Jacobean Furniture and English Styles in Oak and Walnut
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About This Book
A chronological survey traces the evolution of English seventeenth-century furniture from robust oak Jacobean forms to the lighter, more ornamented walnut and marquetry pieces that followed. Chapters aligned with successive stylistic phases describe characteristic chests, chairs, tables, cabinets and daybeds and explain construction, carving, and turning details. Technological and material shifts—the adoption of saw-cut veneers and the rise of walnut—encouraged a move from heavy relief carving to delicate inlay and sea-weed marquetry, while growing continental influences altered leg profiles and ornament. Forty-three plates and descriptive notes illustrate typical motifs, regional types, and transitional features useful for identifying period pieces.
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