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* A slat-back Windsor chair circa 1810-1820 made by linguist, archaeologist and Moravian missionary John Heckewelder (1743-1823). The chair is on loan from Bethlehem’s Kemerer Museum of ...
Ever see an old chair that seems different — the parts are a little more curved, the stretchers between the legs have more shape and the seat seems a little low? The informal slat-back chairs ...
It’s a Pottery Barn Isabella chair that we got in 2014, and unfortunately they no longer make the chair in this color. The ...
Ever see an old chair that seems different — the parts are a little more curved, the stretchers between the legs have more shape and the seat seems a little ...
Question: The chair shown in my photo belonged to my parents. The bottom of its seat is marked "S. Bent & Bros. Inc. 1867 Gardner, Mass." Please discuss the chair's ...
No one knows who made the first Windsor chair, but they are believed to have originated in Windsor, England. The chairs became popular in America in the early 1700s through the early 1800s.
A Windsor chair doesn’t take much wood. There’s a basic look to it but has, like many crafts, so much more behind it. They are, in Grell’s words, sculptural, elegant and strong.
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