Skip to main content

Vintage Heywood Wakefield Bedroom Set

Recent Sales

Pair of Heywood Wakefield Nightstands
Located in Brooklyn, NY
complete your Heywood Wakefield bedroom set, and the simplicity and durability of these bedside tables make
Category

1960s American Vintage Heywood Wakefield Bedroom Set

Materials

Maple

Heywood Wakefield Bedroom Suite
By Heywood-Wakefield Co.
Located in Brooklyn, NY
Bedroom suite consisting of headboard & foot board, tall dresser, low dresser with mirror and
Category

1960s American Vintage Heywood Wakefield Bedroom Set

Mid-Century Modern Heywood-Wakefield Sable Color 'Cadence" Bedroom Set
By Heywood-Wakefield Co.
Located in Manhasset, NY
A four-piece Heywood-Wakefield sable color bed set. A beautiful vintage six-drawer Mid-Century
Category

Mid-20th Century American Mid-Century Modern Vintage Heywood Wakefield Bedroom Set

Mid-Century Modern Heywood Wakefield Champagne Dresser with Mirror
By Heywood-Wakefield Co.
Located in Kingston, NY
Mid-Century Modern Heywood Wakefield Champagne Dresser with Mirror, circa 1950. Stamped inner
Category

Mid-20th Century Mid-Century Modern Vintage Heywood Wakefield Bedroom Set

Materials

Glass, Birch

Midcentury Heywood Wakefield Bedroom Set
By Heywood-Wakefield Co.
Located in Brooklyn, NY
This amazing vintage modern bedroom set includes a low dresser, a highboy dresser, a headboard, and
Category

1970s American Mid-Century Modern Vintage Heywood Wakefield Bedroom Set

Materials

Maple

1950s Heywood Wakefield Encore 5 piece Queen Bedroom suite dressers nightstand
By Heywood-Wakefield Co.
Located in Virginia Beach, VA
An exceptional 1950s, 5 piece bedroom suite by Heywood Wakefield in a beautiful wheat color. The
Category

1950s American Mid-Century Modern Vintage Heywood Wakefield Bedroom Set

Materials

Maple

Sculptura Styled Twin Bed Set by Jiranek / Herrmann for Heywood Wakefield
By Heywood-Wakefield Co.
Located in Cincinnati, OH
M930 for the Heywood Wakefield furniture company .
Category

Mid-20th Century American Mid-Century Modern Vintage Heywood Wakefield Bedroom Set

Materials

Maple

Heywood Wakefield Bedroom Set Sculptura Herrmann /Jiranek
By Heywood-Wakefield Co.
Located in East Hampton, NY
Heywood Wakefield Sculptura Bedroom set. Designed in the 1950'S, by Herrmann /Jiranek. Iconic 4
Category

Mid-20th Century American Mid-Century Modern Vintage Heywood Wakefield Bedroom Set

Materials

Maple

Vintage 1950s Heywood Wakefield Head and Footboard Set
By Heywood-Wakefield Co.
Located in Amherst, NH
Vintage 1950s Heywood Wakefield maple wood head and footbaord set. Rails are not included
Category

Mid-20th Century Mid-Century Modern Vintage Heywood Wakefield Bedroom Set

Materials

Maple

Get Updated with New Arrivals
Save "Vintage Heywood Wakefield Bedroom Set", and we’ll notify you when there are new listings in this category.

Heywood-Wakefield Co. for sale on 1stDibs

Created by the 19th-century merger of two venerable Massachusetts furniture makers, Heywood-Wakefield was one of the largest and most successful companies of its kind in the United States. In its early decades, the firm thrived by crafting affordable and hugely popular wicker pieces in traditional and historical styles. In the midst of the Great Depression, however, Heywood-Wakefield reinvented itself, creating instead the first modernist furniture — chairs, tables, dressers and more — to be widely embraced in American households.

The Heywoods were five brothers from Gardner, Massachusetts, who in 1826 started a business making wooden chairs and tables in their family shed. As their company grew, they moved into the manufacture of furniture with steam-bent wood frames and cane or wicker seats, backs and sides.

In 1897, the Heywoods joined forces with a local rival, the Wakefield Rattan Company, whose founder, Cyrus Wakefield, got his start on the Boston docks buying up lots of discarded rattan, which was used as cushioning material in the holds of cargo ships, and transforming it into furnishings. The conglomerate initially did well with both early American style and woven pieces, but taste began to change at the turn of the 20th century and wicker furniture fell out of fashion.

In 1930, Heywood-Wakefield brought in designer Gilbert Rohde, a champion of the Art Deco style. Before departing in 1932 to lead Herman Miller — the prolific Michigan manufacturer that helped transform the American home and office — Rohde created well-received sleek, bentwood chairs for Heywood-Wakefield and gave its colonial pieces a touch of Art Deco flair.

Committed to the new style, Heywood-Wakefield commissioned work from an assortment of like-minded designers, including Alfons Bach, W. Joseph Carr, Leo Jiranek and Count Alexis de Sakhnoffsky, a Russian nobleman who had made his name in Europe creating elegant automotive body designs.

In 1936, the company introduced its “Streamline Modern” group of furnishings, presenting a look that would define the company’s wares for another 30 years. The buoyantly bright, blond wood — maple initially, later birch — came in finishes such as amber “wheat” and pink-tinted “champagne.” The forms of the pieces, at once light and substantial, with softly contoured edges and little adornment beyond artful drawer pulls and knobs, were featured in lines with names such as “Sculptura,” “Crescendo” and “Coronet.” It was forward-looking, optimistic and built to last — a draw for middle-class buyers in the Baby Boom years. 

By the 1960s, Heywood-Wakefield began to be seen as “your parents’ furniture.” The last of the Modern line came out in 1966; the company went bankrupt in 1981. The truly sturdy pieces have weathered the intervening years well, having found a new audience for their blithe and happy sophistication.

Find vintage Heywood-Wakefield desks, vanities, tables and other furniture for sale on 1stDibs.

A Close Look at Mid-century-modern Furniture

Organically shaped, clean-lined and elegantly simple are three terms that well describe vintage mid-century modern furniture. The style, which emerged primarily in the years following World War II, is characterized by pieces that were conceived and made in an energetic, optimistic spirit by creators who believed that good design was an essential part of good living.

ORIGINS OF MID-CENTURY MODERN FURNITURE DESIGN

CHARACTERISTICS OF MID-CENTURY MODERN FURNITURE DESIGN

MID-CENTURY MODERN FURNITURE DESIGNERS TO KNOW

ICONIC MID-CENTURY MODERN FURNITURE DESIGNS

VINTAGE MID-CENTURY MODERN FURNITURE ON 1STDIBS

The mid-century modern era saw leagues of postwar American architects and designers animated by new ideas and new technology. The lean, functionalist International-style architecture of Le Corbusier and Bauhaus eminences Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Walter Gropius had been promoted in the United States during the 1930s by Philip Johnson and others. New building techniques, such as “post-and-beam” construction, allowed the International-style schemes to be realized on a small scale in open-plan houses with long walls of glass.

Materials developed for wartime use became available for domestic goods and were incorporated into mid-century modern furniture designs. Charles and Ray Eames and Eero Saarinen, who had experimented extensively with molded plywood, eagerly embraced fiberglass for pieces such as the La Chaise and the Womb chair, respectively. 

Architect, writer and designer George Nelson created with his team shades for the Bubble lamp using a new translucent polymer skin and, as design director at Herman Miller, recruited the Eameses, Alexander Girard and others for projects at the legendary Michigan furniture manufacturer

Harry Bertoia and Isamu Noguchi devised chairs and tables built of wire mesh and wire struts. Materials were repurposed too: The Danish-born designer Jens Risom created a line of chairs using surplus parachute straps for webbed seats and backrests.

The Risom lounge chair was among the first pieces of furniture commissioned and produced by celebrated manufacturer Knoll, a chief influencer in the rise of modern design in the United States, thanks to the work of Florence Knoll, the pioneering architect and designer who made the firm a leader in its field. The seating that Knoll created for office spaces — as well as pieces designed by Florence initially for commercial clients — soon became desirable for the home.

As the demand for casual, uncluttered furnishings grew, more mid-century furniture designers caught the spirit.

Classically oriented creators such as Edward Wormley, house designer for Dunbar Inc., offered such pieces as the sinuous Listen to Me chaise; the British expatriate T.H. Robsjohn-Gibbings switched gears, creating items such as the tiered, biomorphic Mesa table. There were Young Turks such as Paul McCobb, who designed holistic groups of sleek, blond wood furniture, and Milo Baughman, who espoused a West Coast aesthetic in minimalist teak dining tables and lushly upholstered chairs and sofas with angular steel frames.

Generations turn over, and mid-century modern remains arguably the most popular style going. As the collection of vintage mid-century modern chairs, dressers, coffee tables and other furniture for the living room, dining room, bedroom and elsewhere on 1stDibs demonstrates, this period saw one of the most delightful and dramatic flowerings of creativity in design history.