enow.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: wood stove surround designs ideas photos and drawings

Search results

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

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fireplace

    Exposure of preschool children living in homes heated with wood burning stoves or in houses with open fireplaces yielded these effects: decreased pulmonary lung function in young asthmatics; increased incidence of acute bronchitis and severity/frequency of wheezing and coughing; and increased incidence, duration, and possibly severity of acute ...

  3. Russian stove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_stove

    The stove was, and is still used today for cooking and had a strong influence on the taste of Russian cuisine. [7] Dishes where the stove is used are pancakes to bake or pies. The porridge or the pancakes prepared in such a stove may differ in taste from the same meal prepared on a modern stove or range.

  4. Wood-burning stove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood-burning_stove

    A 19th-century example of a wood-burning stove. A wood-burning stove (or wood burner or log burner in the UK) is a heating or cooking appliance capable of burning wood fuel, often called solid fuel, and wood-derived biomass fuel, such as sawdust bricks.

  5. Franklin stove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franklin_stove

    A Franklin stove. The Franklin stove is a metal-lined fireplace named after Benjamin Franklin, who invented it in 1742. [1] It had a hollow baffle near the rear (to transfer more heat from the fire to a room's air) and relied on an "inverted siphon" to draw the fire's hot fumes around the baffle. [2]

  6. Kitchen stove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitchen_stove

    Cooker and stove are often used interchangeably. The fuel-burning stove is the most basic design of a kitchen stove. As of 2012, it was found that "Nearly half of the people in the world (mainly in the developing world), burn biomass (wood, charcoal, crop residues, and dung) and coal in rudimentary cookstoves or open fires to cook their food."

  7. Kang bed-stove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kang_bed-stove

    A large kang shared by the guests of a one-room inn in a then-wild area east of Tonghua, Jilin, as seen by Henry E.M. James in 1887. The kang (Chinese: 炕; pinyin: kàng; Manchu: nahan, Kazakh: кән) is a traditional heated platform, 2 metres or more long, used for general living, working, entertaining and sleeping in the northern part of China, where the winter climate is cold.

  8. Nathan G. Moore House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nathan_G._Moore_House

    The interior was paneled in dark wood yet was amply lit by bands of diamond-patterned, leaded casement windows which opened the rooms up to the south garden. Inside also featured eight fireplaces, each with unique custom surrounds. [6] (See more period images of the first Moore House). Nathan and Anna Moore "were delighted with the house."

  9. Masonry heater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masonry_heater

    A classic Scandinavian style round ceramic stove, which fits in the corner of a room, from the porcelaine manufacturer Rörstrand in Stockholm, c. 1900. A masonry heater (also called a masonry stove) is a device for warming an interior space through radiant heating, by capturing the heat from periodic burning of fuel (usually wood), and then radiating the heat at a fairly constant temperature ...

  1. Ads

    related to: wood stove surround designs ideas photos and drawings