Dunbar

Purchase with confidence.

Modern Hill selects items that excel in quality, style, and creativity from a period that transformed the art of decorating. They undergo careful examination and restoration by specialists at our Chicago facility.

It’s like they belong together.

Products labeled "Vintage Restored" can be customized and matched in color, tone, and texture as though they were an original set. And with Modern Hill’s flat rate shipping, additional pieces ship for free.

Hassle-free delivery.

Our pieces ship anywhere nationwide for one low flat rate. You only pay for shipping on one piece per order—anything else we can fit on the same truck ships for free.

Frequently Asked Dunbar Questions

Authentic Dunbar pieces typically carry a Dunbar Furniture label or brass tag on the underside, often with a Berne, Indiana address and a model number. Most mid-century Dunbar pieces also carry an Edward Wormley signature on a separate label or stamp, since Wormley designed the great majority of Dunbar’s mid-century output. Construction tells include solid mahogany or walnut frames (not veneer over particle board), brass nail-head detailing on upholstered pieces, finely-tailored cushion construction, dovetailed drawer joinery on case goods, and the characteristic Wormley proportions on sofas (slightly higher arm-to-back ratios than typical mid-century pieces). Our product pages document the Dunbar label and any Wormley designation when verifiable.

The original Dunbar Furniture Company of Berne, Indiana ceased production in 1986 after operating since 1919. The Dunbar pieces in our inventory are vintage originals from the company’s mid-century period, primarily Edward Wormley designs from the 1950s through the 1970s. A separately named contemporary brand operates today using the Dunbar name (collectdunbar.com), but it is a distinct successor business and not a continuation of the original Berne, Indiana manufacturer.