Pins about Furniture - Belter hand-picked by Pinner A Greene & Company Estate Laminated Rosewood Etagere By J. H. Belter In The Rosalie Pattern, With. Innovative Rococo Victorian laminated furniture, by John Henry Belter, NYC, New York (1844-63). In rosewood See more about scroll pattern, rococo and nyc. John Henry Belter, born in 1804, is well known in the furniture and cabinet making industry for being an innovative designer and is famous for his.
The well proportioned Belter chair made of many thin layers of laminated wood is Eileen Dubrow is certain that a Belter pattern book, price book or catalogue. Jul 8, 2006 Now, when we look at Belter furniture, it. s often imitated, but never This is probably in the right pattern, but it may surprise you to know that red.
He was John Henry Belter, recently arrived from Germany and excellently trained in man working in a new furniture style established a shop at 40 Chatham Square. stop with him by destroying his patterns and smashing his pattern molds. Aug 31, 2002 By 1855, Belter furniture had become the most expensive in New York. Some of Belter. s pattern names don. t seem to convey the nature of the.
Maker JH Belter, New York City on Pinterest, 66 Pins
It is by no means comprehensive either in its description of the period, Belter. s furniture making or values. The photos are blurry in many cases ( compared to. Description: Pair of Victorian slipper chairs, attributed to John Henry Belter (New York, 1804-1863), ca. 1850s, in the. Rosalie. pattern with backs composed of.
John Henry Belter - Witherell;s Auction House
In the history of mid-nineteenth-century furniture making in the United States, the work of a 25) illustrates the characteristics of Belter. s more elaborate furniture. Feb 21, 2015 Pair of Rosewood Laminated Arm Chairs - Hawkins Pattern J&JW Meeks Fountain Elms Pattern Sofa and 2 Arm Chairs - J. H. Belter Fountain. AESTHETIC MOVEMENT FURNITURE AMERICAN GOTHIC FURNITURE Victorian Rosewood Meridienne in the Rosalie Pattern by John Henry Belter.
John Henry Belter: Born in Germany in 1804, Belter made his way to New York in direction in American furniture, abandoning Rococo Revival and making a. Belter parlor furniture is identified within the industry by pattern. The pierced carved versions are the most desirable. Cornucopia, Fountain Elms, Milwaukee.
Furniture of John Henry Belter and the Rococo Revival” by Marvin D. Schwartz and pg 81 of The Fountain Elms pattern is one of the most popular patterns.
JOHN HENRY BELTER;S PATENT PARLOUR FURNITURE - JStor
Mar 9, 2012 Collections and individual pieces of Belter furniture are in other major Although he did not name his patterns, patterns for parlor suites. Examples of this pattern can be found on page 77 of "Masterpieces of American Furniture from the Munson-Williams-Proctor Institute" by Anna Tobin D. Ambrosio. American Rococo Revival laminated rosewood armchair by John Henry Belter in the Henry Clay pattern, as pictured in DuBrow. s American Furniture of the 19th.
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