enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Furniture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Furniture

    Furniture refers to objects intended to support various human activities such as seating (e.g., stools, chairs, and sofas), eating (tables), storing items, working, and sleeping (e.g., beds and hammocks). Furniture is also used to hold objects at a convenient height for work (as horizontal surfaces above the ground, such as tables and desks ...

  3. Table (furniture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Table_(furniture)

    A formally laid table, set with a dinner service. Nested tables. Tables of various shapes, heights, and sizes are designed for specific uses: Dining room tables are designed to be used for formal dining. Bedside tables, nightstands, or night tables are small tables used in a bedroom.

  4. Stool (seat) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stool_(seat)

    A stool is a raised seat commonly supported by three or four legs, but with neither armrests nor a backrest (in early stools), and typically built to accommodate one occupant. As some of the earliest forms of seat, stools are sometimes called backless chairs despite how some modern stools have backrests. Folding stools can be collapsed into a ...

  5. Ancient furniture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_furniture

    Ancient Greek furniture was typically constructed out of wood, though it might also be made of stone or metal, such as bronze, iron, gold, and silver. Little wood survives from ancient Greece, though varieties mentioned in texts concerning Greece and Rome include maple, oak, beech, yew, and willow. [56]

  6. Louis XV furniture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_XV_furniture

    The furniture of the Louis XV period (1715–1774) is characterized by curved forms, lightness, comfort and asymmetry; it replaced the more formal, boxlike and massive furniture of the Louis XIV style. It employed marquetry, using inlays of exotic woods of different colors, as well as ivory and mother of pearl. The style had three distinct periods.

  7. Louis XVI furniture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_XVI_furniture

    Louis XVI furniture is characterized by elegance and neoclassicism, a return to ancient Greek and Roman models. Much of it was designed and made for Queen Marie Antoinette for the new apartments she created in the Palace of Versailles, Palace of Fontainebleau, the Tuileries Palace, and other royal residences.

  8. Elizabethan and Jacobean furniture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabethan_and_Jacobean...

    Whether from any of these causes or from purely commercial ones, what became part of the Elizabethan furniture style was the top-heavy and overloaded Dutch cabinet and the table with big columnar legs capable of upholding mighty serving dishes, and both covered with Flemish ornament.

  9. Wicker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wicker

    Wicker. Wicker is a method of weaving used to make products such as furniture and baskets, as well as a descriptor to classify such products. It is the oldest furniture making method known to history, dating as far back as c. 3000 BC. Wicker was first documented in ancient Egypt, then having been made from pliable plant material, but in modern ...