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  2. Shabby chic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shabby_chic

    Shabby chic is a style of interior design that chooses either furniture and furnishings for their appearance of age and signs of wear and tear or distresses new ones to achieve the same result. Unlike much genuine period décor, this style features a soft, pastel-colored , cottage look.

  3. Plate (dishware) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plate_(dishware)

    Charger (also a buffet plate, cover plate, lay plate, place plate, all names are due to the various uses of this large plate in the past and in the present [9]): a plate typically placed under a separate plate used to hold food, largest and therefore most expensive plate in the set at 11–14 inches (28–36 cm) in diameter with an 8–9 inches ...

  4. Tableware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tableware

    A rice bowl, a soup bowl, two or three small dishes with accompanying foods, and two or three condiment dishes for person would be typical. Various serving bowls and platters would also be set on a table for a typical meal, along with a soy sauce cruet , a small pitcher for tempura or other sauce, and a tea setting of tea pot, tea cups and tea ...

  5. 19 Chic Pieces That Will Make People Think You're a ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/entertainment/19-chic-pieces-people...

    Loungewear . . . but make it chic. These Waitfairy pants are as cozy as can be but look unbelievably stylish! 4. Comfy Cardi! This Lolë cardigan is what layering is all about. Its streamlined ...

  6. Melmac - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melmac

    Melmac is: . A brand name of dinnerware molded from Melamine resin, made by American Cyanamid, most popular in the 1940s through the 1960s.; The fictional planet and homeworld to the alien life form in the eponymously titled sitcom ALF (see also New Melmac)

  7. Lazy Susan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lazy_Susan

    Regardless of the origins of the name, by 1917 it was advertised in Vanity Fair [4] as "Ovington's $8.50 mahogany 'Revolving Server or Lazy Susan ' ", [5] but the term's use predates both the advertisement and, probably, the country. [1] [3] A mahogany George III-era dumbwaiter (c. 1780), auctioned for $3,900 by Christie's in London on 20 Jan ...