$11,500
Length: 33.75”
Depth: 19.75”
Height: 32.5”
**Please note: This item is not currently on view in our gallery...
$23,500
Spice boxes or chests were a status symbol in colonial America. Only a household that was well furnished and fairly prosperous had a spice box...
Diameter: 35"
Height: 28"
The serving of tea in the 18th Century was an important social ritual for those wealthy enough to be able to afford the tea. Specialized furniture and boxes (tea caddies) evolved around the "tea ceremony"
19.5" x 15" x 12.5" tall
$18,500
Width: 44"
Height: 74"
Depth: 22"
Length: 24.5”
Width: 18.5”
Height: 22”
6.5" x 16.5" x 6.5" tall
22" x 22.5" x 41" tall
Many of the tables of this form described as "wine tables" are taller and are actually candlestands...
Height: 24”
Depth: 11.5”
Width:18.5”
Length: 20”
Depth: 10”
Height: 23”
32"h x 22 1/4" diam.
28" x 15" x 42' tall
h:36.25 w:28 d:31 in.
Originally designed for sheet music, these are now used primarily as magazine racks. To see other examples, type "canterbury" into the search box.
Height: 20”
Width: 20.5”
Depth: 14.5”
Circa 1850-70.
These chairs are very closely related to a chair (#14) in Oscar Fitzgerald's catalog: "The Green Family of Cabinetmakers: An Alexandria Institution, 1817-1887" which descended in the Tucker family of Alexandria.
...
Height: 27.75”
Width: 33”
Depth: 21” (closed)
Depth: 40.25” (open)
See illustration of similar table from Federal Furniture and Decorative Arts at Boscobel by Berry B. Tracy.
Height: 28.5”
Width: 23.5”
Depth: 36”
Leaf: 11.5”