Tractor-Seat Bar Stool 1
Tractor-Seat Bar Stool 2
Tractor-Seat Bar Stool 3
Tractor-Seat Bar Stool 4
Tractor-Seat Bar Stool 5
Tractor-Seat Bar Stool 6

Tractor-Seat Bar Stool

$275

These Tractor-seat stools have been designed and built with an urban-aesthetic. Vintage tractor seats - all with handle-bar fronts and acquired variously from corn-planters, harvesters and tractors - sit on architectural bases that present clean, modern-industrial lines. The result is strikingly handsome and original. Their main feature however is comfort - the seats have an ample, contoured dimension and a subtle spring that creates a softer sitting experience than seems possible for steel seats. The stools in these images have been finished in an oil-rubbed bronze metallic paint. I can offer them in several color combinations - including in dual-tones for seat and base. Tractor Red and Farm Green in an enamel finish are eye-candy (ask, and I'll show you pictures) No two stools will be alike. Although the design and build of the bases stays constant the seats themselves will be unique. In many instances I design and fabricate the front "handles" on the seats from vintage steel myself. (for example,,see the stool with the down-pointing arrow, which is made from the strap-hinge of a 1905 barn). The stools can be customized for the height of your kitchen island or bar. I have estimated shipping but will obtain the best price for your location when we talk. If you are within a 150 mile radius of New York city I will deliver the stools myself for less than half their shipping cost I will offer a better price for a set of stools

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DINSA MEHTA

DINSA MEHTA

PeppercornStudio

Bedford, NY
Member since: 2014
5.0
27 Maker Reviews
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I am a sculptor working in metal and glass. Sometimes singly, sometimes together. I find the simple expression of material to be visually pleasing, and often the stuff I have on hand will nudge my creative process. If the resulting piece awakens my visual sense with wonder, that counts as art for me.

I’ve arrived at sculpting after a heady and enjoyable journey through corporate life. I worked my whole career, twenty-seven years, at JPMorgan and all of that on its trading floors. So making art - and the solitude that accompanies it - are a striking counterpoint to the addictive buzz of life in the markets.

The short story reads like this: as an avid gardener I developed an interest to make large-scale metal art to add to the whimsy in my yard. My son, who was (and is) restoring a classic Alfa Romeo taught me how to weld; I followed this with a semester at the Silvermine School of Art. Many moons, more tools, much practise, the steady acquisition of technique (mostly from other artists and artisans) and I had learned much of what goes into my art now.

I like to use recycled steel whenever possible and I scavenge actively to collect old metal - there’s little more satisfying than cutting up and creating art from, say, an old corn planter.
Patina, texture and light fascinate me and play engaging roles in my sculptures.

My wife (an art photographer among her other talents) and I collect the works of (mainly) American craftspeople - glass makers, ceramicists, wood-workers, textile artists, sculptors - and seek out contemporary art, often at Sculpture parks. So making art is its own reward. Sharing it is even better.

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