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  2. Industrial style - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Industrial_Style

    Open faced shelving and storage are big hits when it comes to an industrial kitchen. Free standing metal racks can also provide extra storage and can be beneficial in smaller rooms. If they have wheels, they can multitask. For example, low shelving on wheels can serve as a computer desk one day; the next day it can stand-in as a bar cart.

  3. Rustic furniture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rustic_furniture

    Rustic coffee table with cedar and mountain laurel branches. The rustic furniture movement developed during the mid- to late-1800s. John Gloag in A Short Dictionary Of Furniture says that "chairs and seats, with the framework carved to resemble the branches of trees, were made in the middle years of the 18th century, and there was a popular fashion for this naturalistic rustic furniture" in ...

  4. Tumbrel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tumbrel

    In this use, the carts were sometimes covered. The two wheels allowed the cart to be tilted to discharge its load more easily. [3] [2] Many tumbrels also had hinged tailboards for the same reason. The word is also used as a name for the cucking stool and for a type of balancing scale used in medieval times to check the weight of coins. [4]

  5. Coffee table - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coffee_table

    Couch and coffee table in a hotel room. According to the listing in Victorian Furniture by R. W. Symonds & B. B. Whineray and also in The Country Life Book of English Furniture by Edward T. Joy, a table designed by E. W. Godwin in 1868 and made in large numbers by William Watt, and Collinson and Lock, is a coffee table. [4]

  6. Costa Rican oxcarts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Costa_Rican_oxcarts

    These carts weren't originally pulled by oxen, they were pulled by people. As the coffee industry grew larger and larger, so did the need to use oxcarts for harvesting and transporting. The loads of coffee beans and goods also got larger, so they became too heavy for normal people to carry. So, these people were replaced by oxen.

  7. Cart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cart

    Horse and cart at Beamish Museum (England, 2013) Dockworkers and hand cart (Haiti, 2006). A cart or dray (Australia and New Zealand [1]) is a vehicle designed for transport, using two wheels and normally pulled by draught animals such as horses, donkeys, mules and oxen, or even smaller animals such as goats or large dogs.

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