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DRESSER , in furniture, aSee also: form of See also: sideboard
.
The name is derived from the Fr. dressoir, a piece of furniture used to range or dresser the more costly appointments of the table
.
The appliance is the See also: direct descendant of the See also: credence and the buffet, and is, indeed, a much more legitimate inheritor of their functions than the See also: modern sideboard, which, as we know it, is practically an 18th-century invention
.
It See also: developed into its See also: present shape about the second quarter of the 17th century, and has since then changed but little
.
As a piece of movable furniture it was made rarely, if at all, after the beginning of the 19th century until the revival of See also: interest in what is called " farmhouse furniture " at the very beginning of the loth century led in the first place to the construction of many imitation See also: antique dressers from derelict pieces of old See also: oak, and especially from panels of chests, and in the second to the making of avowed imitations
.
The dresser conformed to a medel which varied only in detail and in See also: ornament
.
Its See also: simple and agreeable form consisted of a long and rather narrow table or slab, with drawers or cupboards beneath and a tall upright closed-in back arranged with a varying number of shallow shelves for the reception of plates; hooks for mugs were often fixed upon the face of these shelves
.
Towards the end of the 17th century small cupboards were often added to the superstructure
.
The majority of these dressers were made of oak, but when, early in the Georgian See also: period
II
See also: mahogany came into general use, they were frequently inlaid with that See also: wood; See also: holly and box were also used for See also: inlaying, most frequently in the shape of plain bands or lines
.
A peculiarly effective combination of oak and mahogany is found in the dressers, as in other " farmhouse furniture," made on the See also: borders of See also: Staffordshire and See also: Shropshire
.
The excellence of the See also: work of this kind in that See also: district and in the country lying west of it may perhaps explain the expression " Welsh dresser," which is now no more than a See also: trade See also: term, not necessarily suggestive of the place.of origin, and applied to all dressers of this type
.
They are most frequently found in the houses of small yeomen and substantial farmers, into which fashion penetrated slowly
.
The dresser is now most See also: familiar as necessary plenishing of the kitchen, in which it is invariably a fixture
.
In form it is essentially identical with the movable variety, but it is usually much larger, is made of See also: deal or other soft wood, and the superstructure has no back
.
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