HARVEY PROBBER ROSEWOOD VITRINE
SKU: 37904820075

HARVEY PROBBER ROSEWOOD VITRINE

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Description

HARVEY PROBBER ROSEWOOD VITRINEA tall, slender, rosewood vitrine with three glass shelves and an enclosed lower cabinet designed in the 1960s by Harvey Probber for HARVEY PROBBER, INC. The upper display cabinet is lighted. HARVEY PROBBER was a leading American furniture designer in the middle years of the last century. He is credited with the invention of sectional (or, as he termed it, "modular") seating and was a pioneer of its application. The concept stemmed from Probber's

A tall, slender, rosewood vitrine with three glass shelves and an enclosed lower cabinet designed in the 1960s by Harvey Probber for HARVEY PROBBER, INC.  The upper display cabinet is lighted.

HARVEY PROBBER was a leading American furniture designer in the middle years of the last century.  He is credited with the invention of sectional (or, as he termed it, "modular") seating and was a pioneer of its application.  The concept stemmed from Probber's conviction that post-war Americans were ready for more flexibility in their homes and lifestyles.  His ideas were popularly embraced and widely adopted among his fellow designers.

Born in Brooklyn in 1922, Probber took an after-school job during high school in a used furniture store.  He was inspired to try his hand at sketching ideas for furniture and sold his first design for a sofa at the age of 16 for $10 (roughly $175 in today's money).  By the time he graduated, Probber was marketing his drawings to furniture companies in Manhattan.  In an era when top American designers typically boasted of advanced degrees in art and architecture, Probber's formal training was limited to a few evening classes at the Pratt Institute.  He learned furniture production concurrently, on the job at Trade Upholstery, a small manufacturer on West 17th St.  After wartime service in the Coast Guard and a brief stint as a lounge singer (!), Probber started his own business in 1945, HARVEY PROBBER, INC.

The 1940s saw the dawn of American Modernism, an era characterized by young designers with talent, initiative, and the willingness to take bold risks with new ideas.  Probber's work would always be tempered by his concern to strike an artful balance between design and ornament.  His pieces combined the new style's understated lines with delicate hardware, exotic woods, hand-rubbed finishes, and sumptuous upholstery fabrics—sometimes in surprisingly bright colors.  Such materials were largely abandoned by his more radical, Bauhaus-influenced contemporaries.  By the end of the decade Probber grew increasingly convinced that consumers were becoming tired of the academic purity exemplified by much of modern furniture; his designs, like those of Edward Wormley and Tommi Parzinger, were for customers who wanted up-to-date furnishings that whole-heartedly embraced elegance.  Never a household name in his lifetime, Probber's furniture is highly collectible today.  Probber was awarded several prestigious Roscoe design industry awards during his career.

HARVEY PROBBER, INC. was established in New York City in 1945 by its namesake—who rose to become one of America's preeminent designers within the decade.  In 1947, its production was moved to Grand Rapids, Michigan, then the center of the furniture manufacturing industry.  In 1948, anticipating the potential for an interior design boom, a showroom was opened on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan catering exclusively to designers.  By the mid 1950s, HARVEY PROBBER, INC., was among the country's most important makers of contemporary furniture.  Its customers appreciated the marriage of luxe finishes and clean, modern practicality embodied by its products.

It was Probber's interest in flexibility of function that led to his most significant design breakthrough:  the upholstered unit or "modular" furniture system.  HARVEY PROBBER christened its initial incarnation the 'Sert Group' (in homage to architect and city planner Jose Luís Sert).  It consisted of nineteen different elements—quadrants, half-circles, corner sections, and wedges—that could be rearranged into any number of seating configurations.  Probber next developed 'Nuclear' furniture, extending the concept to include variously shaped occasional tables with interchangeable pedestals.  Case goods were added to the modular mix in the 1960s—a single basic design was made available in a choice of finishes, legs, bases, heights, and hardware.  (Differences that were cosmetic rather than conceptual were naturally economical to produce—evidence of Probber's business acumen.)  The 'Nuclear Groups' as well as the HARVEY PROBBER 'sling' chair (1948) were chosen for MoMA’s Good Design exhibition in 1951.

By the 1970s, HARVEY PROBBER, INC., had opened trade showrooms in major design centers across the country and had exchanged the residential furniture market for the larger and more lucrative contract (commercial) field.  During this period, Probber's work was awarded two "Best of Neocon" Gold Awards from the Resources Council of the Institute of Business Designers for the 'Houston Chair' (1977) and the 'Advent III Customization Program' (1981).  He never abandoned his interest in modular seating, however, and continued to explore variations of the concept.  HARVEY PROBBER closed its doors in 1986.

The Harvey Probber Design Archive signed an agreement with M2L in 2013 to reintroduce a selected group of designs in a licensed collection under the name "M2L BRAND for Harvey Probber."  The first line of products included a lounge chair, sofa, occasional table, bench, and desk from the 'Architectural Series' and the 'Deep Tuft' sectional sofa.

Design has a fourth dimension—the intangible quality of aging gracefully. – HARVEY PROBBER

Production Period – 1960-1969

Country of Origin – USA

Designer – HARVEY PROBBER (1922-2003)

Maker – HARVEY PROBBER, INC.

Attribution – WELL-KNOWN

Materials – ROSEWOOD, GLASS

Condition – VERY GOOD (no defects; may show slight traces of use)

Height (in.) – 78.0

Width (in.) – 36.0

Depth (in.) – 14.5

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SKU: 37904820075

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4.6 ★★★★★
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A
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Amy
West Palm Beach, US
★★★★★ 1
Return refund impossible to receive also it’s tacky looking
Color: Black
First off this item said it was fit, but it did not second of all I went to return it and they could only be returned to the original payment method my credit card. My bank is not showing anything. Amazon is zero help trying to say it went back on a gift balance, which I have photo proof that both are incorrect. I tried to reach out to the seller and they were also zero help so I advise one not to buy this because it’s small and cheap looking too you can’t get your refund back.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 30, 2025
B
Verified Purchase
Biff Worthington
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 4
It’s so so but ok
Color: Champagne
The color is good and the hair is not as silky as my car seat or seatbelt covers. Also the hairs really get matted. It may just be from elbows but it gets so matted it is hard to undo. And when you do get it good it happens right again and frankly looks bad and unkempt. Other than that it fits right and is more comfy than original so I leave it on. Even with vacuum at car wash the mats stay so it seems eventually it will be too much. I have had it about a month. Maybe a shorter pile is a better option for armrest, like shearling pile. I’ll try that when this one is too far gone. It wasn’t expensive and is still worth the money to not have a blazing hot armrest so I m good for now.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 17, 2026
S
Verified Purchase
shari morgan
Pawtucket, US
★★★★★ 3
🙂‍↔️
Color: Light Pink, Color: Light Pink
The color is beautiful. Is soft, but it runs very short doesn’t fit my car. I’ve had it for six months and now it looks like a dirty dog lol
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Reviewed in the United States on March 17, 2026
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Naomi
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 5
Pop some color
Color: Purple
Cute and fun!
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Reviewed in the United States on April 7, 2026
A
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ariana
Lake Worth, US
★★★★★ 5
very nice
Color: Light Pink, Color: Light Pink
very soft, nice quality. easy to install. definitely measure and make sure it will fit. mine was about 12” long, and this one fits perfectly. more of a soft, washed out pink rather than the brighter pink pictured
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Reviewed in the United States on January 14, 2026

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