Posts Tagged ‘country’
Sunday, November 1st, 2009
DESKS: SECRETAIRES AND SECRETAIRE BOOKCASES
About 1710-1830
Known in the 18thC as a secretary, this piece of furniture appears as a chest of drawers with a full-width, deep, top drawer fitted like a bureau with small drawers, pigeon-holes and cupboards. The drawer pulls half out and its front drops down to form a writing-surface.
Frequently a single bookcase/display [...]
Tags: BOOKCASES, bureau, chest of drawers, country, cupboard, Desks, display cabinet, furniture, Regency, satinwood, secretaire, secretaire bookcases, secretaires, tallboy, top drawer, VALUES
Posted in Antique Secretaires | No Comments »
Thursday, October 29th, 2009
English Bureau Bookcase
A Queen Anne walnut bureau bookcase of the slender ’single width’ type with simple bookcase above. There is a chamfered edge period glass mirror in the door. The bureau section exhibits all the characteristics of ordinary bureaux of the period - herring-bone inlays and cross banding, drawer edge mouldings and stepped interior. The [...]
Tags: 18th century, bone inlay, bookcase, chest of drawers, commodes, country, Drawers, ENGLISH, glass mirror, hepplewhite, inlays, oak, quality mahogany, Queen Anne, veneer, veneers, walnut
Posted in Bureau Bookcases | No Comments »
Thursday, October 29th, 2009
ANTIQUE ENGLISH BUREAUX
Before antique bureaux in the Middle Ages many small portable oak desks were made consisting of a simple box with sloping hinged lid on which the owner could write and keep his papers inside. Towards the end of the 17th century this form of desk appears to have been also made on a [...]
Tags: 17th century, Antique Bureaux, bookcase, bureau, Cabinet, cabriole legs, chest, country, desk section, Desks, ENGLISH, furniture, mahogany, middle ages, oak desks, Price, Queen Anne, table, top drawer, Value, walnut
Posted in Antique Bureaux | No Comments »