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  2. Tip-top table - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tip-top_table

    Folded late 18th century English loo table with Japanese motifs. A Tip-top table is a folding table with the tabletop hinged so it can be placed into a vertical position when not used to save space. It is also called tilt-top table, tip table, [1] snap table [2] [3] some variations are known as tea table, loo table.

  3. Table (furniture) - Wikipedia

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

    Loo tables were very popular in the 18th and 19th centuries as candlestands, tea tables, or small dining tables, although they were originally made for the popular card game loo or lanterloo. Their typically round or oval tops have a tilting mechanism , which enables them to be stored out of the way (e.g. in room corners) when not in use.

  4. Louis XV furniture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_XV_furniture

    At the beginning the 18th century, André Charles Boulle and Charles Cressent had created the bureau au plat. a writing table with columns of drawers, graceful curving legs, gilded bronze decoration, and fine marquetry in geometric forms. Jacques Dubois made a series of celebrated desks in this fashion the 1740s.

  5. Lanterloo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lanterloo

    Lanterloo or loo is a 17th-century trick taking game of the trump family of which many varieties are recorded. It belongs to a line of card games whose members include Nap , euchre , rams , hombre , and maw ( spoil five ).

  6. Louis XIV furniture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_XIV_furniture

    The console table also made its first appearance; it was designed to be placed against a wall. Another new type of furniture was the table à gibier , a marble-topped table for holding dishes. Early varieties of the desk appeared; the Mazarin desk had a central section set back, placed between two columns of drawers, with four feet on each column.

  7. Head (watercraft) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Head_(watercraft)

    The plans of 18th-century naval ships do not reveal the construction of toilet facilities when the ships were first built. The Journal of Aaron Thomas aboard HMS Lapwing in the Caribbean Sea in the 1790s records that a canvas tube was attached, presumably by the ship's sailmaker, to a superstructure beside the bowsprit near the figurehead ...