Item #166082 English vernacular furniture 1750-1900. Christopher Gilbert.
English vernacular furniture 1750-1900
English vernacular furniture 1750-1900
English vernacular furniture 1750-1900
English vernacular furniture 1750-1900
English vernacular furniture 1750-1900
English vernacular furniture 1750-1900
English vernacular furniture 1750-1900
English vernacular furniture 1750-1900
English vernacular furniture 1750-1900

English vernacular furniture 1750-1900

New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1991. Hardcover. Black cloth with color illustrated glossy dustjacket. viii, 294 pages, profusely illustrrated in bw and color with over 400 photographs and illustrations. VG/VG-, light wear to dustjacket. Item #166082
ISBN: 9780300047622

Contents: Introduction -- Traditional Crafts and Native Timbers -- Country Joiners -- Provincial Price Books -- Farmhouses and Cottages -- Urban Working-Class Homes -- Back-stairs Furniture -- Alehouses, Inns and Taverns -- Regional Chairmaking Traditions -- Regional Beds -- Straw and Wicker Furniture -- Schools -- Workhouses -- Houses of Correction, Bridewells and Prisons -- Lunatic Asylums and Hospitals -- Almshouses -- Meeting Houses and Chapels -- Factories and Workshops -- Offices and Shops -- Railway Premises -- Army Barracks and Campaign Furniture -- Bothies, Chaumers and Mine Shops -- Ships -- Caravans, Narrowboats and Living-Vans -- Children's Furniture -- Cricket and Tennis -- Ducking Stools -- Appendix One: Bibliography of Provincial Price Books -- Appendix Two: The Bolton Supplement to the London Book of Cabinet Piece Prices (1802) -- Appendix Three: The Wycombe Chairmakers' List of Prices (1872) -- Glossary -- Notes -- Select Bibliography -- Index. The vernacular furniture used by ordinary people has only recently been considered a subject worthy of study. In this magisterial book the first comprehensive scholarly analysis of English vernacular furniture Christopher Gilbert demonstrates that common furniture possesses as much interest as fashionable pieces made for country houses. Gilbert investigates over twenty well-defined vernacular subgroups that have never previously been explored in detail, including furniture made for workhouses, schools, prisons, Quaker meetinghouses, army barracks, alehouses, lunatic asylums, shops, railway premises, and ships. He also discusses such facets of vernacular furniture making as regional differences in the production of chairs and beds; mainstream cottage and farmhouse domestic furniture; and traditional straw and wicker crafts. Although Gilbert’s main focus is on the English vernacular tradition, he also touches on furniture form Scotland, Wales, Ireland, the Isle of Man, and the channel Islands. He makes extensive use of provincial Books of Price sand various Parliamentary Reports on living conditions that often contain splendidly detailed first hand evidence about domestic interiors, and he has provided numerous illustrations of securely provenanced items to support his text.

OCLC: 21949183

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