Posts Tagged ‘secretaire’
Sunday, November 8th, 2009
ANTIQUE OAK, WALNUT AND MAHOGANY SECRETAIRES
The term secretaire is a kind of catch-all word for antique writing furniture other than out-and-out bureaux, davenports, bonheurs-du-jour, pedestal desks and other specific items. It is used for fall-front walnut pieces, often described in their original papers as scrutoires (or escritoires) and for later pieces of a writing nature.
A [...]
Tags: Antique, antique oak, bureaux, drawer, mahogany, mahogany chest, Pedestal Desks, secretaire, secretaires, walnut, walnut pieces, wood
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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
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Sunday, November 1st, 2009
DESKS: KNEEHOLE
Kneehole desks were made in the 18th century about 1700`s-1780`s
Mahogany kneehole desk with bracket feet about 1760-1770,
A small and attractive piece, originally devised as a dressing-table, not a desk, but in appearance like a chest of drawers with a central recessed kneehole space backed by a cupboard. Occasionally a hinged top, lifting to reveal [...]
Tags: Antique, chest, chest of drawers, CHESTS, chests of drawers, decorative veneers, Desks, Door, drawer fronts, Drawers, dressing table, Edwardian, half columns, mahogany, marquetry, secretaire, Straight, VALUES
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Thursday, October 29th, 2009
English Walnut and Mahogany Secretaires
A William and Mary period fall-front secretaire cabinet on chest in walnut. c. 1690. The heavy mouldings in cross grained walnut, convex cushion drawer, and bun feet show the Dutch influence of William’s reign. The piece is veneered in fairly straight grained English walnut without much figure and shows herring-bone inlay [...]
Tags: bone inlay, bun feet, bureaux, chest, chest section, drawer, George, hepplewhite, Mary, mary period, period style, Price, secretaire, secretaires, Sheraton, tallboys, Value, veneer, walnut, walnut veneer, William, william and mary
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Thursday, October 29th, 2009
A Chippendale mahogany kneehole desk of exceptional quality, c. 1760. The front is of serpentine shape and the choice of veneers is extremely fine, showing pronounced figure.
The mouldings show considerable refinement. A cock bead is to be seen around the drawer edges and the shaping of the bracket feet is one typically attributed to the [...]
Tags: Chippendale, Desks, drawer, Drawers, ENGLISH, library tables, mahogany, period, Price, Queen Anne, secretaire, Value, walnut, wood, yew, yew wood
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Sunday, October 18th, 2009
Fall Front Desks and Secretaires
As antique desks especially for writing grew in popularity in the 18th century, different styles were developed. The secretaire a abattant, a tall French writing desk, was first produced in the 1700s in Paris by the cabinet-maker, Jean-Francois Oeben.
The secretaire a abattant looked, from its flat-fronted exterior appearance, like an armoire, [...]
Tags: antique desks, brass, brass frame, cabinet maker, cupboard, Desks, drawer, DROP-LEAF, ENGLISH, FRENCH, Front, front desks, furniture design, inlaid, kingwood, lacquer, mahogany, marble, marquetry, neoclassical furniture, ormolu, rosewood, secretaire, secretaire a abattant, secretaires, wardrobe, writing desk
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