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Thread: Furniture styles (periods) Book/web site...

  1. #1
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    Feb 2009
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    College Park, MD
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    Furniture styles (periods) Book/web site...

    I am baffled by all of the styles of furniture I read about. You know federal, Chippendale, Queen Ann etc... Plus shaker, mission and green & green etc... Is there a good book or web site that explains all of this? I am not a furniture collector nor a very good furniture maker at the moment but I hope to be that latter soon ( and only collect my stuff ). But I really would like to know more about all of the different styles. Any help would be appreciated. Currently I do like to copy certain designs that I like but it would be like to know what it is I like. Thanks, John...

  2. #2
    The best sources are usually antique magazines or a book like Jeffrey Greene's American Furniture of the 18th Century. An alternate if you can find a used copy is Wallace Nutting's Furniture Treasury. Unfortunately the list of books could go on forever. You might want to check out the website of the Society of American Period Furniture Maker at www.sapfm.org. There is lots of good information there and the forum is attended by many of the best makers in this country.
    Dave Anderson

    Chester, NH

  3. #3
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    Apr 2010
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    savannah
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    You might want to check the library...you know, that place where all the bums go to get on Facebook?


    Anywho, there is a great selection at my library on furniture styles, periods, etc.

    Quote Originally Posted by john davey View Post
    I am baffled by all of the styles of furniture I read about. You know federal, Chippendale, Queen Ann etc... Plus shaker, mission and green & green etc... Is there a good book or web site that explains all of this? I am not a furniture collector nor a very good furniture maker at the moment but I hope to be that latter soon ( and only collect my stuff ). But I really would like to know more about all of the different styles. Any help would be appreciated. Currently I do like to copy certain designs that I like but it would be like to know what it is I like. Thanks, John...
    It's sufficiently stout..


  4. #4
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    Oct 2008
    Location
    Indianapolis, Indiana
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    I'm not overly fond of visiting the library, but this is one of those needs for which they really excel.

  5. #5
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    Nov 2006
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    Sebastopol, California
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mark Wyatt View Post
    I'm not overly fond of visiting the library, but this is one of those needs for which they really excel.
    I'm curious - why not? I mean, my very question may reveal what a library junkie I am, but I'd sure suffer if they went away.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
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    College Park, MD
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    Thanks for the replies. Sadly my library is a joke on all things woodworking. I'll have to check for furniture but I dont hold much hope for them. They just sentenced our county exec to seven years so it is easy to see how the area has gone to crap .

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Wayne, Pa.
    Posts
    498
    My experience is dominated by Queen Anne and Chippendale and some Federal. I know Shaker and Arts and Crafts too but there are holes in my knowledge...which is okay because they are mostly crap. I have picked up a few books, unintentionally, that tell furniture styles through the years. They are real general but give you a sense of what was what. I'll post the name of one or two when I get home.

    John

  8. #8
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    Jan 2008
    Location
    Silicon Valley, CA
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    989
    Google is your friend here:
    http://www.connectedlines.com/styleguide/
    (has crude sketches of styles and description of characteristics)

    or use google image search for any term you're interested in.


    Matt

  9. #9

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Location
    Indianapolis, Indiana
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    296
    Quote Originally Posted by Bill Houghton View Post
    I'm curious - why not? I mean, my very question may reveal what a library junkie I am, but I'd sure suffer if they went away.
    Like many, the Indianapolis public library system has faced significant budget cuts. Our libraries are doing the best they can given funding, but they do have problems. The first issue is the hours of operation. Our local library is not open at very convenient times and is forced to close certain days of the week. Secondly, the buildings and books are dirty. I usually walk around with a Clorox wipe and clean the (plastic) book covers before I look at them. Third, our library and staff focus most of their energy on providing internet access. It is often difficult to get someone to help you find a book and the computers are forcing the books out of the building. Of course, budget cuts also mean less books in circulation and more lending/sharing between libraries which takes time. Libraries can be great, but our city system is not.

  11. #11
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    Sep 2011
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    Eureka Springs, AR
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    Quote Originally Posted by john davey View Post
    Thanks for the replies. Sadly my library is a joke on all things woodworking. I'll have to check for furniture but I dont hold much hope for them. They just sentenced our county exec to seven years so it is easy to see how the area has gone to crap .
    Well, this is not a woodworking question, per se, it's about furniture styles, art, fashion, history, antiques. and the like.

    Jack

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Trussville, AL
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    3,589
    If your library system has multiple branches and has a decent web site, you may be able to look at all the books in the system and request the ones you want be sent to your local branch. I do that often to preview books before I buy. I like having my own copies, but buying them cold is pretty hit or miss (mostly miss). On the flip side, I've never gotten a bad tip from a fellow 'creeker. All of those have been keepers!

  13. #13
    Quote Originally Posted by John T Barker View Post
    I know Shaker and Arts and Crafts too but there are holes in my knowledge...which is okay because they are mostly crap.
    Huh? Shaker furniture is mostly crap? Arts and Crafts is mostly crap? That is the first I've heard those things said. Please, defend yourself, sir. What makes these forms "mostly crap"?
    [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]

  14. #14
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    Dec 2010
    Location
    Burlington, Vermont
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    2,443
    Your profile lists you as being in College Park, so it might be worth checking out the library at UMD.

    I have stumbled across a lot of really cool books on woodworking, as well as architecture and furniture styles at my local University library. Part of it depends on the types of courses they offer and have offered, and how well the University is funded and how long it's been around, but for more esoteric non-fiction subjects, they can be worth checking out. I think I first stumbled there looking for a copy of "Woodworking in Estonia" after hearing it mentioned by Underhill, but was surprised by all the interesting books I ran across. They seem like in general, University libraries hold onto things a lot longer, regardless of circulation, if the information isn't outdated, which may happen with science texts, but not the stuff we're talking about here.

    Often you probably can't check out the books if you aren't a student or alumni without paying a fee, unlike the public library, which may very well be free to you, but it may be worth checking out what's around. If the college or university is state school, there may be no fee or a resident, or it may be considerably cheaper. I think I payed 30 bucks for a year of access at UVM - but for the longest time I just read things there.

    The books are often a little more dense - the collection is aimed at the academic, of course, so you may find interesting books about historical woodworking, but some of them will be historical texts, or reprints of Moxon or what have you, but you probably won't find "Build your own Kitchen Cabinets" or something like Tolpin's new book, but if you're into the subject in question, it may be worth struggling through. I've never been able to send myself to college, but I really love taking advantage of the library. I end up adding all sorts of knowledge to all of my weird hobbies having been through that building.

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Apr 2010
    Location
    savannah
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    1,102
    The county library is only a block up from where I work, and I'll occasionally walk over and get a book. I have two books on woodturning right now that are really interesting. BUT, I definitely don't enjoy going there. It's a nice library, but I have to walk through thugs and bums DEMANDING cigarettes just to get to the door. And then, like I said, nobody is reading a book...but you'd have to wake up pretty early to get on the computer. I walk by and EVERYONE is on Facebook. I walk by the "employment center" and everyone is on Facebook. It's depressing.

    Quote Originally Posted by Mark Wyatt View Post
    Like many, the Indianapolis public library system has faced significant budget cuts. Our libraries are doing the best they can given funding, but they do have problems. The first issue is the hours of operation. Our local library is not open at very convenient times and is forced to close certain days of the week. Secondly, the buildings and books are dirty. I usually walk around with a Clorox wipe and clean the (plastic) book covers before I look at them. Third, our library and staff focus most of their energy on providing internet access. It is often difficult to get someone to help you find a book and the computers are forcing the books out of the building. Of course, budget cuts also mean less books in circulation and more lending/sharing between libraries which takes time. Libraries can be great, but our city system is not.
    It's sufficiently stout..


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