Furnishing the Home of Good Taste eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 174 pages of information about Furnishing the Home of Good Taste.

Furnishing the Home of Good Taste eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 174 pages of information about Furnishing the Home of Good Taste.
are a few examples of ladder-back and cabriole legs combined, although these are very rare.  The chair settees of the Dutch time, with backs having the appearance of chairs side by side, were also made by Chippendale.  “Love seats” were small settees.  It was naively said that “they were too large for one and too small for two.”  A large armchair that shows a decided difference in the manners of the early eighteenth century and the present day was called the “drunkard’s chair.”

[Illustration:  DIFFERENT TYPES OF CHAIR SPLATS USED BY CHIPPENDALE.]

When the craze for “Indian work” was at its height, there were many pieces of old oak and walnut furniture covered with lacquer to bring it up to the fashionable standard, but their forms were not suitable, and oak especially, with its coarse grain did not lend itself to the process.  The stands for lacquer cabinets vary in style, but were often gilded in late Louis XIV and Louis XV style.  The difference between true lacquer and its imitations is hard to explain.  The true was made by repeated coats of a special varnish, each rubbed down and allowed to become hard before the next was put on.  This gave a hard, cool, smooth surface with no stickiness.  Modern work, done with paint and French varnish, has not this delightful feeling, but is nearly always clammy to the touch, and the colors are hurt by the process of polishing.  Chippendale did not use much lacquer, but in the “Director” he often says such and such designs would be suitable for it.

Much of the furniture that Chippendale made was heavy, but the best of it had much beauty.  His delicate fretwork tea-tables are a delight, with their fretwork cupboards and carving.  He seemed to combine many sides in his artistic temperament, a fact that many people lay to his power of assimilating the work of others.  He did not make sideboards in our sense of the word.  His were large side-tables, sometimes with a drawer for silver and sometimes not.  Pier-tables were very much like them in shape, but smaller, and were often gilded to match the mirrors which were placed above them.

The larger pieces of Chippendale furniture have the same characteristic of perfect workmanship and detail which the chairs possess.  Dining-tables were made in sections consisting of two semi-circular ends and two center pieces with flaps which could all be joined together and make a very large table.  The beds he made had four posts and cornice tops elaborately carved and often gilded, with a strong Louis XV feeling.  The curtains hung from the inside of the cornice.  He also made many other styles of beds, such as canopy beds, tent beds, flat tester beds, Chinese beds, Gothic beds:  there was almost nothing he did not make for the house from wall brackets to the largest wardrobes.

To many people used to the simple Chippendale furniture which is commonly seen, the idea of rich and beautiful carving and gilding comes as a surprise, and even in the “Director” there are no plates which show his most beautiful work.  His elaborate furniture was naturally chiefly order work, and so was not pictured, and much of it that is left is still in the possession of the descendants of the original owners.  The small number of authentic pieces which have reached public sales have been eagerly snapped up by private collectors and museums at large prices.

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Furnishing the Home of Good Taste from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.