They say “Everything sounds better on vinyl…” I happen to agree. AND, it’s certainly going to LOOK better too if you display your record player on this vintage beauty!! This is a wonderful vintage Drexel Declaration record cabinet by Kipp Stewart & Stewart MacDougall comprised of a lovely walnut frame, a recessed base with lovely square tapered legs and apron, double doors with a push open feature, inner components including an upper wood shelf with grooves below for vertical record storage, an open lower section with a center wood divider, removeable record groove plates below, 1 false back to place your 45’s or cassette tapes behind, & 1 divider that slides in the grooves to create division. This is the PERFECT spot to place your record album collection inside and your turn table on top whether in the family room, office or study, your bedroom, or entertainment area. There’s nothing quite like the sound of your favorite artist through the crackle of a vinyl record and your collection deserves to be stored & displayed in exquisite Drexel style. However, this handsome cabinet does not need to store records alone. It could be used as a wonderful nightstand or end table storing games or books & magazines. This piece SCREAMS with Mid-Century Modern magnificence and its classic style is sure to withstand the hands of time.
Kipp Stewart, a celebrated American designer, born in 1928 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania did not lead a charmed childhood. Sent to California to live with distant relatives at a young age, you could call him a self-made man. His furniture designing fate was sealed at 15 when hitchhiking to school he passed a storefront shop and studio on Melrose Avenue in Los Angeles with pencil industrial drawings in the windows and fell in love with them. Kipp worked hard, turning down a track and field scholarship at USC and instead enrolled at Chouinard Art Institute in the late 1940s. Again, he worked very hard days and nights becoming a renowned artist, architect, and award-winning designer. He currently resides in Carmel, California and is still painting.
Alexander Stewart Orton MacDougall was born in the late 1920s in Pasadena and grew up in a Green and Green house which he credits for his fascination and love of design. Judged early with a learning disability which he obviously overcame, Stewart attended Chouinard Art Institute after a short time in the Navy. He then went to work for Victor Gruen and Associates where he met his mentor Rudolf Baumfeld who had studied under Le Courbusier. With this association, his design and artistry paths were sealed. Striving always for simple lines without fussiness. It is clearly apparent throughout his work whether in furniture, boats, golf clubs, or sculpture. He currently splits his time between Montecito California, and Nantucket with his wife of many many years and lifetime muse, still working on projects each day.
Drexel Furniture Company was founded in 1903 in Drexel, North Carolina by six businessmen for a total investment of $14,000.00. Sam Huffman, one of the initial founders, managed the enterprise until his death in 1935 when his son, Robert O. Huffman took the helm. By 1950 under the younger Huffman’s leadership Drexel had grown from a small factory to a leader in furniture manufacturing. They acquired other furniture companies along the way and by the late 1950s employed 2300 workers. The 1960s had them adding industrial and hospitality furniture to their lines. In 1968 they were purchased again, and Drexel Enterprises became Drexel Heritage Furnishings, Inc. They continued to add to their styles and lines and were sold again and then in 1986 became part of Masco Corporation one of the country’s largest furniture manufacturers. They are now based in High Point, NC and operate ten factories in North Carolina and one in South Carolina and are one of the leading furniture manufacturers in the world.
This is an iconic piece of Drexel Declaration furniture designed by famed designers Kipp Stewart & Stewart MacDougall. And, for the RECORD… you should make it YOURS!!!