Archive for the ‘History of Furniture Making’ Category
Saturday, May 16th, 2009
Traditional furniture, like the designs crafted by Amish wood workers of today, would not seem what it is if not for the name Sheraton. Englishman Thomas Sheraton authored and published the most important trade catalogue, “The Cabinet-Maker and Upholsterer’s Drawing Book”, in the latter eighteenth century. For better or for worse this book was so [...]
Tags: Amish, Books, cabinetmaker, draftsmanship, Furniture, furniture design, Louis XVI, Mahogany, Thomas Sheraton
Posted in Amish Furniture Styles, Chairs, Dining Room Furniture, History of Furniture Making, Upholstered Furniture | No Comments »
Monday, May 11th, 2009
Since all movements are contemporary to the time they were began the term Modern furniture may seem confusing, especially when its roots go back over one hundreds. A child spawned from the functional designs and philosophies of the Arts and Crafts Movement, Modern furniture designs was as influenced by the revolution against Victorianism as it [...]
Tags: Amish, Arts and Crafts, arts and crafts movement, Barcelona, Caledonia, Contemporary Design, Contemporary Furniture, Frank Lloyd Wright, Furniture, furniture design, Henri van de Velde, Mission, Modern Design, modern furniture, reclining chair, Sullivan, Victorianism, William Morris
Posted in Amish Furniture Styles, Arts and Crafts, History of Furniture Making, Mission, Modern & Contemporary, Oak Furniture, Organic | No Comments »
Wednesday, May 6th, 2009
Much like Gustav Stickley, a dominant influence of the Spanish settler’s furniture designs in the early colonization of America, was the lack of good tools. While, like other settlers from other countries, the Spaniards brought the influence of their home land, they were so isolated in the New World that they succumbed to native materials [...]
Tags: Gustav Stickley, Interior Design, Mission, Mission Furniture, Santa Fe Trail, solid wood, Spaniard, trastero
Posted in Accessories, Design Style, History of Furniture Making, Mission, Organic | No Comments »
Thursday, April 16th, 2009
The Amish craft solid wood designs that often replicate the popular look of Heywood-Wakefield. Unless you have a love for solid wood furniture from the golden era of Modern design (circa 1936-1966) you may be unfamiliar with the name Heywood-Wakefield and the furniture associated. Among admirers and collectors of this company’s designs it is wildly [...]
Tags: Amish, B. F. Heywood, Benjamin Heywood, Chairs, Cyrus Wakefield, Furniture, Gilbert Rhode, Heywood-Wakefield, Kohinoor, Levi Heywood, Modern Design, modern furniture, Moses Wood, Russell Wright, Seth Heywood, solid wood, Solid wood furniture, W. Joseph Carr
Posted in Collectibles, Design Style, History of Furniture Making, Maple Furniture, Modern & Contemporary | No Comments »
Wednesday, April 8th, 2009
Hepplewhite, Sheraton and Chippendale, the big three, were the Holy Trinity of furniture designers in the 18th century. Hepplewhite and Sheraton were extremely popular furniture styles in the late 1700s and remain the most desired of traditional designs even today. The traditional creations from the Amish woodworkers still keep the designs alive and affordable in solid [...]
Tags: american furniture, Amish Furniture Styles, cabinetmaker, cherry, furniture design, George Hepplewhite, hardwood, Interior Design, James Rannie, Mahogany, rosewood, Sideboard, The Amish, Thomas Chippendale, Thomas Haig, Thomas Sheraton, tulipwood, walnut
Posted in Amish Furniture Styles, Bedrooms, Chairs, Cherry Furniture, Design Style, Dining Room Furniture, History of Furniture Making, Sofas, Upholstered Furniture | 1 Comment »
Friday, April 3rd, 2009
Art Deco-
Art Deco was born in 1925 at the Paris International Exposition and lived and evolved over a quarter of a century. Evoking images of nude nymphs, geometry-centric lines curves and shapes, early chrome and glass and caricatures of greyhound dogs, Art Deco has often been misunderstood.
Within the genre of Deco there were several sub-categories. [...]
Tags: art deco, Art Nouveau, Arts and Crafts, dirk van erp, Gustav Stickley, Mission, mission designers, tiffany, William Morris
Posted in Accessories, Arts and Crafts, Bedrooms, Collectibles, Craftsman, Design Style, Dining Room Furniture, History of Furniture Making, Lamps & Lighting, Mission, Modern & Contemporary, Oak Furniture, Upholstered Furniture | No Comments »
Wednesday, March 25th, 2009
Long bike rides in the country with a camera in tow provided Dr. Wallace Nutting the opportunity and desire to become one of America’s most famous photographers. As a young student, Nutting entered Phillips Exeter Academy and in 1883 finished his studies at Harvard University, Hartford Theological Seminary and Union Theological Seminary. In 1893 the [...]
Tags: Craftsman, Dr. Nutting, Dr. Wallace Nutting, Framingham, Furniture, nutting photography, Pastor Nutting, Windsor
Posted in Art & Photography, Chairs, Design Style, History of Furniture Making | No Comments »
Monday, March 16th, 2009
The country of Ireland has had many a visitor over the centuries – however, most of them were uninvited. For better or for worse, Ireland has been a country invaded and fought over for many lifetimes. Because of the burning and pillaging of many of the invaders of the Irish isle, very few pieces of [...]
Tags: Amish Furniture Styles, claymore, Desmond Fitz, England, George I, Georgian, Glin Castle, Ireland, Irish Georgian, James Peill, Mahogany, marquetry, medieval, Queen Anne, Scotland
Posted in Amish Furniture Styles, Design Style, History of Furniture Making | No Comments »
Wednesday, March 11th, 2009
Born into a working class German-American family, Gustav (born Gustave) Stickley was born poor enough that he was put to work by his father at age 12. While William Morris was born into a posh English family and later philosophically rejected it for his utopian socialistic ideals, Gustav and his brothers were not so privileged. [...]
Tags: Amish, Art, Arts and Crafts, arts and crafts movement, Craftsman, Furniture, Gustav Stickley, hardwood, Mission, organic environment, William Morris
Posted in Amish Furniture Styles, Arts and Crafts, Chairs, Craftsman, Dining Room Furniture, History of Furniture Making, Mission, Oak Furniture, Organic | 2 Comments »
Wednesday, March 4th, 2009
William Morris (1834-1896), has often been attributed as being the inventor of the Morris reclining chair. In fact, the Victorian Morris did produce one version but, although we adopted his name to the chair, he was not the inventor. Morris is also associated with being the father of the English Arts and Crafts movement, which [...]
Tags: Amish Furniture Styles, Arts and Crafts, arts and crafts movement, Craftsman, furniture design, Gustav Stickley, Henry Hyndman, Mission, morris chair, reclining chair, socialism, William Morris
Posted in Arts and Crafts, Craftsman, History of Furniture Making, Mission, News, Organic | 2 Comments »