Antique Furniture Woods - Oak
Antique Woods - Oak
| Mahogony and
Satin | Antique Furniture Wood –Walnut | Other Wood |
Antique Furniture Styles 1550- 1700 | Antique Furniture Styles 1700 -1840
When the subject of English furniture first began to be studied and to be written about, it was divided conveniently into four distinct types.
One writer called his books on the subject The Age of Oak, The Age of Walnut, The Age of Mahogany and The Age of Satinwood. It is not really
quite as simple as that, for each of the so-called Ages overlaps the others and it is quite impossible to down strict dates as to when any one
timber was introduced or when it finally, if ever, went out of favour. However, these clear-cut divisions do make it easier to deal with the
subject, and it may be as well to keep to them; bearing in mind that the dates given are no more than very rough guides.
However, it can be a good starting point for us to begin looking at the subject of Antique furniture. The oak
tree is considered very much a symbol of Englishness and one of the early uses of Oak was to build the ships of Henry VIII’s navy. “Hearts of
Oak” is also a tradional English patriotic song.
Oak is the traditionally English wood and while it alone was almost solely used for the making of furniture
from the earliest times until about 1650, it has actually continued along with other woods right down to the present day. Old oak furniture is
solidly made—the wood is very hard, and not only resists decay and woodworm but calls for time, patience and strength to fashion it—and many
surviving pieces are of large size and notice¬ably weighty. At the time when it was popular, the houses of those who could afford furniture
(other than plain and simple pieces) were large and the principal room, the hall, was quite often vast in size. Tables and cupboards were
correspondingly big, and to find a small and attractive piece of English oak furni¬ture of sixteenth-century date today is thus not at all easy.
The surviving specimens are eagerly sought and fetch high prices. Whereas a seventeenth-century chest may be bought for twenty pounds or so (on
the whole, the larger the cheaper) a small cupboard of earlier date will cost several hundreds.
Oak furniture was made also on the mainland of Europe, and in appearance it is not unlike that made in
England. Much was imported at the date it was made, and a further quantity of it was sent to London during the course of the nineteenth
century.
As has been said above, oak continued in use for making furniture long after the wood had gone generally out of fashion. Pieces were made from it
throughout the eighteenth and nine¬teenth centuries; pieces one would expect to find in walnut or mahogany which are discovered to be of oak.
This was done mostly in the smaller country towns, where local craftsmen used timber that was available readily. While transport was both
difficult and expensive, imported woods like walnut and mahogany would have been obtainable normally only near a seaport or a large
town.
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