Antique Pedestal Desks
DESKS: PEDESTAL
About 1750 onwards
Mahogany pedestal desk, early-19th Century.
Asubstantial piece of writing furniture deriving from the type of pedestal ‘library’ or ‘writing-table’ made and illustrated by Thomas Chippendale and other high quality London-based cabinet makers in the mid-18thC. Subsequently made in a wide range of sizes, the largest being the double. sided partners’ desk, the smallest the half-pedestal devised around 1900. Particularly popular during the 19th and 20thC for office use.
Early library tables with two pedestals of four drawers with a plain top with frieze below and carved and shaped apron fronting kneehole recess. Sometimes panelled cupboard doors enclosing pedestal drawers.
From about 1765 standard form evolved. Made in three parts: two pedestal bases, each containing a flight of three drawers of graduated depth. Sides generally flat when veneered, panelled when solid. Top with three frieze drawers, outer two of equal width to drawers below. Continuous plinth around bases (in late 19thC sometimes fitted with concealed castors). Occasionally bracket feet; short turned legs after 1790. Overhanging top with lip or thumb-nail moulding; narrow moulding around lower edge of top section.
Writing- surface with tooled (sometimes gilt) border. Later 19thC cloth imitation common. Can be laid in three sections. One pedestal sometimes has a cupboard, fronted by dummy drawers.
Above, late- Victorian mahogany pedestal desk, about 1880-1890; below, kidney-shaped mahogany pedestal desk, about 1800-1820.
By far the majority were rectangular; a few kidney- or D-shaped between about 1790 and 1820. Being free-standing, all visible surfaces were finished (i.e. back and inner sides of pedestals). Occasionally there was a solid back to the recess. (This feature was often found on simple provincial and country-made versions; used in smaller rooms of smaller houses, against the wall i.e. not free-standing.)
Second half of 19thC saw continuous production of the standard model, but also an attempt to apply the prevailing historic revival and other styles such as:
Reformed Gothic: Chamfered edges, panels of diagonal planking, incised line decoration, carved trefoils.
Elizabethan: Heavily carved, dark-stained oak, carved wood, lion’s mask, pull handles.
Sheraton: Principally inlay, some marquetry, in contrasting coloured satinwood. Cross-banding too.
Variations included:
Partners’ desks (from about 1770): As a standard pedestal but double-sized and double-sided. Sometimes there are drawers one side and cupboards the others, but usually the configuration was identical.
Half-pedestals (about 1900 onwards): Made in one piece with apron below single drawer and simple legs replacing missing side.
Simple office desks (about 1900 onwards):With two four-drawer pedestals and plain top (i.e. without drawers). Curved apron fronting recess.
Late versions of standard pedestals may have bracket feet or short, turned or tapering legs ending in cup of box socket castors, considerably altering overall proportion, generally looking too insubstantial to support significant weight above.
From 1900 solid backs to recesses of office desks (for purposes of modesty) much more common. Some pieces with additional floor-level foot-rail.
Mostly mahogany. Commonly oak in 19thC, or pine, originally stained to simulate mahogany, but now usually sold stripped and waxed. Occasionally rosewood during Regency; burr walnut, yew and other figured woods in Victorian times. Sometimes satinwood for decorative panels of veneer.
Standard methods employed (see CHESTS OF DRAWERS, p. 93). Top framework with mortise-and-tenon joints. Top slots over blocks were glued to top of base.
Structural alterations not common, but occasionally marriage of bases to different top, or the superstructure (feature sometimes found on late 19thC pieces) removed and top re-veneered or replaced with new. Occasionally plain oak versions were veneered later to up price; look for all-oak carcase.
MOCK-GEORGIAN DESKS
Very many Victorian and early 20thC desks refurbished with new leather and period-style brass handles and sold as `Georgian’. Check construction of drawers carefully; watch particularly for plywood linings (an inter-war feature). The holes left by former handles may give a clue to the date. The horizontal wooden pulls common from about 1900 will show two screw holes (both inside and out) further apart than you would expect on a standard handle; the semi-elliptical metal handles popular between the wars will leave three
small screw or pin holes on the outside only, arranged as the three points of a triangle; Victorian wooden knobs will leave a 1/2 inch/I cm diameter hole on both sides.
Very little decoration. Some carving on verticals and friezes of early writing-tables. Inlay, mostly in the form of stringing lines, and occasionally marquetry of neo-classical inspiration, on drawers from about 1780; revived again in late 19thC (though this tends to be heavier, executed in strongly contrasting yellow satinwood). Sometimes narrow cross-banded veneer rather than inlay.
Some use of burr or highly figured veneers throughout 19thC.
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Tags: Cabinet, cabinet maker, cupboard, Desks, drawer, frieze drawers, mahogany, marquetry, pedestal, Pedestal Desks, satinwood, section, Sides, Thomas Chippendale, victorian mahogany, Writing, writing table