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If your chair’s arms don’t support yours when you’re using the mouse for a long time, you can get “unnatural twisting of the wrists, hands, elbows and shoulders.” And it’s important to move around, to shift, to avoid hours in the same position. Otherwise, you might “decrease blood flow in the legs.” The fruit of all of this research, study and philosophizing is the new Steelcase Gesture chair, available later this fall for $980 and up (depending on whether you opt for leather, vinyl, cloth and so on).
patio chair cushions 19 x 21It’s supposed to be the ultimate work chair — “a new sitting experience,” the company asserts.
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Both the seat and the back are deeply padded and expansive; you could even, if you wanted, sit with your legs tucked under you, or partly so. The arms are connected to the chair behind you, so they don’t block your thigh should you decide to swing it over the side. And it certainly is adjustable. Like most office chairs, you can make this one taller or shorter when you press a lever on the chair’s stem.
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You can adjust the tension on the spring, too, so that it goes back and forward more or less easily. You can lock the back into one of five angles with the flip of a lever. All the controls are on the right side, below seat level. By turning a knob, you can move the seat forward or backward relative to the back, to accommodate the longer or shorter of limb. The armrests are miracles of mobility.
fisher price table and chairs plasticBy squeezing a lever under each one, you can move them fluidly and independently up or down, inward or outward.
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For example, the arms are short enough that they don’t get in the way when you want to pull up close to the table or desk. And the back doesn’t extend past your torso. It doesn’t block or restrict you when you turn to around to yell, “Hey, Frank! Do we have any C-120s in stock?” Finally, a shout-out to whoever had the idea of wrapping the padding all the way around all four sides of the seat’s edges. Suppose, for example, that you wanted to assume a position that’s not among the Steelcase Nine. That’s entirely possible, thanks to this all-the-way-around padding; you can hang a limb over any of the seat’s edges without worrying about getting gangrene. (Don’t try that with the famous Herman Miller Aeron chair. Its sharp, rigid seat edges could lop your leg right off.) And, so, yes: This is a wonderful chair. It’s supremely comfortable, impressively adjustable, exceptionally supportive. And yes, it’s also true that we work in weird new positions these days.

What’s not so clear is Steelcase’s claim that these two statements are connected. In other words, just how much of a breakthrough is the Gesture chair? After you clear away the smoke from those arguments about our modern mobile gadgets, is the Gesture actually any more flexible than its rivals? I made a pilgrimage to a couple of high-end office-furniture stores to find out. And here’s the baffling thing that I discovered: The Gesture is, at best, only a small advance. It seems to be intended as a body blow at the Herman Miller Embody chair, which may not come with marketing materials about 2,000 people in 11 countries, but which you can adjust in nearly identical ways. The chair goes up and down, the seat goes forward and back, the back reclines a lot, the armrests go up and down and inward and outward. The Gesture wins this round, though. The Embody chair costs much more ($1,300), and is slightly less adjustable; its armrests don’t rotate. More mysteriously, the Gesture isn’t even that much of a leap beyond the Leap, Steelcase’s own earlier adjusto-chair and its most popular model.

You can adjust the Leap in most of the same ways as the Gesture, but it costs less. The Leap is a more responsible choice, too: 94 percent of it is recyclable, and 30 percent of it is made of recycled material (well, “up to” 30 percent). It, too, is available in various colors of cloth or leather. Now, the Gesture looks much more modern, much more sculptural and much classier. It says “high-tech executive” more than “worker bee with sciatica.” But all that stuff about a “new sitting experience” — that’s clearly baloney. And it’s possible to find nits to pick even with the Gesture. You can’t change the angle of the seat, if you care. And the armrests are hard plastic; a little cushioning wouldn’t hurt. So yeah, the company’s attempt to connect its conclusions — “we sit differently these days, and it’s healthy to shift positions often” — with its latest chair may reek of marketing department desperation. But the conclusions themselves are sound.