The Elephant Stool combines playful design with expert craftsmanship, featuring molded plywood construction that creates smooth compound curves. Its cherry wood finish provides warmth and natural beauty, while the sturdy plywood base ensures lasting durability. The distinctive elephant silhouette adds character to any space, and the compact form offers versatile seating or display options.
In the early 1940s, Charles and Ray Eames spent several years developing and refining a technique for moulding plywood into three-dimensional shapes, creating a series of furniture items and sculptures in the process. Among these initial designs, the two-part elephant proved to be the most technically challenging due to its tight compound curves, and the piece never went into serial production. One prototype, which was given to Charles's 14-year-old daughter Lucia Eames, was loaned to the Museum of Modern Art in New York for a 1946 exhibition. It is still in the possession of the Eames family today.





