The chair that wasn't for sitting on

Edmonton furniture store sold the 'frontal chair' in 1985

Media | This chair's not for sitting

Caption: An Edmonton retailer specializes in nontraditional chairs in 1985.

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You might need to sit down before hearing what CBC's Midday had to talk about in June 1985.
There was a new kind of chair on the market — an option in furniture for people who didn't want to sit in the usual way any more.
"You lie on it," explained Edmonton reporter Alf Cryderman, who visited a local furniture store to learn more about what was called the Frontal Chair.
A tester could be seen demonstrating a contoured platform with a hole for the face to accommodate reading material propped on the floor.

Too much sitting

Image | Knee chair

Caption: The Norwegian balance chair, already on the market for a few years, was described as a "rocker with kneepads." (Midday/CBC Archives)

Furniture store owner Eric Fisker said the chair was meant to address a modern problem.
"We're sitting in our cars, we're sitting at work, a lot of us," he told Cryderman.
Eating lunch, watching TV, even hobbies were spent sitting, he pointed out — and he said that posture needed to be varied.
"With these chairs you are activating muscles in your back that you probably haven't used since you got off the floor when you were three or four years old," said Fisker.
He also highlighted benefits to blood circulation.
"Prices start at $240," noted Cryderman. That's about $520 in 2020 dollars.

Image | Rolling backwards

Caption: Another type of chair available lacked legs and enabled the sitter to roll backwards. (Midday/CBC Archives)