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Chippendale Style Camelback Yellow Damask Sofa with Mahogany Frame
English Georgian Chippendale style (mid 20th Cent) camel back yellow damask sofa with out scrolled arms and a mahogany frame with six lattice carved legs.
English Georgian Chippendale style (mid 20th Cent) camel back yellow damask sofa with out scrolled arms and a mahogany frame with six lattice carved legs.
A Camel Back chair or sofa is named for its styled curve back featuring one or more humps. They come in a variety of styles but are known most commonly in Chippendale or Hepplewhite style. The top rail is in the form of a serpentine curve with two humps downward and three humps upward.
Lattice
Lattice is an openwork of various materials arranged to form an ornamental criss-cross pattern. Latticework is typically made of strips of wood or metal and is usually associated with the outdoors.
Chippendale
Thomas Chippendale (1718-1779) was one of the great cabinet makers in 18th-century England. His work shows a refinement of Georgian styles, influenced by the Gothic, Chinese, and French rococo. First of his era to extensively use mahogany rather than walnut, the prevailing wood in the Early Georgian period. In 1754 he published "The Gentlemen's and Cabinetmaker's Directory," illustrating the styles of the day.
Damask
A linen, cotton, rayon, or silk fabric with a reversible jacquard weave. Damasks are woven on a jacquard loom using predominantly monotone fibers and a combination of weaving techniques most commonly satin and twill variants creating a tone on tone pattern that is produced by the contrast of matte and reflective surfaces. Prior to the invention of the jacquard loom in the early 1800s, damasks were woven by hand and considered a luxury fabric, but the loom's ability to produce bulk yardage allowed for more widespread access to damask fabrics within middle-class households in the 19th Century.
Mahogany
Mahogany is a straight grained hard wood with silky texture, ranging in color from dark brown to red. Furniture made from mahogany became popular in Britain from Mid-18th Century on, spreading throughout Europe.
Camel back
A Camel Back chair or sofa is named for its styled curve back featuring one or more humps. They come in a variety of styles but are known most commonly in Chippendale or Hepplewhite style. The top rail is in the form of a serpentine curve with two humps downward and three humps upward.
Lattice
Lattice is an openwork of various materials arranged to form an ornamental criss-cross pattern. Latticework is typically made of strips of wood or metal and is usually associated with the outdoors.
Chippendale
Thomas Chippendale (1718-1779) was one of the great cabinet makers in 18th-century England. His work shows a refinement of Georgian styles, influenced by the Gothic, Chinese, and French rococo. First of his era to extensively use mahogany rather than walnut, the prevailing wood in the Early Georgian period. In 1754 he published "The Gentlemen's and Cabinetmaker's Directory," illustrating the styles of the day.
Damask
A linen, cotton, rayon, or silk fabric with a reversible jacquard weave. Damasks are woven on a jacquard loom using predominantly monotone fibers and a combination of weaving techniques most commonly satin and twill variants creating a tone on tone pattern that is produced by the contrast of matte and reflective surfaces. Prior to the invention of the jacquard loom in the early 1800s, damasks were woven by hand and considered a luxury fabric, but the loom's ability to produce bulk yardage allowed for more widespread access to damask fabrics within middle-class households in the 19th Century.
Mahogany
Mahogany is a straight grained hard wood with silky texture, ranging in color from dark brown to red. Furniture made from mahogany became popular in Britain from Mid-18th Century on, spreading throughout Europe.
Camel back
A Camel Back chair or sofa is named for its styled curve back featuring one or more humps. They come in a variety of styles but are known most commonly in Chippendale or Hepplewhite style. The top rail is in the form of a serpentine curve with two humps downward and three humps upward.
Lattice
Lattice is an openwork of various materials arranged to form an ornamental criss-cross pattern. Latticework is typically made of strips of wood or metal and is usually associated with the outdoors.
Chippendale
Thomas Chippendale (1718-1779) was one of the great cabinet makers in 18th-century England. His work shows a refinement of Georgian styles, influenced by the Gothic, Chinese, and French rococo. First of his era to extensively use mahogany rather than walnut, the prevailing wood in the Early Georgian period. In 1754 he published "The Gentlemen's and Cabinetmaker's Directory," illustrating the styles of the day.
Damask
A linen, cotton, rayon, or silk fabric with a reversible jacquard weave. Damasks are woven on a jacquard loom using predominantly monotone fibers and a combination of weaving techniques most commonly satin and twill variants creating a tone on tone pattern that is produced by the contrast of matte and reflective surfaces. Prior to the invention of the jacquard loom in the early 1800s, damasks were woven by hand and considered a luxury fabric, but the loom's ability to produce bulk yardage allowed for more widespread access to damask fabrics within middle-class households in the 19th Century.
Mahogany
Mahogany is a straight grained hard wood with silky texture, ranging in color from dark brown to red. Furniture made from mahogany became popular in Britain from Mid-18th Century on, spreading throughout Europe.
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