The Mentor: Furniture and its Makers, Vol. 1, Num. 30, Serial No. 30

The Mentor
“A Wise and Faithful Guide and Friend”
Vol. 1 No. 30
CHARLES ANDRÉ BOULLE
DANIEL MAROT
J. HENRI RIESENER
THOMAS CHIPPENDALE
THOMAS SHERATON
GEORGE HEPPELWHITE
By PROFESSOR C. R. RICHARDS Director of Cooper Union, New York.
It is rather surprising to find how late a development furniture is in the modern sense. Up to the seventeenth century chairs were far from common. Outside of the large and heavy armchairs reserved for the head of the family, benches, chests, and stools were the only seats in all but the wealthiest households. Before the sixteenth century fixed tables were unusual. Dining tables were almost always composed of a set of boards placed upon trestles at mealtime. Going a little further back to the fourteenth century we find furniture, even in castles of the nobility, of the scantiest and simplest. In the sleeping rooms the pieces were limited to a bed, one or two chests, a bench before the fireplace, and seats built into the wall, commonly under the windows. In the hall where meals were served the only indispensable article besides the trestle tables and benches was a dressoir or buffet for the display of plate. All of these pieces were exceedingly heavy and massive, and oftentimes built into the structure of the room. Not until the seventeenth century did furniture become lighter, more easily movable, and more comfortable. It was at this period that chairs began to be made with sloping backs and furnished with cushioned seats of leather or woven stuff.
LOUIS XIV CABINET

Charles R. Richards
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О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2015-09-07

Темы

Furniture

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