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English Hepplewhite Elm Wood Leather Seat Commode Armchair
Newel Warehouse
32-00 Skillman Ave
Long Island City NY - 11101
English Hepplewhite Elm Wood Leather Seat Commode Armchair
Newel Warehouse
32-00 Skillman Ave
Long Island City NY - 11101
Hepplewhite
George Hepplewhite was an English designer in the 18th century who wrote "The Cabinet Maker and Upholsterer's Guide." Hepplewhite produced designs that were slender, curvilinear, and well balanced.
Apron
A structural support placed at right angles to the underside of a shelf, chair seat, or table top to provide additional weight bearing strength and often decorative flourishes.
Splat
Central flat support between a chair's seat and the top-rail often featuring distinctive shapes and decorative designs.
Commode
French form mimicking an English chest-of-drawers, dating from the mid 17th-century and very popular in the 18th century. Fashion greatly determined variances in styles and decoration, but commodes generally are wider than they are tall.
Elm
Elm wood is a uniform and fine textured wood with a light brownish-red color tinged with darker brown ring marks. It is valued for its interlocking grain, and resistance to splitting. The most significant uses for elm wood are for wagon wheels, chair seats, and coffins.
Hepplewhite
George Hepplewhite was an English designer in the 18th century who wrote "The Cabinet Maker and Upholsterer's Guide." Hepplewhite produced designs that were slender, curvilinear, and well balanced.
Apron
A structural support placed at right angles to the underside of a shelf, chair seat, or table top to provide additional weight bearing strength and often decorative flourishes.
Splat
Central flat support between a chair's seat and the top-rail often featuring distinctive shapes and decorative designs.
Commode
French form mimicking an English chest-of-drawers, dating from the mid 17th-century and very popular in the 18th century. Fashion greatly determined variances in styles and decoration, but commodes generally are wider than they are tall.
Elm
Elm wood is a uniform and fine textured wood with a light brownish-red color tinged with darker brown ring marks. It is valued for its interlocking grain, and resistance to splitting. The most significant uses for elm wood are for wagon wheels, chair seats, and coffins.
Hepplewhite
George Hepplewhite was an English designer in the 18th century who wrote "The Cabinet Maker and Upholsterer's Guide." Hepplewhite produced designs that were slender, curvilinear, and well balanced.
Apron
A structural support placed at right angles to the underside of a shelf, chair seat, or table top to provide additional weight bearing strength and often decorative flourishes.
Splat
Central flat support between a chair's seat and the top-rail often featuring distinctive shapes and decorative designs.
Commode
French form mimicking an English chest-of-drawers, dating from the mid 17th-century and very popular in the 18th century. Fashion greatly determined variances in styles and decoration, but commodes generally are wider than they are tall.
Elm
Elm wood is a uniform and fine textured wood with a light brownish-red color tinged with darker brown ring marks. It is valued for its interlocking grain, and resistance to splitting. The most significant uses for elm wood are for wagon wheels, chair seats, and coffins.