Antique
English Furniture 4
At one time Queen Anne walnut furniture was very
popular in the United States, but it was soon found
that central-heated rooms caused glue to dry up and
veneer to fall off in an alarming manner. Consequently,
veneered furniture is no longer looked on with affection
in America.
Mahogany is such a well-known timber that it is
scarcely necessary to say much about it in the way
of description. To most people it is a familiar reddish-brown
wood, and it has been used for making furniture since
about 1730. The timber was imported from the Bahamas,
from San Domingo, from Cuba, and from Honduras. Strictly
speaking these different places produced trees that
were not usually true mahogany, but the use of the
word spread to cover all timbers of a red-brown colour
that resembled it closely in appearance and could
be worked in a similar manner.
It is the Cuban variety that has the very distinctive
markings beloved of cabinet-makers in the second
half of the eighteenth century. This variety was
used often in the form of veneers, as was walnut,
in order to show the light and shade of the figurings
to the best advantage.
Mahogany is very strong, seasons quickly and does
not tend to warp and split, is seldom attacked by
woodworm, and is a good timber to work. It could
be obtained in large enough pieces to make large
table-tops without joining, which had not been possible
before, and not only does it take a pleasing smooth
finish but is excellent for carving. It is therefore
not hard to understand why, once it had been
introduced, it quickly became popular and stayed
for long the principal timber used in cabinet-making.
Satinwood came from the West and East Indies, and
was in use for furniture-making from about 1780 until
1810. It is a wood with a warm yellow colour, and
has a close grain that takes a high polish. It was
used mainly as a veneer, but unless handled carefully
by the cabinet-maker it has a tendency to split.
Towards 1800 it was used in the solid for making
chairs and for the legs of veneered tables. Satinwood
was an expensive timber, and it was used, on the
whole, only for special pieces for wealthy clients.
English
Furniture
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