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English Victorian Papier Mache Étagère
Newel Warehouse
32-00 Skillman Ave
Long Island City NY - 11101
English Victorian Papier Mache Étagère
Newel Warehouse
32-00 Skillman Ave
Long Island City NY - 11101
Victorian
Period in English furniture during the reign of Queen Victoria 1837-1901. Consists of a resurrection of many previous periods and revival imitations including: Gothic, Tudor, Elizabethan, Rococo, and Neoclassic style. This period had a focus on dark woods, heavy fabrics, embellishment, engagement with newly developed imitation materials that were facilitated by the Industrial Revolution, and a tendency towards eclecticism.
Étagère
Similar in shape and usage to the English what-not, the ètagère was a popular 18th and 19th Century French furniture form consisting of a set of free-standing or wall shelves used to display objects, sometimes with drawers or doors.
Papier-mâché
Papier-mâché is a technique using sand, chalk, and paper pulp molded while wet into decorative forms. This method was popular in 19th-century Europe and America.
Victorian
Period in English furniture during the reign of Queen Victoria 1837-1901. Consists of a resurrection of many previous periods and revival imitations including: Gothic, Tudor, Elizabethan, Rococo, and Neoclassic style. This period had a focus on dark woods, heavy fabrics, embellishment, engagement with newly developed imitation materials that were facilitated by the Industrial Revolution, and a tendency towards eclecticism.
Étagère
Similar in shape and usage to the English what-not, the ètagère was a popular 18th and 19th Century French furniture form consisting of a set of free-standing or wall shelves used to display objects, sometimes with drawers or doors.
Papier-mâché
Papier-mâché is a technique using sand, chalk, and paper pulp molded while wet into decorative forms. This method was popular in 19th-century Europe and America.
Victorian
Period in English furniture during the reign of Queen Victoria 1837-1901. Consists of a resurrection of many previous periods and revival imitations including: Gothic, Tudor, Elizabethan, Rococo, and Neoclassic style. This period had a focus on dark woods, heavy fabrics, embellishment, engagement with newly developed imitation materials that were facilitated by the Industrial Revolution, and a tendency towards eclecticism.
Étagère
Similar in shape and usage to the English what-not, the ètagère was a popular 18th and 19th Century French furniture form consisting of a set of free-standing or wall shelves used to display objects, sometimes with drawers or doors.
Papier-mâché
Papier-mâché is a technique using sand, chalk, and paper pulp molded while wet into decorative forms. This method was popular in 19th-century Europe and America.