H is for Historic House
Kelsey Rose Williams Kelsey Rose Williams

H is for Historic House

An assignment in looking deeply at historic house museums. Give yourself this opportunity to learn about a new (to you) place, discover the identities of the people associated with it, and feel like you are contributing to the longevity of its history.

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In a Circus Ring with Saul Steinberg
Kelsey Rose Williams Kelsey Rose Williams

In a Circus Ring with Saul Steinberg

A glimpse of the friendship between Charles and Ray Eames, Saul Steinberg, and Hedda Sterne while revealing that some of their inspiration was derived from the attitudes of the circus.

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The Seattle World’s Fair, in Six Parts
Kelsey Rose Williams Kelsey Rose Williams

The Seattle World’s Fair, in Six Parts

Explore the 1962 Seattle World’s Fair in six parts, including its modern architecture, entertainment, technology, and furniture. Written for Memo, a Seattle-based furniture company.

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Charles and Ray Eames Biography
Kelsey Rose Williams Kelsey Rose Williams

Charles and Ray Eames Biography

Immediately following their marriage in June of 1941, Charles and Ray optimistically moved to Los Angeles, bursting with exuberance for one another and their potential future in the arts and design.

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Eames Office Archives
Kelsey Rose Williams Kelsey Rose Williams

Eames Office Archives

Charles and Ray Eames, alongside the Eames Office staff, photographed and developed hundreds of thousands of images over a period of decades. The Eameses used photography to document and reconfigure a project as it progressed or to formulate and express ideas. Today, we extend the Eames legacy by carefully archiving and digitizing these historic photographs.

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The Eames Office Design Process
Kelsey Rose Williams Kelsey Rose Williams

The Eames Office Design Process

For decades within the Eames Office, knowledge and experience continuously built upon previous projects, materials were seen for their inherent worth, and iteration honed all ideas into practical forms. “901,” the Eames Office’s workspace, further enabled the iterative, hands-on design process of Charles, Ray, and their staff.

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Eames Archives: Interwoven Lives
Kelsey Rose Williams Kelsey Rose Williams

Eames Archives: Interwoven Lives

Eames Archives: An Image as an Idea is a blog series written with the intention of sharing rarely-viewed images from the Eames Office archive and narratives attached to them.

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What Researching an Old Home Taught Me About Seattle’s Homebuilding History
Seattle, architecture Kelsey Rose Williams Seattle, architecture Kelsey Rose Williams

What Researching an Old Home Taught Me About Seattle’s Homebuilding History

With this home in mind, I dove enthusiastically into a three-month research project to uncover every possible detail of its construction, past tenants, and alterations. What I discovered was far more impactful than I anticipated: I uncovered the otherworldly history of the pioneering days of a city so fresh to me.

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The Materials of the Eames House
Kelsey Rose Williams Kelsey Rose Williams

The Materials of the Eames House

Charles and Ray Eames set out to design and build the Eames House by utilizing materials in an “honest” manner. Here is a list of the most vital Eames House parts, including their original war-time intent and why Charles and Ray wanted the house to be respectful and representative of the innate qualities of its materials.

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Meet the De Pree House: Michigan’s Eames House
Kelsey Rose Williams Kelsey Rose Williams

Meet the De Pree House: Michigan’s Eames House

Max De Pree, the son of Herman Miller’s founder D.J. De Pree, commissioned Charles and Ray Eames to design a home for himself, his wife Esther, and their two young children in Zeeland, Michigan.

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The Importance of Landmark Status
Eames, architecture, Los Angeles, Eames House Kelsey Rose Williams Eames, architecture, Los Angeles, Eames House Kelsey Rose Williams

The Importance of Landmark Status

It was important that the Eames House remain intact with the highest historic integrity (building materials, collections inside and surrounding the structure, and the 1.4 acre landscaping in Pacific Palisades, California) with the hopes of sharing the legacy of Charles and Ray with the public for the foreseeable future. The Eames House received its designation as a National Historic Landmark and was added to the National Register of Historic Places by the National Park Service in September 2006.

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