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  2. Aspen Golann - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aspen_Golann

    Career. Aspen Golann is a furniture maker, artist and educator whose work explores gender and power through the manipulation of iconic American furniture forms. Trained as a 17th-19th century woodworker, Aspen engages the moral complexity of reproduction furniture by appropriating the aesthetics and antiquarian processes of early America to ...

  3. A. H. Davenport and Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A._H._Davenport_and_Company

    A. H. Davenport and Company was a late 19th-century, early 20th-century American furniture manufacturer, cabinetmaker, and interior decoration firm. Based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, it sold luxury items at its showrooms in Boston and New York City, and produced furniture and interiors for many notable buildings, including The White House.

  4. Virginia furniture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virginia_furniture

    Early employees of Bassett Furniture Company, Bassett, Virginia, circa 1900. By the 20th century, the activities of groups like the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities, led to a renewed interest in colonial styles. Companies like Biggs Furniture grew from a small antiques shop in Richmond into a major reproductions ...

  5. Duncan Phyfe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duncan_Phyfe

    Duncan Phyfe (1768 – 16 August 1854) was one of nineteenth-century America's leading cabinetmakers.. Rather than create a new furniture style, he interpreted fashionable European trends in a manner so distinguished and particular that he became a major spokesman for Neoclassicism in the United States, influencing a generation of American cabinetmakers.

  6. William Savery (cabinetmaker) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Savery_(cabinetmaker)

    Life and career. Savery served a 7-year apprenticeship under the Philadelphia cabinetmaker Solomon Fussell, beginning in 1735. In 1742, at about age 21, he opened his own shop on Second Street, just south of High (now Market) Street in Philadelphia. Benjamin Franklin was an early patron (and a patron of Fussell), [1] and two Savery-attributed ...

  7. Kittinger Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kittinger_Company

    The Kittinger Company was founded in Buffalo, New York, in 1866 as "Thompson, Colie & Co." Around 1870 the company began crafting hand-made upholstered furniture and by this time had changed its name to "Colie & Son" after George and Oliver Colie took control. The furniture business proved so successful for the Colie's that in 1885 they built a ...

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