Key Questions to Ask When Ordering China Plastic Chair PP

13 May.,2024

 

Basic Info.

Model NO.

HY-007

Style

Modern

Material

Plastic

Usage

Hotel

Armrest

Without Armrest

Color

Clear

Folded

Folded

Rotary

Fixed

Customized

Non-Customized

Shape

Customized

Condition

New

General Use

Home Furniture

Type

Dining Room Furniture

Feature

Customized

Delivery Time

25-35days

Trademark

hardware

Transport Package

Cartons

Specification

standard

Origin

China

HS Code

94017190

Product Description

1.Professional staff to weld and grind  Pipe.
2.High-temperature polished chairs.
3.Mirror Polish will not easily fall off with Better quality
4.It's shinv. smooth. good adhesion
5.We have many color to choose

Product Name

Transparent chair dining

Item No.

HY-007

Size:

Standard

Material

Plastic

CBM

0.5cbm/ctn

Packing

4pcs/1ctn

Remarks

You can send your hot sell products pictures for our quotation

MOQ

20pcs, if change color or size and customized , the MOQ need be discussed

Package

PE Foam , Polyfoam , Carton

Hardware Furniture Co.,Ltd , is one professional manufactory in metal furniture.Our company established in 2006, with 8years development, now prossess 10000sqm workshop & above 100 qualified workers.We imported machines from Itatly & Germany, take the high quality as our life. From incoming materials to finished goods, we have our qulified QC to control the quality. Hope to supply our global customers good products.
Our product range is wild, including Dining sets, coffee table, TV Stand, sofabed, leisure chairs & metal bed,etc. We export to around 20 countries in the world for above 8 years, such as Russia, UK,America, Middle of East ,etc,which refund us good reputation and more trust from customers.With our quality products and competitive price, we ensure that more and more customers will be versatile in the furniture Market.


A Company You Can Trust:


Hardware furniture.,co ltd Located in foshan City, we are a professional manufacturer of Hardware furniture. hardware furniture co.,ltd,we have more than 10 years of experience in furniture and have a good reputation in this field. Our products have won praise from customers worldwide.
1, Output capacity : our factory possesses 10000 square meters workshop, above 100 employees, established in 2006. Imported machines from Europe.Our output eachmonth is 10000sets and export 30-35 containers. Our main market is Europe,America, Middle East, Asia, and south part of Africa.
2, Our main products: Our factory is one leading manufactory of metal furniture,including Dining table and chair, coffee table, TV Stand, End table & sofabed,etc.
3, Good service : Sample order accepted, We will not start the mess production till you confirm the sample. Orders will be arranged well, tracking it timely and keep you posted. Before loading, you can check goods,or we check goods for you. Photos will be taken and send to you.If have any questions, you can contact our salers freely,we will reply you within 24hours. 
4, More competitive price& high quality. Firstly, we produce the metal ourself, so we can control cost & Quality well; Finally, we have qualified QC Team to control quality well.
5, Each month 25*40HQ are exported. We have earned a good name for satisfying after-sales service and good quality. So we have many regular customers.
6, Trial order is accepted. You can order 5sets each item, then mix 3~5 items in one container. So you can test your market.



FAQ:


Q1.How can I get the cargo?
We have more than 14 years in export to different countries. We can handle delivery the cargo to your closest port or delivery to your warehouse directly.

Q2. How can I know how my order is being done?
30% deposit payment---start production---Take photos you confirmed ---check the logistic---book shipment---inform customer ETD&ETA---load container---balance payment---send documents.

Q3. Can I visit your factory?
Sure, we have our factory in Foshan, China. If you want to have a visit to our factory, please contact us to make an appointment. We can arrange driver to pick you around.

Q4.What is your minimum order quantity?
We have the detail MOQ for each item. But we also accept LCL order. If the quantity of single item can't reach the MOQ, the price should be sample price.

Ian Frazier, writing about the return of seals to the waters that surround New York City, offers this poetic observation about a white plastic chair:

On a higher part of the beach, a single patio chair of molded white plastic commanded a wide view. Someone might have put it there to enjoy a beer in, or for winter sunbathing. Then again, it might have been flotsam. I have seen this identical type of plastic chair in photos of the Lagos, Nigeria, city dumps in the Times. A photo of a memorial gathering for a slain Al Qaeda leader in Jordan showed a row of these same chairs in a tent. I own six of these chairs myself. I believe this type of white molded-plastic chair belongs to the growing category of the world’s ubiquitous objects.

His observation stuck with me, and I found myself searching through photos I’ve taken around the world in my travels, searching for the plastic chair. It is, indeed, ubiquitous.

Here’s my friend, Sarpei Nunoo, leaning on a particularly attractive version in a beer garden near central Accra. Some large percentage of my Ghanaian photos feature the white chair in the background, like this photo of my friend and former teacher, Bernard Woma, performing with his dancers in Nima, Accra. And they’re certainly not limited to that city. Here’s a stack of chairs, surrounded by cranes, in Arusha, Tanzania. Expand the color palette beyond white and I find examples in a dusty village in Rajastan, a quiet street in Palermo, Sicily, a roadside bar outside Jakarta.

In Abuja, Nigeria, they’re not just furniture – they’re key stage props for a dancer who balances plates, trays, tables and chairs on his body while executing full splits.

I started to think that perhaps I’d start collecting images of white plastic chairs, when I discovered that I’d been beaten to the punch… many, many times over.

There’s a Flickr group titled, “Those White Plastic Chairs” which features 930 images of white plastic chairs, taken in at least a dozen countries. (There’s a more inclusive, but slightly less impressive collection of multicolored plastic chairs on Flickr as well.)

One of the contributors to the Flickr group is Jens Thiel, from whom I learned the correct nomenclature for the chair in question. It’s a plastic Monobloc chair, named because it’s a single piece of polypropylene (mono-block), heated to to 220 degrees centigrade and extruded into a mold that can produce chairs every 70 seconds. Monoblocs are produced throughout the world, in China, Taiwan, the US, Israel, Mexico and elsewhere. At roughly $3 a piece, it’s easy to understand how they’ve become so pervasive.

Thiel maintains a website and a Facebook page dedicated to the Monobloc. The site features everything from an examination of creative ways the Monobloc is repaired in countries where it’s too expensive to replace, to numerous art pieces that feature the Monobloc. My favorite artistic interpretations include a beautifully morbid chair by pool called “souviens toi que tu vas mourir” and a fantastically subversive piece called “white billion chairs 33” by Tina Roeder. Roeder’s piece features a pile of chairs each perforated with up to 10,000 holes, rendering them beautiful but totally non-functional.


White Billion Chairs 33, Tina Roeder, detail

Artists and designers appear to have a love/hate relationship with the Monobloc. Some artists attempt to dress up the chair, melding it with other chairs, rendering it in wood, reupholstering it in leather. Others demand that we end discrimination against cheap furniture, like Martí Guixé’s Statement Chair. An art book by Arnd Friedrichs and Kerstin Finger titled “220C Virus Monobloc” sums up the tensions – it’s an object worthy of a book-length study as well as a virus, reproducing itself around the world and crowing out other designs for chairs.

I don’t have strong feelings about whether the Monobloc is an object of beauty or a target for derision… though I’d suggest that any design as successful as the Monobloc has proved its evolutionary worth. What I’m intrigued by is the idea that the Monobloc is a context-free object.

To explain what I mean:

Fifteen years ago, one of my jobs at Tripod was managing our abuse and legal teams. With several million webpages hosted on our service, some of them violated our terms of service and hosted pornography. That wasn’t a bit problem – we deleted pages that violated our TOS. But when we encountered pages that might be hosting child pornography, we had a more complicated procedure. We copied files to floppy disk (remember, it was 1996!) and mailed them to our regional FBI office, along with information on the IP address the user in question had signed up from.

One of the best guys on my team went to Boston for a week to train to become a “confidential informant”, so he could testify if we’d found evidence in a child pornography case that went to court. Curious guy that he was, he asked whether the information we were providing – the IP address signed up from – was helpful in building cases. Sure, he was told, but not as useful as the information in the photos. Almost every detail in a photo held information about the time and location the photo was taken. The shape of electrical outlets, labels on any consumer products, fabrics, clothing all were clues as to whether a photo was taken in the 1970s or last week, in Sweden or Schenectady.

Virtually every object suggests a time and place. The Monobloc is one of the few objects I can think of that is free of any specific context. Seeing a white plastic chair in a photograph offers you no clues about where or when you are. I have a hard time thinking of other objects that are equally independent of context. Asking friends to propose a similar object, most people suggest a Coke can… but I can tell you that Coke is presented very differently in different countries, in glass bottles as well as cans, with labels in local languages. The Monobloc offers no linguistic cues, no obvious signs that it’s been localized. Wherever you are, it’s at home.

For me, the Monobloc isn’t so much a glimpse of the future, where we suspect that mega-corporation will blur distinctions between Albania and Afghanistan. Even McDonalds, the avatar for global homogenization, makes heavy investments in localization. if it didn’t, it would be very hard to sell beef burgers in majority-Hindu India. It’s going to be a while before McChicken Tikka (an excellent sandwich, by the way) is so pervasive that its wrapper doesn’t reveal that you’re at an Indian McDonalds, not a Japanese one.

The Monobloc is a reminder that the world is still filled with the local, the unique, the distinctive. Globalization may be homogenizing the world, but most objects still offer some context. The few objects that defy localization deserve some special form of lionization. They’ve achieved a level of design perfection where they don’t require adaptation to be as successful in Africa as they are in suburban America. Dismiss them at your peril – context-free objects like the Monobloc have achieved a sort of global celebrity that few humans could ever hope for.

Key Questions to Ask When Ordering China Plastic Chair PP

The Monobloc and the Context-Free Object

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