using the technique of marquetry. Image Parquetry Table.JPG thumb In contrast, this Tilt top table is veneered in a parquetry pattern by Isaac Leonard Wise, circa 1934. Image Marquetry TwoLovers.JPG thumb Two Lovers example of sand shading and shellac inking Image Marquetry allashka.jpg thumb An example Marquetry as fine art by Allashka. Image Bald Eagle Fine Art in Marquetry.jpg thumb 220px Achieving Realism in Marquetry. Image Marquetry Mezuzah.jpg thumb 120px Mezuzah case marquetry by Yair Emanuel. Image Silas Kopf Tangram Table.JPG thumb right Modern marquetry a tangram table by Silas Kopf , with trompe l oeil images of paper and pencil made entirely of different shades of flat veneer Marquetry ... to marquetry in the latter the pieces of veneer are of simple repeating geometric shapes, forming ..., trelliswork and the like. Marquetry and parquetry too differs from the more ancient craft of inlay ... material tortoiseshell , mother of pearl , pewter , brass or fine metals. Marquetry using colored Straw marquetry straw was a specialty of some European spa resorts from the end of the 18th century ... of marquetry uses only two sheets of veneer, which are temporarily glued together and cut with a fine ... , part and counterpart . Marquetry as a modern craft most commonly uses knife cut veneers. However ... Ink and Shellac. History The technique of veneered marquetry had its inspiration in 16th century Florence and at Naples . Marquetry elaborated upon Florentine techniques of inlaying solid marble slabs ... jig sawn technique. Techniques of wood marquetry were developed in Antwerp city Antwerp and other ... of Louis XIV of France Louis XIV . Early masters of French marquetry were the Fleming Pierre Golle ... b niste s and gave his name to a technique of marquetry employing tortoiseshell and brass with pewter in Arabesque Islamic art arabesque or intricately foliate designs. Boulle marquetry dropped out ... with gilt bronze mounts. Floral marquetry came into favor in Parisian furniture in the 1750s ... more details
Image MarquetryOriental.jpg 250px right Oriental marquetry motif Straw marquetry is a craft very similar to that of wood marquetry , except that straw replaces the wood veneer . It is thought to have first been practised in the East examples were brought to England in the 17th century. To mimic the varying shades of wood veneer, wheat or oat straw has to be split, then soaked in cold, warm, or hot water. The strips are then ironed, and there will be a variety of tones from pale gold to deepest dark brown. There are accounts of nuns in France and Switzerland making a variety of items using straw marquetry. The most famous straw marquetry was practised by prisoners of war from the Napoleonic wars . Dartmoor and other prisons had been built for them the prison most famous for straw marquetry was Norman Cross, Huntingdon . Easter eggs are decorated with straw applique , especially in Eastern European countries. Geometric shapes, stars and flower motifs are the most common themes. There is a slight difference in the way the straw is prepared, however for marquetry, the straws are soaked, split and ironed for Egg biology egg decoration the straw is not ironed. See also Corn dolly , Straw , Oat , Wheat , Barley , Rye , Easter egg Photo gallery gallery Image StrawMarquetryFlowers.jpg Image MarquetryHouse.jpg File Ukrainskie pisanki.jpeg Image MarquetryEggs.jpg gallery References Empty section date July 2010 External links decorative arts Category Art genres Category Straw art decorative art stub sr Slamarstvo ... more details
Floor Medallions are generally a centerpiece of flooring design that can be made with various flooring materials including natural stone, wood, metal, tile, glass or a variety of other materials suitable for flooring. The pattern can be created using various methods such as mosaic , intarsia , and marquetry . Image floor medallion.jpg frame Floor Medallion using stone intarsia full thickness puzzle piece assembly With a mosaic , small pieces of flooring material are put together to develop a pattern. This can be done in a direct, indirect, or double indirect method. In the direct method small pieces are set directly into a bonding substrate like cement. Using an indirect method the pieces would be placed face down against paper or other material with a temporary adhesive. After the design is completed face down the entire section would be set into the floor and then have the paper removed, revealing the mosaic floor. With intarsia pieces are cut to fit together like a puzzle. The pieces are generally thicker that those used in marquetry, and often full thickness rather than being laminated. For flooring the pattern is generally created face down so that it remains level and then flipped over and transferred into the floor. Marquetry is often associated with woodworking, but can be done with any thin material. With marquetry very thin veneer, generally 1 16 or less and is cut to shape and then laminated over another surface. Inlay is thicker than marquetry, generally 1 8 to 5 8 thick and is set within the material. Mosaics have a distinctly different appearance than intarsia or marquetry. Intarsia and marquetry can appear very similar, but marquetry is much more common when semiprecious, or precious materials are being used. External links http www.majesticmedallions.com Thumbnails of hand made hardwood floor medallions inlays and compass rose BACKUP.html All kinds of wood Floor medallions http sites.google.com site floormedallionsinlaysfordummys Installing floor med ... more details
Orphan date February 2009 Certosina is a decorative art technique used widely in the Italian Renaissance period. Similar to marquetry , it uses small pieces of wood, bone, metal, or mother of pearl to create inlaid geometric patterns on wood. The term comes from Certosa Church in Pavia, where the technique was used in ornamenting an altarpiece. References http www.rijksmuseum.nl aria aria encyclopedia 00046967?lang en Certosina Rijksmuseum Amsterdam National Museum for Art and History . Retrieved on 2007 August 29. See also Decorative art Italian Renaissance Marquetry Intarsia Pietre dure Woodworking Category Artistic techniques Category Arts in Italy Category Woodworking Category Ornaments art history stub woodworking stub ... more details
tl expert subject Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 Orphan date December 2009 Doll s head clocks , often known by their French language French name t te de poup e , were popular in the later half of Louis XIV of France Louis XIV s reign. They are named for their profile which resembles a head and shoulders. A doll s head clock is almost always ornamented with Boulle marquetry . DEFAULTSORT Doll s Head Clock Category Antiques Category French culture Category Clocks France stub ... more details
Marquet is a surname , and may refer to Albert Marquet 1875 1947 , French painter Josh Marquet born 1969 , Australian cricket player Luc Marquet born 1970 , French volleyball player Maurice Marquet born 1954 , field hockey player from New Zealand Paul Marquet , Australian rugby player See also marquee disambiguation marquetry surname surname stub de Marquet fr Marquet it Marquet ... more details
Alison Elizabeth Taylor born 1973, Selma, Alabama is an United States American artist based out of New York City . She is known for her Renaissance style marquetry and woodwork depicting contemporary subject matter. Her work has been featured at a number of notable galleries and covered in The New York Times , The New Yorker Magazine The New Yorker , and The Village Voice . ref cite news url http www.nytimes.com 2008 05 27 arts design 27marq.html? r 1&ref design&oref slogin title An Artist Revives Renaissance Style Marquetry , publisher The New York Times date 27 May 2008 accessdate 2008 07 18 first Carol last Kino ref ref cite web url http www.jamescohan.com artists alison elizabeth taylor bio title James Cohan Gallery Alison Elizabeth Taylor ref Works and Career Image Alison Elizabeth Taylor The Tattooist.jpg thumb right 180px The Tattooist , 2008, Wood veneer, pyrography, shellac, 54 41 inches Form follows function in that Taylor employs marquetry in the service of content. She subverts inlay s decorative status by constructing narratives that are neither decorative, nor memorial, nor facile, but rather freezing the abject, mundane and ordinary in time. Marquetry was first popularized under Louis XIV in the 17th century in the unprecedented luxury of Versailles. By portraying these subjects in a technique associated with opulence and privilege, the artist pays respect to the subject and challenges the expectations and connotations associated with the material. Alison Elizabeth Taylor is a graduate of Columbia University , School of the Arts and has had three solo exhibitions at the James Cohan Gallery in New York. References Reflist Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Taylor, Alison Elizabeth ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1973 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Taylor, Alison Elizabeth Category American artists Category 1973 births Category Living people US artist stub zh ... more details
Cleanup date February 2008 Lath art is a form of woodworking folk art for making rustic pictures out of strips out of old lath from plaster and lath walls. Today it is commonly made from lattice, lumber stickers and weathering weathered lobster trap s. Beach scenes and rural scenes are the most popular themes. Techniques Lath work is an old artform where the designer can carve wood, spinning at high speeds, into different shapes, patterns, objects, tools, furniture etc. Lath art has a lot in common with marquetry and intarsia . They are all woodworking hobbies to make pictures out of sections of wood, but marquetry and intarsia use the wood grain as a design element, and lath art uses the direction of the lath stick and the colors of the stains as a design element. See also Parquetry Scroll Saw Tunbridge ware decorative arts Woodworking Category Decorative arts Category Woodworking Category Art genres Category Folk art woodworking stub art stub ... more details
Image Silas Kopf Tangram Table.JPG 300px Marquetry tangram table by Silas Kopf. thumb right 250px Marquetry tangram table by Silas Kopf at the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Massachusetts with trompe l oeil images of paper and pencil made entirely of different shades of flat veneer. Silas Kopf is a furniture maker specializing in the art of marquetry . Born in 1949, Kopf graduated from Princeton University in 1972 with a degree in architecture and soon began designing and making furniture. In 1988, he received a Craftsman s Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts , ref http www.boston.com yourlife home articles 2004 05 20 pieces of beauty ?page 2 http www.boston.com yourlife home articles 2004 05 20 pieces of beauty ?page 2 Boston.com Retrieved on 03 30 07 ref and used the opportunity to study traditional marquetry technique at the Andr Charles Boulle cole Boulle , an institute of Interior Architecture interior architecture and design , in Paris . His major projects include several piano s commissioned by Steinway & Sons ref http www.rsi.org silas.html http www.rsi.org silas.html RSI.org Retrieved on 03 30 07 ref and benches, desks, and cabinets for private collections and museums. His designs frequently incorporate floral depictions, other images from nature, and Trompe L oiel trompe l oeil concepts. He first became interested in marquetry because he hoped for an alternative, less consumerist lifestyle. ref http www.woodworking.com article archive.cfm?section 3&article 1400 http www.woodworking.com article archive.cfm?section 3&article 1400 Woodworking.com Retrieved on 03 30 07 ref Since 1978, he has worked in Easthampton, Massachusetts , where he continues to build and design. He has an assistant, Tom Coughlin, who also designs and builds guitar s. References div class references small references External links http www.boston.com yourlife home articles ... The Master Techniques of Marquetry DVD Review http www.silaskopf.com Kopf s Business Website ... more details
marquetry, at Knole House , which were probably diplomatic gifts made by Louis XIV to Charles Sackville ... marquetry furniture in the latest Parisian taste to the court of William and Mary . There was some ... more details
Stonewall Farm AKA Stonewall Stallions is a thoroughbred race horse breeding farm in Versailles, Kentucky established in 1852. It is named for its famous stone wall built during the Civil War by Irishman John Kearney in 1863. Originally owned by Major Warren Viley, it was known as Woodford County Stud. Lexington horse Lexington , Leading sire in North America 16 times, stood at stud there in the 1860s and 70s. Present day The farm is currently owned and run by Audrey Haisfield and was previously known as Gaillardia Farm. The farm has been home to a number of famous horses including 2007 American Champion Older Male Horse , Lawyer Ron , 2005 American Champion Male Turf Horse , Leroidesanimaux , graded stakes race stakes winners, A. P. Warrior , Marquetry horse Marquetry , Doneraile Court , Da Stoops , and Medaglia d Oro , sire of 2009 Preakness Stakes winner, Rachel Alexandra . External links http www.stonewallstallions.com Stonewall of America http www.ntra.com stats bios.aspx?id 15450 Audrey Haisfield bio coord missing Kentucky Category Horse farms in Kentucky Category American racehorse owners and breeders Category Buildings and structures in Woodford County, Kentucky ... more details
This is a listing of the horses that finished in either first, second, or third place and the number of starters in the Mervyn Leroy Handicap , an United States American Graded stakes race Grade 2 race for horses three years old & up at 1 1 16 miles on synthetic surface held at Hollywood Park Racetrack in Inglewood, California . ref Stakes Histories, The Original Racing Almanac 2009, page 424 on June 26, 2008. ref List 1980 present cellspacing 2 cellpadding 3 border 2.5 Year Winner Second Third Starters 2009 Ball Four Rail Trip Dakota Phone 6 2008 Surf Cat Desert code Global Hunter 8 2007 Molengao Porto Santo Buzzards Bay 8 2006 Surf Cat Spellbinder Dixie Meister 5 2005 Ace Blue Ender s Shadow Borrego 7 2004 Even The Score Ender s Shadow Total Impact 8 2003 Total Impact Fleetstreet Dancer Piensa Sonando 8 2002 Sky Jack Bosque Redondo Devine Wind 6 2001 Futural Skimming Moonlight Charger 5 2000 Out Of Mind Early Pioneer Skimming 7 1999 Budroyale Moore s Flat Wild Wonder 6 1998 Wild Wonder Budroyale Flick 7 1997 Hesabull Region Kingdom Found 5 1996 Siphon horse Siphon Del Mar Dennis Dramatic Gold 4 1995 Tossofthecoin Ferrara Polar Route 8 1994 Del Mar Dennis Tinner s Way Hill Pass 6 1993 Marquetry horse Marquetry Potrillion Lottery Winner 6 1992 Another Review Sir Beaufort Marquetry horse Marquetry 5 1991 Louis Cyphre Warcraft Anshan 6 1990 Super May Charlatan Lively One 12 1989 Ruhlmann Sabona Perfec Travel 5 1988 Judge Angelucci Simply Majestic Mark Chip 8 1987 Zabaleta Nostalgia s Star Sabona 7 1986 Skywalker horse Skywalker Sabona Al Mamoon 8 1985 Precisionist Greinton My Habitony 5 1984 Sari s Dreamer Fighting Fit Ancestral 7 1983 Fighting Fit Island Whirl Kangroo Court 7 1982 Mehmet A Run Major Sport 6 1981 Eleven Stitches Glorious Song Summer Time Guy 8 1980 Spectacular Bid Peregrinator Beau s Eagle 6 See also Mervyn Leroy Handicap References reflist http www.pedigreequery.com index.php?search bar stakes&query type stakes&field view&id 1716 The Mervyn Leroy Han ... more details
Jacques Philippe Carel working c1723 c1760 was a Parisian cabinet maker b niste , who was admitted to the cabinetmakers guild in 1723 and specialized in rococo case pieces of high quality veneered in end grain bois de bout floral marquetry . Two almost identical commode s made c 1755 at the Frick Collection , New York, are part of an unusually large group of commodes of almost identical shape, variously veneered but bearing the same mounts, apparently commissioned from numerous cabinetmakers by a single marchand mercier , who originated the design and retained a monopoly of the mounts. ref The group was identified by Theodore Dell, The Frick Collection. V. Furniture 1992 270 281. ref Notes Reflist DEFAULTSORT Carel, Jacques Philippe Category Furniture makers ... more details
Giuseppe Maggiolini 13 November 1738 16 November 1814 , himself a marquetry maker intarsiatore , was the pre eminent cabinet maker ebanista in Milan in the later 18th century. Though some of his early work is Baroque architecture Late Baroque in manner, his name is particularly associated with blocky Neoclassical architecture neoclassical forms veneered with richly detailed marquetry vignettes, often within complicated borders. His workshop s output is somewhat repetitive, making attributions to Maggiolini a temptation. His clientele reached to Austria ref The desk sold from the collection of the earl of Bute, Christie s 3 July 1996, lot 10, made for an Austrian patron about 1784. ref and Poland. ref A panel of marquetry designed by Giuseppe Levati made in 1783 for Stanis aw August Poniatowski Stanislas II Poniatowski , king of Poland illustrated in Alvar Gonz lez Palacios, Il gusto dei principi arte di corte del xvii e xviii secolo Milan 1993 . ref Born in Parabiago , near Milan, he was the son of Gilardo Maggiolini, a forester in the service of the Cistercians Cistercian monastery of Sant Ambrogio della Vittoria, and after apprenticeship in a woodworking shop he opened his own bottega in the town s central piazza, which today bears his name. In 1757 he married Antonia Vignati, from Villastanza they had a single son, Francesco, born the following year. The painter Giuseppe Levati consigned to Maggiolini work for marchese Pompeo Litta at Villa Litta, Lainate , near Milan, to Levati s designs, with unexpectedly fine results. Maggiolini was invited to collaborate on designs for the wedding ... produced the marquetry flooring in the Palazzo di Corte in Milan, being rebuilt under the direction ... the painter Andrea Appiani and the architect Giocondo Albertolli . In 1777 he produced marquetry ... green, like blue or rose. Cartoons for execution in marquetry were provided by artists such as Levati and Appiani, and panels of pictorial marquetry were produced purely for displays as tours ... more details
at Gubbio Metropolitan Museum of Art gallery Notes reflist See also marquetry mosaic niello damascening intarsia External links commonscat Inlay art http www.patricelejeune.com Marquetry Marquetry.html Contemporary Wall Art Marquetry New technics http luiginebuloni.omou.net Luigi Nebuloni s Personal ... more details
Thoroughbred racehorse infobox horsename Squirtle Squirt image caption sire Marquetry horse Marquetry grandsire Conquistador Cielo dam Lost The Code damsire Lost Code sex Stallion horse Stallion foaled 1998 country United States colour Bay horse Dark Bay Brown breeder Dr. Audrey Narducci owner David J. Lanzman Racing Stable Inc. trainer Jose Garcia, Jr. br Robert J. Frankel 2001 record 16 8 4 0 earnings United States dollar US 1,112,220 race Willard L. Proctor Memorial Stakes 2000 br Haggin Stakes 2000 br Hollywood Juvenile Championship Stakes 2000 br Barretts Juvenile Stakes 2000 br King s Bishop Stakes 2001 br Breeders Cup wins br Breeders Cup Sprint 2001 awards American Champion Sprint Horse 2001 honours updated for the Pokemon Squirtle Squirtle Squirt foaled 1998 in Kentucky is an United States American Eclipse Award Champion Thoroughbred horse racing racehorse . Background Squirtle Squirt was out of the mare Lost The Code, by multiple Graded stakes race Grade I winner Lost Code . His sire was 1991 Hollywood Gold Cup winner Marquetry horse Marquetry , who also sired the 1999 Breeders Cup Sprint winner, Artax horse Artax . Marquetry was a son of 1982 American Horse of the Year and Belmont Stakes winner Conquistador Cielo . Consigned to the 1998 Keeneland Sales Keeneland November sale , Squirtle Squirt was sold to Donna Wormser for 30,000. She put him up for auction again at the March 2000 Barretts Auction of two year olds in training, where David Lanzman paid 25,000 for the colt with a bad knee. Lanzman turned him over to trainer Jose Garcia, Jr. for race conditioning. Racing career In his two year old season, Squirtle Squirt won five of his eight starts, including the Grade III Hollywood Juvenile Championship Stakes in July. In November, he underwent surgery for a persistent knee problem, after which his new owner sent him to trainer Robert J. Frankel Bobby Frankel . In 2001, Squirtle Squirt raced exclusively in Sprint race sprint races , winning three of his six ... more details
Joachim Tielke October 14, 1641 January 19, 1719 was a Germany German maker of musical instruments . He was born in K nigsberg , Duchy of Prussia Prussia , and died in Hamburg . A publication was dedicated to him by G nther Hellwig. Hellwig lists the total number of 139 instruments still existing of Tielke s oeuvre with lute s, Ang lique instrument angelica s, theorbo es, bell cittern s hamburger cithrinchen , guitar s, pochette s, violin s, viole d amore without sympathetic strings, baryton s, viole da gamba and bows. More recent research shows that all theorboes were originally either lutes with bent back pegboxes or are modifications of angelicas. The bows have shown to be non authentic. On the other hand, nearly thirty instruments not know to Hellwig have come up, among them the fragment of a baryton, a cello, more viols, guitars, lutes. Tielke s existing oeuvre is therefore one of the most comprehensive and by number close to that of Stradivarius Stradivari and the other great Italian makers. Tielke s instruments are famous not only for their marquetry and carved heards but also for their tonal qualities. A much debated question is that of the contribution Tielke himself made to the instruments signed with his name. The examination of his work leads to the idea that he engaged outside craftsmen and artists for the supply of carvings and marquetry, possibly even complete instruments. References Friedemann and Barbara Hellwig, Joachim Tielke. Kunstvolle Musikinstrumente des Barock , Berlin Munich 2011 in German, with an English summary Further reading G nther Hellwig, Joachim Tielke. Ein Hamburger Lauten und Violenmacher der Barockzeit , Frankfurt Main 1980 External links http www.tielke hamburg.de The Tielke website Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Tielke, Joachim ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH October 14, 1641 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH January 19, 1719 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Tielke, Joachim Category 1641 births Categ ... more details
The cole Boulle is an advanced public school of fine arts and crafts and applied arts in Paris, France. History The cole Boulle is named after the cabinetmaker Andr Charles Boulle who is generally considered to be the preeminent artist in the field of marquetry in the century of Louis XIV . The school trains students from the Applied Arts Baccalaur at french national secondary school diploma required to pursue university studies for 18 years old students to the DSAA 4 years degree in applied arts after the Baccalaur at , equivalent to the first year of a Master s degree in European LMD Disambiguation needed date June 2011 system . There are 2 different DSAA Dipl me Sup rieur d Arts Appliqu s , related to 2 different departments http www.ecole boulle.org spip.php?article91 Spatial Design and http www.ecole boulle.org spip.php?article46 Industrial Design . Departments Since 1886, the cole Boulle has trained students in two main fields which correspond to two main departments artistic crafts , including chairmaking, marquetry, cabinetmaking, tapestry, engraving, sculpture in wood, wood turning, bronze sculpture, jewellery applied arts including spatial design and interior architecture, industrial design, furniture design, visual expression and communication, with additional education in computer software, applied philosophy, semiotics, history of arts, etc. See also Portal Design formatting please do not remove until some more text lines are added to compensate spacing External links http www.ecole boulle.org cole Boulle Official Website coord missing France DEFAULTSORT Ecole Boulle Category Universities and colleges in France Category Educational institutions established in 1886 France stub fr cole Boulle ... more details
and Mayhew were also among the first London furniture makers to exploit marquetry decoration when ... rectangular commodes with richly engraved neoclassical marquetry of satinwood and holly ... 119 Colin Streeter, Marquetry Furniture by a Brilliant London Master The Metropolitan Museum of Art ... marquetry in an Etruscan taste with painted panels and gilt bronze mounts discovery of the commode enabled Hugh Roberts tentatively to identify a series of comparable demilune and serpentine fronted marquetry ... collections johnmayhewcommode.asp Lady Lever Art Gallery, Liverpool Marquetry commode by Mayhew ... more details
Tunbridge ware is a form of decoratively inlaid woodworking woodwork , typically in the form of boxes, that is characteristic of Tonbridge and the spa town of Royal Tunbridge Wells Tunbridge Wells in Kent in the 18th and 19th centuries. The decoration typically consists of a mosaic of many very small pieces of different colored woods that form a pictorial vignette. Shaped rods and slivers of wood were first carefully glued together, then cut into many thin slices of identical pictorial veneer with a fine saw. Elaborately striped and feathered bandings for framing were pre formed in a similar fashion. There is a collection of Tunbridge ware in the Tunbridge Wells Museum and Art Gallery in Tunbridge Wells. ref http www.tunbridgewellsmuseum.org Default.aspx?page 1643 Tunbridge ware pages from Tunbridge Wells Museum & Art Gallery ref See also Intarsia Marquetry Parquetry Pietre dure Opus sectile Lathart References reflist External links http www.tunbridgewellsmuseum.org Default.aspx?page 1643 Tunbridge ware at Tunbridge Wells Museum & Art Gallery http www.teamuseum.org tunbridgeware.php Tunbridge ware http www.stuartking.co.uk index.php tunbridge ware Article about Tunbridge ware http www.marquetrysociety.ca Techniques.html Techniques of making Tunbridge ware Woodworking Category Decorative arts Category Surface decorative techniques in woodworking Category Tunbridge Wells borough Category Tonbridge and Malling decorative art stub Woodworking stub Royal Tunbridge Wells Tonbridge ... more details
Buhl is a decorative type of marquetry of patterned inlays of brass or tortoiseshell, or occasionally other materials, used on chiefly French furniture, from the 17th century. The word is the German spelling of Andr Charles Boulle Boulle and is used chiefly in American English. Buhl may also refer to TOCright Places United States Buhl, Alabama Buhl, Idaho , trout capital of the world Buhl, Minnesota France Buhl, Bas Rhin , in the Bas Rhin d partement Buhl, Haut Rhin , in the Haut Rhin d partement Buhl Lorraine , in the Moselle d partement People Bob Buhl 1928 2001 , American baseball player Hermann Buhl , an Austrian climber Ludwig von Buhl , German pathologist Vilhelm Buhl , a former Prime Minister of Denmark Henry Buhl, Jr., a retail entrepreneur, public science educator, and philanthropist in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Things Buhl Aircraft Company The Buhl Building , Detroit, Michigan, designed by Wirt C. Rowland The Henry Buhl Jr. Planetarium & Observatory at the Carnegie Science Center in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Buhl decorative furniture, first made by Charles Andr Boulle The Henry Buhl library at Grove City College , Pennsylvania Attractions Buhl Farm Golf Course See also B hl disambiguation disambig ceb Buhl de Buhl fr Buhl it Buhl nl Buhl pms Buhl pl Buhl pt Buhl sk Buhl sr fi Buhl sv Buhl uk vo Buhl ... more details
14 26 , doi 10.5334 jcms.91105 . ref After about 1620, marquetry tended to supplant intarsia in urbane ... www.tbirdranch.com Intarsiafiles intarshist.html Jackson, F. Hamilton, Intarsia and Marquetry , London ... more details
Image Credenza.jpg thumb Credenza A credenza is a piece of furniture that became very fashionable during the second half of the 19th century. Often made of a burnish ed and polished wood decorated with marquetry , a central cupboard would be flanked by symmetrical quadrant glass display cabinet s. The top would often be made of marble, or another decorative stone, or of inlaid wood. Image Modern Credenza.JPG thumb left Modern Credenza Today, a credenza is more often a type of sideboard used in the home or restaurant . In dining rooms, it is typically made from wood and used as a platform to serve buffet meals. In restaurant kitchens, made from stainless steel , it provides a side surface and storage cupboards. Originally in Italian the name meant belief . In the 16th century the act of credenza was the tasting of food and drinks by a Food taster servant for a lord or other important person such as the pope or a Cardinal Catholicism cardinal in order to test for poison . The name passed then to the room where the act took place, then to the furniture. ref http www.etimo.it ?term credenza Definition at Dizionario Etimologico Online ref See also Credenza desk Salver References Reflist Category Furniture furniture stub fr Cr dence io Kredenco it Credenza arredamento lb Kredenzd schelchen nl Credens pt Aparador ... more details
File Roentgenportrait.jpg thumb Abraham Roentgen. Abraham Roentgen 30 January 1711 1 March 1793 was a Germany German b niste cabinetmaker . Roentgen was born in M lheim am Rhein , Germany. He learned cabinet making from his father. At age 20, he traveled to Den Haag , Rotterdam and Amsterdam , learning from established cabinet makers. He became known for his marquetry work, and worked in London until 1738. On 18 April 1739, he married Susanne Marie Bausch from Herrnhut . His son, David Roentgen , was born on 11 August 1743. Roentgen died in Herrnhut in Saxony Germany. External links http www.getty.edu art gettyguide artMakerDetails?maker 411&page 1 Biography at the Getty museum BBKL r roentgen a band 29 autor Claus Bernet spalten 1177 1181 Persondata NAME Roentgen, Abraham ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION b niste cabinetmaker . DATE OF BIRTH January 30, 1711 PLACE OF BIRTH M lheim am Rhein DATE OF DEATH March 1, 1793 PLACE OF DEATH Herrnhut DEFAULTSORT Roentgen, Abraham Category Furniture makers Category 1711 births Category 1793 deaths Category People from Cologne Germany engineer stub cs Abraham Roentgen de Abraham Roentgen it Abraham Roentgen ... more details