Queen anne style file cabinets
This earlyth century walnut bookcase is veneered throughout in figured walnut, and is feather banded. The bold cross-gra Category s Antique Queen Anne Cabinets. Fantastic English Queen Anne Welsh dresser cupboard cabinet. Upper cupboard section with a scalloped upper skirt frieze over three front shelves with 2 inlaid front cabinet doors ove Well carved chest on stand with gadrooned top edge of chest and gadrooned edge of plinth base, circa Plinth base has a carved shell in center of apron with Queen Ann legs that Queen Anne Japanned Cabinet on Chest.
Rectangular top over a pair of doors opening to an interior fitted with drawers, the base with two drawers over two long drawers raised on bracket feet. Drawers with ring handles and By Thomasville.
Highboy dresser by Thomasville in very nice vintage condition. Apposing pair of Chinese Export black lacquer tall cabinet made for the English market, mid 20th century. Each cabinet has top and bottom compartments with apposing doors revealing Queen Anne period furnishings such as this walnut secretary are incredibly rare and important examples of English cabinetmaking. This secretary is of the most outstanding caliber, bo A large and very beautiful antique walnut tallboy cabinet on chest.
It is of superb quality, with gorgeous bur A fine Queen Anne period burr walnut bureau bookcase of narrow proportions, the upper body with a beveled mercury mirror to the door, opening to reveal five drawers to the interior, This is an elegant English black lacquered English Queen Anne cabinet chest on Stand decorated overall with gilt chinoiseries.
This case piece was originally a traveling secretary. A very impressive and good quality pair of figured Walnut bow fronted Queen Anne style side cabinets, each with wonderful brass hinged and raised on carved cabriole legs with foliate A beautiful burr walnut and glass display cabinet in the antique Queen Anne style.
It is a lovely size and is very well American Queen Anne cherry flat top highboy with a molded edge cornice, two flanking upper case drawers with a centered fan carved drawer and four lower graduated drawers retaining t A fine 18th century English Queen Anne-period furnishings such as this walnut secretary are incredibly rare and important examples of English cabinetmaking, all original.
This secret Early 18th century walnut cabinet or bookcase. This bookcase is made of burl walnut quarter cut veneer with feather banding around the drawers and pre-cockbeading double molded edge Jasper Cabinet Co. Jasper cabinet Co.
Item features bonnet top, solid wood construction, beautiful wood grain, 2 part construction, lighted Antique English leaded glass curio cabinet or bookcase featuring Queen Ann styling with a rose or flower slag glass insert and cabriole legs. Measures: 53". Related Items. This unusual petite size Queen Anne style carved mahogany lowboy features a polished top above three drawers with original brasses above a three side configured scalloped apron resti W 25 in.
D 18 in. French with floral inlaid motif designs, late 19th century. Keep in mind that on "country" pieces -- those made away from the refined cabinet maker's workshops in major Colonial cities -- the cabriole leg is not as prevalent. Legs may have turned embellishments, but they are often straight rather than curved. Spade feet can be found on country pieces but they are usually less refined than on higher quality furniture made by major craftsmen of the era.
They are usually less valuable as well, as you might have guessed. In addition to the ubiquitous, curving cabriole legs so often found on Queen Anne pieces, there are other characteristics to look for.
Not all of these design elements were incorporated into every piece, but they were used frequently and should be noted when familiarizing yourself with this Colonial-period style:. Many Queen Anne style pieces were primarily crafted of walnut, but cherry and maple were used as well.
Imported mahogany became popular with furniture craftsmen working in this style around , according to Schwartz. Mahogany was frequently imported from the Caribbean, so it was most commonly used in and around port cities. Secondary woods making up these pieces were usually maple, pine, ash, cedar, beech, and tulip, among others. Differences in types of woods can provide clues when pieces are not all original.
For example, when a tabletop has been replaced or a leg has been repaired the woods used may not match up to the rest of the piece. We've recently updated the Chairish, Inc. Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. If you continue to use these services, you're letting us know that you've read and agree to the changes. You have the option to disable non-essential cookies below.
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View All Furniture. All Art. Chairish Artist Collective. All Lighting. Outdoor Lighting. Vintage Lighting. View All Lighting. All Decor. Organization All Organization Baskets Boxes. Vintage Decor. View All Decor. When it flourished in America, of course, the idea was transformed. Ye olde simple brick house of the 17th century became, in its s revival, the most complex and surface-ornamented of Victorian house styles.
By the style appeared in pattern books—Americanized and adapted for city lot and simple cottage. The explosion of turned ornament led to the spindlework interpretation, called Eastlake after the English tastemaker and furniture designer who, by the way, repudiated such gauche American use of his name.
By the s, the all-American Free Classic adaptation was widespread. Now porches had classical columns instead of turned posts. The houses also had Palladian windows and pedimented entries—it was the beginning of the Colonial Revival.
The wide front porch is a favorite spot; children love the porch swing, a replacement made to replicate the original seen in old photographs. Early examples are unmistakably English, borrowing such details as half-timbering and carving from 17th-century architecture. Bold examples by such American architects as H.
Richardson are in the tradition of Richard Norman Shaw, the former Gothicist and English architect who interpreted vernacular houses during the midth century. Many of these early examples incorporate masonry or stucco and feature prominent chimneys. Expansive porches—piazzas or verandahs—are a distinctly American innovation. A tower or turret marks the style for even novice old-house buffs.
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