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American Mid-Century Style Black Leather Channel Tufted 2-Seat Sofa with Pull Out Bed
Newel Warehouse
32-00 Skillman Ave
Long Island City NY - 11101
American Mid-Century Style Black Leather Channel Tufted 2-Seat Sofa with Pull Out Bed
Newel Warehouse
32-00 Skillman Ave
Long Island City NY - 11101
Chesterfield
The Chesterfield sofa is a large couch with out scrolled arms with a continuous straight back and upholstered ends. A typical Chesterfield is upholstered in a dark leather with button tufting and nailhead trim. The original Chesterfield has been credited to Lord Philip Stanhope, fourth Earl of Chesterfield, in the mid-1700s. Stanhope commissioned a design with the intention to allow a gentleman to sit upright without wrinkling their garments.The sofa design became quite popular during Queen Victoria’s reign and is often thought of in relation to British country homes and fraternal clubs.
Chesterfield
The Chesterfield sofa is a large couch with out scrolled arms with a continuous straight back and upholstered ends. A typical Chesterfield is upholstered in a dark leather with button tufting and nailhead trim. The original Chesterfield has been credited to Lord Philip Stanhope, fourth Earl of Chesterfield, in the mid-1700s. Stanhope commissioned a design with the intention to allow a gentleman to sit upright without wrinkling their garments.The sofa design became quite popular during Queen Victoria’s reign and is often thought of in relation to British country homes and fraternal clubs.
Chesterfield
The Chesterfield sofa is a large couch with out scrolled arms with a continuous straight back and upholstered ends. A typical Chesterfield is upholstered in a dark leather with button tufting and nailhead trim. The original Chesterfield has been credited to Lord Philip Stanhope, fourth Earl of Chesterfield, in the mid-1700s. Stanhope commissioned a design with the intention to allow a gentleman to sit upright without wrinkling their garments.The sofa design became quite popular during Queen Victoria’s reign and is often thought of in relation to British country homes and fraternal clubs.