22
Furniture Styles

Furniture Styles. Jacobean (1600-1690) Jacobean is an English style of furniture, which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs,

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Furniture Styles. Jacobean (1600-1690) Jacobean is an English style of furniture, which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs,

Furniture Styles

Page 2: Furniture Styles. Jacobean (1600-1690) Jacobean is an English style of furniture, which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs,

Jacobean (1600-1690)Jacobean is an English style of furniture,

which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs, sturdy construction, ornate carvings, and a dark finish. Much of Early American furniture was patterned after this style.

Page 3: Furniture Styles. Jacobean (1600-1690) Jacobean is an English style of furniture, which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs,

Early American (1640-1700)Early American furniture is rudimentary,

utilitarian furniture made from local woods. It was brought from or modeled after European furniture styles, particularly from England, France, the Netherlands, Scandinavia, and Spain.

Page 4: Furniture Styles. Jacobean (1600-1690) Jacobean is an English style of furniture, which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs,

William and Mary (1690-1725)William and Mary is a European influenced

style, named after the reign of William and Mary of England (1689-1694). William and Mary has Dutch and Chinese influences. It is characterized by trumpet turned legs terminating in a ball or Spanish foot, padded or caned chair seats, and Oriental lacquer-work.

Page 5: Furniture Styles. Jacobean (1600-1690) Jacobean is an English style of furniture, which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs,

Queen Anne (1700-1755)The Queen Anne style is a refinement of

the William and Mary style with a moderate proportion and graceful appearance. It is characterized by cabriole legs terminating in a pad or drake foot, fiddle-back chair backs, and bat wing shaped drawer pulls. It is named after Queen Anne of England who reigned from 1702-1714.

Page 6: Furniture Styles. Jacobean (1600-1690) Jacobean is an English style of furniture, which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs,

Colonial (1700-1780)The Colonial style combines characteristics

of William and Mary, Queen Anne and Chippendale. Colonial furniture tended to be more conservative and less ornate than English and European furniture of the same style period.

Page 7: Furniture Styles. Jacobean (1600-1690) Jacobean is an English style of furniture, which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs,

Georgian (1714-1760)The Georgian style is a more ornate version

of Queen Anne with heavier proportions, elaborately carved cabriole legs terminating in a pad or ball-and-claw foot, ornate carvings, pierced back splats and the use of gilding. It is named after George I and George II who reigned England from 1714-1760.

Page 8: Furniture Styles. Jacobean (1600-1690) Jacobean is an English style of furniture, which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs,

Pennsylvania Dutch (1720-1830)Pennsylvania Dutch is a simple, utilitarian

American country style of furniture with Germanic influences. It is characterized by colorful folk painting on case pieces.

Page 9: Furniture Styles. Jacobean (1600-1690) Jacobean is an English style of furniture, which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs,

Chippendale (1750-1790) The Chippendale style is named after British

designer and cabinet maker Thomas Chippendale who published his furniture designs in "The Gentleman and Cabinet Maker's Director" in 1754. The Chippendale style can be classified into three types: French influence, Chinese influence and Gothic influence. In the United States, the Chippendale style was a more elaborate development of the Queen Anne style with cabriole legs, ball-and-claw foot, and broken pediment scroll top on tall case pieces.

Page 10: Furniture Styles. Jacobean (1600-1690) Jacobean is an English style of furniture, which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs,

Chippendale

Page 11: Furniture Styles. Jacobean (1600-1690) Jacobean is an English style of furniture, which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs,

Robert Adams Furniture1728 -1792    Robert Adam (3 July 1728 .

3 March 1792) was a Scottish neoclassical architect, interior designer and furniture designer. He developed the "Adam Style", and his theory of "movement" in architecture, based on his studies of antiquity, by contrasting room sizes and decorative schemes.He replaced the ornate curvature of the Chippendale designs with the straight lines of Roman columns. The chair back usually has the classical motif like the shape of a Greek lyre.Furniture at this time was often made of mahogany and satinwood.

Page 12: Furniture Styles. Jacobean (1600-1690) Jacobean is an English style of furniture, which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs,

Hepplewhite (1765-1800)Hepplewhite is a neoclassic style

characterized by a delicate appearance, tapered legs, and the use of contrasting veneers and inlay. It is named after British designer and cabinetmaker George Hepplewhite whose designs in "The Cabinet Maker and Upholsterers Guide" were published posthumously in 1788. This style was reproduced in the United States particularly in the Carolinas, Maryland, New England, New York, and Virginia.

Page 13: Furniture Styles. Jacobean (1600-1690) Jacobean is an English style of furniture, which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs,

Hepplewhite

Page 14: Furniture Styles. Jacobean (1600-1690) Jacobean is an English style of furniture, which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs,

Federal (1780-1820) The Federal style combines the neoclassic

furniture style characteristics of Hepplewhite and Sheraton. It is characterized by graceful straight lines, light construction, tapered legs, inlay, and contrasting veneers.

Page 15: Furniture Styles. Jacobean (1600-1690) Jacobean is an English style of furniture, which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs,

Sheraton (1780-1820)Sheraton is a neoclassical style

characterized by delicate straight lines, light construction, contrasting veneers, and neoclassical motifs and ornamentation. It is named for English designer Thomas Sheraton who published his designs in "The Cabinet Makers and Upholsterers Drawing Book" in 1791. It was the most reproduced style in the United States during the Federal period.

Page 16: Furniture Styles. Jacobean (1600-1690) Jacobean is an English style of furniture, which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs,

Duncan Phyfe (1795-1848)The Duncan Phyfe style is characterized by

carved or reeded legs and neoclassic motifs. It is named after American cabinetmaker Duncan Phyfe, and is considered by some art historians as more of an adaptation and refinement of Adam, Sheraton, Hepplewhite and Empire than a style in itself.

Page 17: Furniture Styles. Jacobean (1600-1690) Jacobean is an English style of furniture, which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs,

Empire (1800-1840)American Empire is moderate in proportion

with classical ornamentation, coarse carving, and a dark finish. It is patterned after French Empire with classical influences.

Napoleon’s Throne

Page 18: Furniture Styles. Jacobean (1600-1690) Jacobean is an English style of furniture, which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs,

Shaker (1820-1860)The Shaker style is a simple, utilitarian style characterized by straight tapered legs, woven chair seats, and mushroom shaped wooden knobs. It was produced by the religious group, the United Society of Believers, in self-contained communities in the United States.

Page 19: Furniture Styles. Jacobean (1600-1690) Jacobean is an English style of furniture, which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs,

Victorian (1840-1910)The Victorian style draws its influence from

gothic forms with heavy proportions, dark finish, elaborate carving, and ornamentation. It is named for Queen Victoria of England who reigned from 1837-1901 and was the first furniture style of mass production.

Page 20: Furniture Styles. Jacobean (1600-1690) Jacobean is an English style of furniture, which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs,

Arts and Craft (1880-1910)The Arts and Craft style is characterized by

simple, utilitarian design, and construction.

Page 21: Furniture Styles. Jacobean (1600-1690) Jacobean is an English style of furniture, which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs,

Art Nouveau (1910-1930)A naturalistic style characterized by

intricately detailed patterns and curving lines.

Page 22: Furniture Styles. Jacobean (1600-1690) Jacobean is an English style of furniture, which is medieval in appearance with straight lines, rigid designs,

Scandinavian Contemporary (1960-1990)

A simple utilitarian design style in natural wood popularized by Danish and Swedish designers.