Make your home look like you have never been to IKEA with pictures of these at least in your mind. More from Percy MacQuoid’s work “History of English Furniture: Age of Satinwood.” Published in Edinburgh by T. and A. Constable, printers to His Majesty (Edward VII). Collections of the Society of the Four Arts.

Figure 162: Inlaid and painted satin wood commode. Figure 163: Top of same. Page 226. Collections of the Society of the Four Arts. Scanned by the Internet Archive. Cc0 License 1.0. via https://archive.org/details/HistoryOfEnglishFurnitureAgeOfSatinwood/page/n226/mode/1up
Painted sideboard-commode. Property of Frank Partridge, Esquire. Signed Shirley Slocombe artist, 1907. Plate XI, page 232. Collections of the Society of the Four Arts. Scanned by the Internet Archive. Cc0 License 1.0. via https://archive.org/details/HistoryOfEnglishFurnitureAgeOfSatinwood/page/n232/mode/1up
Figure 167: Mahogany chair (left). Figure 168: Mahogany chair, property of Alfred Davis, Esquire (right). Page 236. Collections of the Society of the Four Arts. Scanned by the Internet Archive. Cc0 License 1.0. via https://archive.org/details/HistoryOfEnglishFurnitureAgeOfSatinwood/page/n236/mode/1up
Painted satin-wood writing cabinet. Property of Messrs. D. L. Isaacs. Plate XII, page 245. Signed Shirley Slocombe artist, 1908. Collections of the Society of the Four Arts. Scanned by the Internet Archive. Cc0 License 1.0. via https://archive.org/details/HistoryOfEnglishFurnitureAgeOfSatinwood/page/n245/mode/1up
Figure 179: Mahogany chair-back settee. Property of Messrs. J. Mallett and Son. Page 250. Collections of the Society of the Four Arts. Scanned by the Internet Archive. Cc0 License 1.0. via https://archive.org/details/HistoryOfEnglishFurnitureAgeOfSatinwood/page/n250/mode/1up

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