The Complete Home eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 223 pages of information about The Complete Home.

The Complete Home eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 223 pages of information about The Complete Home.

The davenport in mahogany or oak, in a plain or striped velour tapestry, felt filled, with good springs, built on straight lines with claw feet, broad arms, and heavy back, is a good article and will not leave much change out of a $50 bill.  That represents a fair price for a fair quality, and it would be better to do without the davenport than to go in for something too cheap.  The sort that have detached cushions in soft leather are very nice and practically dustless.  The same is true of easy chairs so provided.  A handsome weathered-oak davenport with cushions of this kind will be found marked somewhere about $65, while half that price pays for an easy chair of the same style.  The cushions are filled with felt.  Springs and fillings in davenports, easy chairs, and couches should be most thoroughly investigated.  If there are carvings they must be subjected to the severest tests of appropriateness, and in no event should they be where they will come in frequent contact with other articles or with persons.

BOOKCASES

Bookcases in weathered oak, with the top sections of the doors in leaded glass, seem worth the prices at $28 for 30-inch, $43.50 for 4-foot, and $47.50 for 5-foot; yet a simple 30-inch golden oak case “made in Grand Rapids,” and of which no one need be ashamed, costs but $14.  Sectional cases are very convenient, and are now being designed in artistic styles, but are not yet altogether approvable for the parlor or living room.  For the library simply, they are to be recommended.  Bookcases and other heavy pieces should either set solidly upon the floor or have sufficient open space beneath them to permit cleaning.  Unless their contents are (mistakenly) hidden by curtains, the bookcases should not be placed in too strong sunlight, as some bindings fade rapidly.  Nor should they be near the heat radiators, or against a wall that may possess moisture.  The piano, too, must be protected against too great heat or moisture, and in a stone or brick house should be placed against a partition rather than the outside wall.

SUNDRIES

Useful, but not life-or-death essentials, are a tabouret at, say, $3.25, a footrest for a little less, and a magazine rack for $5 or $10.  The problem of keeping periodicals in easy reach without too much of a “litter’ry” effect has not yet been solved.  The open rack is the best compromise between sightliness and utility, because it is more apt to be used than the more ambitious arrangements with doors.  In the general treatment of the living room the piano and its case are not to be overlooked, and the presence of a piano also suggests the music cabinet, with its problem similar to that of the magazine rack.  As music is not kept so well “stirred up,” however, the cabinet with a tight door is “indicated.”

WILLOW FURNITURE

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Complete Home from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.