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Chairs
Queen Anne Side Chair
This is the typical Queen Anne chair from the 18th Century.
This example is made out of mahogany and is finished with aniline dye and
lacquer.

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Chippendale Side Chair
This Chippendale chair is reproduced from an 18th century
design from coastal North
Carolina. This example has tombstone piercings in the splat and is made out of cherry and is finished with aniline dye
and lacquer.

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Chippendale Arm chair
This Chippendale armchair is of the same design as the
Chippendale side chair. It is made out of walnut and is finished aniline dye
and shellac.

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Philadelphia Side Chair
This Philadelphia side chair is embellished with a shell
carving and scroll on the crest rail. The chair is made out of walnut, as was
most 18th century furniture from the Philadelphia area. The
chair is finished with aniline dye and a lacquer topcoat.
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Chippendale Side Chair
This is another example of a coastal North Carolina side
chair. It is made out of mahogany and finished with aniline dye and lacquer.
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Easy chair
This is a southern example of an Easy chair from the 18th
century. This example has ball and claw feet and is covered with leather. The
primary wood is mahogany and the secondary wood is southern yellow pine. |
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Carved Chippendale Chair
This is another reproduction of an 18th century southern chair. The chair is
embellished with a carved shell and leaves on the crest rail and several carved
volutes on the splat. Built out of mahogany and finished with aniline dye
and lacquer.
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