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A Short
Glossary of Antiques Terminology Are there
times when you wonder what all
those strange words really mean!
Here are a few of those most frequently used when
describing antiques.
Acanthus
A term used to
describe a decorative
feature frequently carved
on furniture and
representing the leaf of
the Acanthus spinosus, a
motif which was used as
far back as Greek and
Roman times
Adam Style
Robert Adam was the
second son of William
Adam, the foremost
Scottish architect of his
time, who worked from
Edinburgh in the Palladian
style, and after his
father's death he was
taken into partnership by
his elder brother John. In
1754 he left for a tour of
Europe with a young
nobleman, returning in
1758 to London with his
head full of details of
Roman antiquities. His
younger brother James
joined him during 1763,
and together they
developed the 'Adam Style'
marked by a new lightness
and freedom in the use of
the classical elements of
architecture. "Works
in Architecture of Robert
and James Adam,
Esquires" was
published 1773.
Regarding furniture the
Adam brothers played a
leading role, as in an
Adam interior everything
was to be part of the
unified scheme. The style
is typified by an elegance
and sense of proportion;
extensive use is made of
paterae, anthemion,
delicate flutings, and
wreaths of flowers
festooned between rams'
head.
By the late 18th C.
however Robert Adam's
popularity was beginning
to decline, and Horace
Walpole, after visiting
the new Carlton House,
wrote, "How sick one
shall be, after this
chaste palace, of Mr.
Adam's gingerbread and
sippets of
embroidery."
Amboyna
A rare wood of a
mellow golden brown colour
with intricate bird's eye
figuring, used for
veneering. Originally a
native tree of the West
Indies
Anthemion
Classical
ornamentation based on the
blossom of the honeysuckle
.
Astragal
A small moulding; now
normally a term used when
describing the division
between panes in a glazed
cabinet. From the Greek
word for moulding - astragalus.
Biedermeir
Roughly it translates
from the German as Honest
John - a solid dependable
style for the citizenry.
The style was first in
vogue during the early
part of the 19th C.,
contemporary with our
Regency period.
Boulle (Sometimes seen spelt
Buhl)
Andre Charles Boulle
(1642-1732) was a famous
French cabinet maker who
perfected a marquetry of
tortoiseshell and brass as
a veneer for furniture;
the design is of scroll,
flower and arabesque
motifs often inlaid into
ebony. Little Boulle
furniture was made in
England in this early
period, though it enjoyed
a revival of popularity in
the 19th Century.
Boxwood
From the Box tree,
Buxus sempervirens, a pale
yellowish-white wood, very
hard and smooth and much
used for banding and
inlay. It is cut across
the grain and sometimes
stained green.
Bracket Foot
A foot extending each
way from the corner of the
base of a piece of
furniture. A bracket foot
can be of fairly simple
construction, or may be
splayed outwards at the
toes, or of ogee
construction (see below)
Brushing Slide
A pull out slide at a
convenient height on a
chest of drawers, or
similar piece which forms
a temporary work surface
on which to brush clothes.
(Remember roads were
muddy, most people
travelled by foot or on
horseback, and outer
clothing was often of woolen fabric and not
easily washable).
Bun Foot
A foot somewhat in the
shape of a bun, most often
used on chests of drawers
and bureaux etc. Popular
in the 17th and early 18th
C.
Bureau (the plural
being Bureaux though often
spelt Bureaus nowadays)
These evolved from
portable writing boxes
with sloping lids, which
were later fitted with
stands. By the late 17th
C. they began to have
further drawers fitted
beneath. The term is now
normally applied to a
writing desk with an
angled fall to the front
concealing drawers and/or
pigeon holes, and fitted
with further drawers below
the angled fall.
Burr
A veneer cut from
transverse slices of the
knarled roots or branch
junctions of trees,
notably the walnut, oak,
elm, and thuja.
Cabriole Leg
This type of leg first
became popular in England
and France in the late
17th C., although it was
known in the ancient
world. Based on the
legs of four footed
animals, and often with
realistic modelling of the
hoof and sometimes hair of
the creature, the
simplified later form is
of two elongated curves -
the upper one convex, the
lower one concave, forming
a long slow ‘S’
sometimes joined by
stretchers. The knees
often have carved
decoration, and the legs
may terminate in a scroll,
slipper, pad, hoof, or
claw-and-ball foot.
Canterbury
A term now applied to
a stand with divisions for
holding sheet music
(though more often used
for magazines) it was
originally said to have
been a type of dumb waiter
invented by an Archbishop
of Canterbury - Sheraton
describes it as ‘made to
stand by a table at
supper, with a circular
end, and three partitions
crosswise to hold knives,
forks and plates at that
end which is made circular
on purpose’.
Carlton Desk or Carlton
Table
A writing table on
legs with a raised back
and sides fitted with
pigeonholes and small
drawers etc. Apparently
named in compliment to the
then Prince of Wales,
(afterwards George IV) who
lived at Carlton House.
Caryatides
Columns or pilasters
with the top half in the
form of woman. Those
featuring the male form
are normally called
Atlantes.
Chaise Longe
A type of low chair or
couch with only one end
and sometimes a partial
back and a seat long
enough to support the legs
usually made for a lady to
recline on. From the
French for long chair.
Chasing
Ornamentation of metal
by means of a hard metal
burin, used to form raised
and indented sections and
lines
Chiffonnier
Sometimes mis-spelt as Cheffonier, it is normally
a small sideboard with one
or two shelves at the back
and two doors enclosing
shelving to the base, and
often fitted with a
concealed drawer above the
cupboards. The word
literally means a gatherer
up of small articles (in
France a chiffonnier was a
rag-and-bone man! - Not
that we have these in
France or England these
days!)
Chippendale
Thomas Chippendale,
was christened in 1718 at Otley, Yorkshire. His
early life is sketchy but
it is thought he moved to
Worcester with his father
who worked there as a
cabinet-maker, and that
they later moved to
London. By 1753 he moved
to 60 St. Martin's Lane
where he had a showroom
and workshop employing
some twenty workmen, and
this remained his home for
the rest of his life. In
1754 he published his
celebrated book ‘The
Gentleman and
Cabinet-Maker's Director’
this work was one of the
most important collection
of furniture designs
published in England,
illustrating almost every
type of mid-18th C.
domestic furniture, and
containing 160 plates. In
1755 he published a second
edition, and the third
edition containing 200
plates was published in
weekly parts from 1759-62.
The designs were largely
Chippendale's improvements
on the fashionable
furniture styles of the
time.
Rococo, Chinese and
Gothic influences show
strongly in Chippendale's
designs, particularly in
chair backs, and
case-furniture. From the
1760s onward, he was
influenced by the great
English architect Robert
Adam, and adopted the new
Neo-classical style. This
final phase is notable for
mahogany and marquetried
satinwood furniture. The
superb satinwood and
inlaid commodes (possibly
designed by his son - also
called Thomas Chippendale)
and other furniture at
Harewood House are
masterpieces of the
cabinetmaker's craft.
Claw and Ball Foot
Beloved of
Chippendale, it is
probably of Chinese origin
and believed to represent
the three clawed foot of
the dragon (in mythology a
very lucky beast)
clutching the sacred
pearl, and was introduced
by the Dutch late in the
17th C.
Cock-Beading
A small rounded
projecting moulding used
around the edges of
drawers. Probably used in
the sense of something
which is raised or
standing proud. i.e.. hay
cock.
Console Table
A console is a bracket
often in the form of an
S-Scroll or curve. A
console table is a side
table normally fixed to
the wall, sometimes with
receding legs, giving a
bracket like effect.
Introduced from France in
18th C. they are also
known as pier tables, as
they were often sited on
the pier wall between tall
windows.
Court Cupboard
A cupboard with a
smaller cupboard over it,
often richly carved, and
used by the family for
wine etc, as distinguished
from a livery cupboard
which would have been used
by retainers for more
mundane fare.
Cross Banding
Short sections of
veneer laid at right
angles to the longest
grain of the main surface,
originally used as a
protective edging, it
rapidly gained favour for
its decorative qualities,
and can often form part of
a decorative inlaid
banding.
Cupboard
This word refers back
to the original design,
which was a board, or
table, on which cups,
drinking vessels and other
necessaries for meals were
placed. There were several
shelves- the number of
which bore relation to the
rank of the owner -
surmounted by a canopy;
eventually doors were
added, and it became a
Court Cupboard (see above)
gradually metamorphosising
into the cupboard as we
know it today.
Davenport
A small writing desk
with a lift up writing
slope, and a range of
drawers at the side.
Popular in the 19th C., it
was named after a Captain
Davenport, who apparently
commissioned one to take
with him on campaign.
Dresser
A side table of the
farmhouse type, used for
dressing food before
serving, and with drawers
to the front and either
cupboards beneath, or a
pot-board shelf. There may
be a narrow range of
shelves, sometimes added
at a later date, on which
plates etc. were
displayed. It seems to
have become a recognized
piece of furniture from
the 17th C. onwards: often
called a Welsh Dresser
there is no necessary
geographical connection
with Wales, although many
do come from this area of
the country.
Feather Banding
An inlaid edging or
banding named because of
the similarity of its
pattern to the flight
veins of a feather. It was
introduced during the
latter part of the 17th C.
and is most often seen on
the walnut case furniture
of this period.
Fielded Panel
In heraldic language
‘field’ means the
general surface of a
shield. In furniture the
word is used in a similar
sense to describe a panel,
the surface of which is on
the same plane as the
surrounding woodwork, but
which is defined by a
sunken section often with mouldings.
Fluted
Flutings are vertical
channels or grooves
separated by a sharp edge
or arris. When the
mouldings are convex
rather than concave they
are called reedings.
Gadroon (From
the French godron - a
plait or ruffle.)
Gadrooning is used as
an embellishment to the
edges of items. In wooden
items it is normally
carved, though in
metalwork it would be
cast.
Gate Leg
A type of table with
drop leaves, normally oval
in shape, which are
supported on hinged legs
resembling a gate in
construction.
Girandole
Originally a branched
candlestick or chandelier
for use on the table, or
fixed as a bracket to a
wall frequently with a
mirror attached, it is a
term now normally applied
only to the latter .
Harewood
A green grey coloured
veneer usually of stained
sycamore, and most often
used as a contrasting
inlay.
Hepplewhite
George Hepplewhite
(sometimes wrongly spelt
Heppelwhite - occasionally
even by himself!) was
probably apprenticed to
the well-known cabinet
maker Gillow of Lancaster.
He went into business on
his own account, and by
the time of his death in
1786 was the proprietor of
a considerable business in Cripplegate. His widow,
Alice, continued the
business under the name of
A. Hepplewhite & Co,
and in 1788 it was she who
published the influential
"The Cabinet-Maker
and Upholsterers'
Guide", with further
editions in 1789 and 1794.
Hepplewhite style is
characterized by the
perfection of workmanship,
lightness of construction,
and elegance of form.
These characteristics are
particularly noticeable in
his chair designs with
shield and heart-shaped
backs, often carved with
wheat-ears, honeysuckle
(anthemion), swags of
drapery, and Prince of
Wales Feathers
Herring Bone Inlay
An inlaid banding
named because of the
similarity of its pattern
to that of the main bones
in a herring. It was
introduced during the
latter part of the 17th C.
and is most often seen on
the walnut case furniture
of this period.
Hock Leg
A cabriole leg with a
broken curve to the inside
of the knee, echoing the
shape of a quadruped’s
hock.
Hoof Foot
Foot of a piece of
furniture which is carved
to resemble that of a
quadruped, either solid or
cloven. Known in the
ancient world in was
introduced to England from
France in the 17th C.
Husk Ornamentation
Often used as a carved
motif it represents the
stylized form of the
Garrya eliptica.
Incised Decoration
Thin decorative lines
worked so as to be below
the general surrounding
plane of the main surface.
Inlay
Decoration to a
surface formed by the
removal some of the
surface, which is then
replaced with a
contrasting material.
Loo Table
A table designed for
the game of Loo, a
six-handed card game
popular in the 19th C.
Usually having an oval or
round top, and with a
hinged and snap mechanism
fitted to a pedestal base,
so that the table could be
stored when not in use.
Low Boy
A small table fitted
with drawers, first made
in the early 17th C. and
used as a writing or
dressing table. When there
are further drawers above
it is termed a High-Boy,
though this seems to be a
mainly American
terminology, and in
England such a piece would
be called a chest on
stand.
Lustre
Prismatic cut glass
pendants, largely used in
candelabra and
chandeliers, or items
designed to reflect light;
also used to describe
those light reflecting
metallic glazes made from
platinum, silver or copper
etc., which are used in
the decoration of pottery
and china.
Marquetry
Elaborate veneered or
inlaid designs in various
coloured woods, sometimes
including ivory, or metals
such as silver; usually
floral or natural in
design; as opposed to
parquetry which is based
on geometric shapes.
Ogee
A design where one
part is concave and the
other is convex, giving an
s-shape outline, normally
used to describe the
mouldings or the feet of
pieces.
Ormolu
A type of brass composed
of around 75 parts of
copper to 25 zinc,
resulting in a colour more
similar to gold than that
of ordinary brass.
Normally ornately cast and
chased, it was usually
then mercury gilded to
prevent tarnishing.
Oviform
Shaped like an egg.
Oyster Veneer
Where decorative pieces of
wood have been cut
transversely from smaller
branches or saplings, the
resulting ring-like grain
of the wood being
reminiscent of the
markings on an oyster
shell.
Parquetry
A decorative pattern
formed from different
types of wood but applied
in a geometric design as
compared to marquetry.
Parcel Gilding
Only selected portions of
the surface are gilded -
normally the areas with
carved detail - the
remainder of the surface
being polished. This
was a style popular around
the late 17th to early
18th century, though there
was a resurgence in the
Regency period.
Patera
Originally a shallow dish
or saucer of foliate
design used for drinking
purposes by the
Romans. The name was
also applied to
architectural ornaments of
similar form during the
classical period. Now used
for round or oval shapes
applied to furniture
either to cover holes or
joints, or simply as a
decorative motif,
sometimes they are carved
with a rose motif and are
then termed rosettes.
Pembroke Table
A table with two hinged
flaps on the longest
sides, supported by
folding brackets; mostly
fitted with a drawer at
one end of the shorter
side, and often with a
matching dummy drawer at
the opposing end, though
sometimes with a drawer at
each end. Said to
have been named after the
Countess of Pembroke.
Pie Crust Edge
An edge moulding of
C-scrolls and S-scrolls
and ogees which somewhat
resembles the edge of a
pastry pie-crust.
Pigeon Holes
Small compartments in a
bureau or secretaire
reminiscent of the
entrances to a dove-cot .
Pilaster
A flat column or pier,
with a base and capital,
and very slightly proud of
the surface.
Pole Screen
A small, often shaped,
screen supported on a tall
slender pole normally with
a tripod base, and
adjustable so that a
lady's complexion might be
protected from the heat of
a strong fire.
Quartetto Tables
A set of four tables of
light construction and
small size, but normal
table height, being of
diminishing size and
designed to nest one
within another.
Sheraton is thought to
have been the first to
devise them, and they are
usually in this style.
Ribbon-Back
Where the central splat of
a chair is carved to
represent puckered ribbons
tied in bows. The
style was introduced from
France in the mid-18th
Century and was much
favoured by Chippendale,
who refers to it in his
Director (q.v.) as a
"Ribband-Back
Chair".
Sofa Table
Traditionally a table of
long oblong form, with a
drop leaf on each of the
shorter sides supported by
brackets, and normally
with two drawers and two
dummy drawers along the
long sides. Now
often used to refer to any
long table which will
stand behind a sofa and
take a lamp.
Thomas Sheraton, who seems
to have invented the form,
describes it thus in his Cabinet
Dictionary (London,
1803) pages 305-306, as
"…used before a
sofa, and are generally
made between 5 and 6 feet
long; ...the frame is
divided into two drawers…The
ladies chiefly occupy them
to draw, write or read
upon."
Spindle
(From
the Latin spina, a thorn,
indicating anything
slender)
A slender turned rod used
in furniture construction
from the earliest times,
and still in use
today. Seen
particularly in chairs,
but also in screens, and
in openings of early
cupboards. Spindle is also
used to denote the small
bar, shaped at both ends
and used for hand spinning
before the invention of
the spinning wheel in
Brunswick in 1530.
Splat
The central upright
portion of a chair back
contained within the side
uprights, the top rail and
the seat.
Spoon Back
The shaping of a high back
chair to fit the shape of
the spine, also sometimes
known as spooning.
Stringing
A term for the thin, fine
lines of contrasting wood
inlay used as decoration.
Sutherland Table
A table where the two drop
leaves reach nearly to the
floor, but the central
section is very narrow, so
when it is folded down it
occupies little space, but
gives a large usable
surface when
open.
Tunbridge Ware
Decorative veneer work,
originally made at
Tunbridge Wells, where
small rods of wood of
different colours are
glued together in bundles
and then cut across the
grain, so that the ends
form a pattern which gives
the appearance of minute
mosaic work.
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