We are showcasing people who buy Midcentury at our store. Clients have good-naturedly consented to pose. We will periodically post photographs of buyers with their "stuff" either in the store or in their homes. You'll see folks from Richmond-- The Fan, Oregon Hill, West End, Far West End, across the river, North Side, Henrico, Goochland, Hanover, Petersburg, and north to Fairfax and down Williamsburg and Norfolk way. Our faithful keep coming back to Metro Modern to talk, to look, to make comparisons with other sources and eventually to select a keeper for a special place in their home. Half the fun is knowing who gets what, where it's going and and why. We genuinely appreciate having repeat customers and we are happy to meet new ones. We thank you. All of YOU create our success.
Frank Engler is a busy man--he is always doing whether he is working on web design, helping his wife Julie or taking his daughter Gigi on adventures. Frank loves certain shapes of chairs, especially this Danish chair which he wants to
showcase in his Mechanicsville home. Looking for a small unobtrusive table for her studio, Marguerite Hames Witt decided this Neal Small lucite Handkerchief Table, 1970s would do the trick. The table is ready-at-hand for holding objects without taking up too
much space. Herman Miller created original lithos in the 1970s to celebrate their company employee picnics. The 1970s lithos designed by Stephen Frykolm have great appeal. Audie McDougall and James Kohler especially liked this Summer Picnic Watermelon, 1971 which they added to a prior purchase of Summer Picnic Cherry Pie, 1975 to hang in their home on Broad St. 


