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Century Plyboard was founded in 1986 by Sajjan Bhajanka and Sanjay Agarwal in Kolkata. [8] [9] [10] Sajjan Bhajanka has been serving as its chairman since October 31, 2011.[8] [9] He serves as the Chairman of Star Ferro and Cement Limited, Century Plyboards Ltd. and Shyam Century Ferrous Limited. [11]
Two sons became partners in 1880 and 1882 (with two more to follow in the early 1890s) and the name became Ichabod T. Williams & Sons. Their sawmill and veneer plant in Carteret, New Jersey, was a leading firm for the manufacture and distribution of fine domesticated and foreign hardwoods. He was for several years President of the Lumber Trade ...
Due to its low cost, concrete was a popular replacement for stone as a structural building element. [2] As a building material, concrete was historically consigned to unseen structural positions such as behind a veneer or in the basement, but evolutions in texturing technology produced concrete blocks that could perform aesthetically as well as structurally. [4]
Sears offered roughly 370 models over the 32 years it sold houses by catalog, with an average of 80 to 100 models in each catalog. The models offered in each catalog varied each year, with some models remaining over long periods, and others appearing in only a few catalogs. In the early years, the models were identified with numbers.
Casket, early 18th century, attributed to André-Charles Boulle, oak carcass veneered with tortoiseshell, gilt copper, pewter and ebony, in the Art Institute of Chicago. Marquetry (also spelled as marqueterie; from the French marqueter, to variegate) is the art and craft of applying pieces of veneer to a structure to form decorative patterns or ...
Adamantine is a veneer developed by The Celluloid Manufacturing Company of New York City, covered by U.S. Patent number 232,037, dated September 7, 1880, for the process of cementing a celluloid veneer or coating to a substrate such as a wood case.
Jean-Pierre Latz (c. 1691 – Paris, 4 August 1754 [1]) was one of the handful of truly outstanding [2] cabinetmakers (ébénistes) working in Paris in the mid-18th century. [3] Like several of his peers in the French capital, he was of German origin. [ 4 ]
At the end of the 19th In the 19th century, it had made it to the standard of style in northern and western Germany in industrial construction.[ Many decades before the advent of the Hanover School, in the end of the 18th century. century, a need for multi-storey factory buildings arose.