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  2. Welsh dresser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welsh_dresser

    A Welsh dresser is a piece of wooden furniture consisting of drawers and cupboards in the lower part, with shelves and perhaps a sideboard on top. Traditionally, it is a utilitarian piece of furniture used to store and display crockery, silverware and pewter-ware, but is also used to display general ornaments. [1] [2] [3]

  3. Chest of drawers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chest_of_drawers

    The chest drawers were and are called by many names: LAMSAS database contains 37 answers to the request to name a chest of drawers, with "bureau" and "dresser" most popular at 52.5% and 17.5% respectively. [5] Chippendale called them "commode tables" or "commode bureau tables", Hepplewhite used the terms "commodes", "chests of drawers".

  4. Irish dresser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_dresser

    Irish dresser from County Carlow (1844) An Irish dresser (Hiberno English), sometimes known as a kitchen dresser, is a piece of wooden Irish vernacular furniture consisting of open storage or cupboards in the lower part, with shelves and a work surface, and a top part for the display of crockery, but also any objects of monetary or sentimental value.

  5. Furniture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Furniture

    Gothic chest; late 15th century; wood; 30.2 x 29.2 x 39.4 cm; Metropolitan Museum of Art Gothic chest; late 15th century; walnut and iron; overall: 47 x 38.7 x 75.9 cm; Metropolitan Museum of Art Romanian analogion ; second quarter of the 16th century; carved, openwork and champlevé wood; 115 x 58 x 65 cm; from the Probota Monastery ( Suceava ...

  6. Domestic furnishing in early modern Scotland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domestic_furnishing_in...

    The inventories of the 16th-century royal household were published in 1815 and 1863. The royal inventory makers were concerned only with rich textiles and tapestries, and few other domestic items are mentioned. [4] References to many published Scottish inventories are included in Simon Swynfen Jervis, British and Irish Inventories (London, 2010 ...

  7. Tallboy (furniture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tallboy_(furniture)

    The topmost drawers of the tallboy could only be reached by the use of bed steps, and the disappearance of high beds and the consequent disuse of steps exercised a certain influence in displacing a characteristic piece of furniture which was popular for at least a century.