A telltale sign of the furniture s maker is a manufacturing tag label or stamp bearing the name of the creator.
Furniture makers marks english.
British furniture can conjure images of smoke stained chesterfield sofas mahogany dressers or antique wood wormed wardrobes.
Early colonial 17th century.
But most makers of the early period either scrawled their name or mark under a drawer somewhere or didn t bother to mark their products at all.
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When buying antique furntiure it is important to look out for pieces stamped with the mark of their maker to help date and vaule a piece.
Maker s marks on british antique furniture.
An identification stamp called a maker s mark is often placed in one of these hard to see areas.
In theory the distinctive symbol known as the maker s mark identifies the company or craftsman that created a piece of furniture.
How much earlier guilbaud may have used this label is unknown.
The marks and library website maintains a list of books and online references.
Pine birch maple and walnut.
The diamond shaped english registry mark was used by the english patent office since 1842 to identify pieces of english pottery porcelain and other products.
Beginning around mid century the advent of the factory system meant most furniture was made in a commercial facility under the auspices of a company name and very few individual craftsmen labeled.
Hybrid of english styles with square lines solid construction.
The mark has the roman numerals iv at the top of the mark if it is for a ceramic.
Such a marking or label may have been placed inside a drawer on an old dresser on.
But the british furniture industry is experiencing a renaissance combining an unparalleled history of craftsmanship quality materials and eccentricity with a more modern pulse.
Identifying antique american furniture styles.
Look in the recesses of drawers or the springs of furniture for identification papers.
English usage is documented from before 1712 the latest working date for john guilbaud at the crowne and looking glasse in long acre in london.
If you find a mark you can look it up in one of various reference guides.
In france a strict guild corporation insisted on stamping and verifying every single piece of furntiure that was made.
They may be stamped in a variety of ways and often in more than one place.
These papers often give the date of manufacture location of the factory in which the piece was manufactured and the name of the maker.
It is easy to tell when the ceramic was made.