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"cabinetwork" Definitions
  1. finished woodwork made by a cabinetmaker

16 Sentences With "cabinetwork"

How to use cabinetwork in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "cabinetwork" and check conjugation/comparative form for "cabinetwork". Mastering all the usages of "cabinetwork" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Its timber is light and easily worked. It is used for flooring, furniture and cabinetwork, interior fittings, turnery, gun stocks, wood carving, veneers as well as spars and masts for boats. Courtroom number three of The High Court of Australia is beautifully and completely furnished with coachwood timber.
The Centre de formation professionnelle de La Baie offers its 138 students training programs in metallurgy, cabinetwork, forestry, and composite materials. The closest post- secondary institutions (CEGEPs and universities) are in Chicoutimi. The borough also has a branch of the Saguenay public library network located in the same building as the Théâtre municipal.
Armchair for the Malden Public Library from David Rumsey. Richardson designed the New York Court of Appeals Room (1883–84), on the third floor of the New York State Capitol in Albany. Davenport & Co. executed its highly carved, Byzantine- Romanesque-style cabinetwork and furniture.Mary Jean Madigan, Nineteenth Century Furniture: Innovation, Revival and Reform (Art & Antiques, 1982), p. 9.
The wood is used for furniture, cabinetwork, joinery, paneling, specialty items, boat-building, railroad cross-ties (treated), decorative veneers and for musical instruments (e.g. for guitar fretboard). The leaves are used as food by Antheraea paphia (silkworms) which produce the tassar silk (Tussah), a form of commercially important wild silk. The bark is used medicinally against diarrhoea.
The Spanish explorers were quick to appreciate West Indies Mahogany's special properties; its early importation and use in cabinetwork is attested by the 16th century provenance of some fine Spanish Renaissance pieces. Queen Elizabeth is said to have been interested in samples of mahogany brought by Sir Walter Raleigh on his return from Trinidad in 1595.Rolf, R.A. The True Mahoganies. Bulletin of Miscellaneous Information. Vol.
McKim's goal was "to make changes so that the house would not have to be altered again."Monkman, p. 186. Herter Brothers executed plasterwork, paneling and cabinetwork for several of the public rooms, helping to turn a stylistic hodge-podge of interiors into a unified Neo-Classical whole. Edward F. Caldwell & Co. made the lighting fixtures, and Leon Marcotte & Co. and Davenport & Co. made the furniture.
The cabinetwork in these rooms are all northern pine, a tree now extinct. The basement can be reached by another flight of stairs and contains tools and utensils throughout the history of house, many of which were used in the building of the mansion. One of the oddities is a child-sized coffin set as a reminder of the high mortality rate during child-birthing in the 1800s.
An old Scottish church furnished the pattern for the reading stand. The rear cabinet, based on an aumbry or weapon closet, contain artifacts such as pewter and china used at Soutar's Inn in Ayrshire that was frequented by Robert Burns. The panels in the doors, mantel, and in-the-wall cabinets were carved in Edinburgh by Thomas Good and then shipped to Pittsburgh. The cabinetwork was done in the shops of Gustav Ketterer of Philadelphia.
Cited in Louis I. Kahn: Beyond Time and Style by Carter Wiseman, page 102, , op. cit. Architectural historian Vincent Scully said the pioneering work by Kahn and Komendant on this project "was to affect for good the techniques of the whole concrete pre-casting industry from the factory to the site." The Architectural Record noted at the time that the precision achieved was "more typical of fine cabinetwork than of concrete construction." Cited in Louis I. Kahn: Beyond Time and Style by Carter Wiseman, page 98, , op. cit.
In Kengtung, Burma Dipterocarpus alatus (, , ; Khmer chhë tiël ba:y, chhë tiël tük, chhë tiël thomDY PHON Pauline, 2000, Plants Used In Cambodia, self- published, printed by Imprimerie Olympic, Phnom Penh or chheuteal; , '), also known colloquially as the resin tree, is a tropical forest tree, of dense evergreen or mixed dense forests, in tropical Asia. It is considered vulnerable. It often occurs gregariously along river banks and is a key planting species for regenerating deforested land around the Dong Nai river and Cat Tien National Park. In Cambodia, the wood is much valued in construction and cabinetwork, when not exploited for its oily resin.
Davenport & Co. did work on the James J. Hill House (1891) in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The architects, Peabody and Stearns, were fired before the building's completion and its interiors were completed by Irving & Casson. The company produced furniture and interiors for architect Charles Brigham's 1895 annex to the Massachusetts State House in Boston.Armchair from Massachusetts Legislature. To the designs of architect Stanford White, the company executed cabinetwork and furnishings for the Villard Houses (1882–84) in New York City; Naumkeag (1885–86) in Stockbridge, MA; Harbor Hill (1899-1902) in Roslyn, New York;Interior of the MacKay house from Vintage Designs.
Located in Frick Fine Arts Building, this two- story library houses a circulating research collection serving the Department of the History of Art and Architecture. The Collection contains over 90,000 volumes and subscribes to more than 350 journals in relevant fields and is ranked among the top 10 fine art libraries in the country. The library's reading room is constructed of fruit wood paneling and cabinetwork with gold leaf trim designed by Italian craftsmen. The library is further appointed by wrought iron balcony railings, terracotta tile flooring, maple tables with matching Windsor chairs, and ceiling-high windows furnishing views of Schenley Park.
Traditional costume Distinctive representatives of craftsmanship on the island are Tenerife Lace (calado canario), which is drawn work embroidery, and the intricate doilies known as rosetas, or rosette embroidery, particularly from Vilaflor. The lace, often made for table linen, is produced by the intricate and slow embroidering of a stretched piece of cloth, which is rigidly attached to a wooden frame and is finished with illustrations or patterns using threads that are crossed over and wound around the fijadores, or pins stuck in a small support made of cloth. These decorated, small pieces are afterwards joined, to produce distinct designs and pieces of cloth. Another Tenerife-based industry is cabinetwork.
The art critic Robert Hughes attributes much of Cornell's artistic sensibility to his East Coast moorings. In The Shock of the New he writes, "Cornell would admit nothing to his memory theatre that was not, in some degree, elegant. This may sound a recipe for preciosity, but it was not, because Cornell had a rigorous sense of form, strict and spare, like good New England cabinetwork." Wassmann grew up influenced not only by his deep family roots, but more immediately by a Pennsylvania Dutch community in nearby Butler County, which only heightened his aesthetic for the spartan design and precise, but elegant, carpentry he saw in his Amish neighbors.
The school at night The construction of such a huge building in the Belgrade of that time with mainly ground-floored objects, was complex and expensive enterprise, financed by the Municipality of Belgrade with 280.000 dinars. For this project, the Municipality hired its own architect, Јеlisaveta Načić, and Belgrade constructors and craftsmen took part in the construction: the construction undertaker Nikola Vitorović, cabinetwork was done by Voja St. Janković`s workshop, the central heating and the electrical installations were done by the undertaker company „Andra Ristić and comp.“, the masonry was the work of the „Ripanj granite industry“, so the school near the Orthodox Cathedral was almost completely the product of domestic industry. The building was constructed on the sloping ground of the highest part of Sava slope, by the most modern construction procedures, and it consists of a basement, semi-basement, a ground floor and the first floor.
Roussel's stamp, with its fleur-de-lis between the P and ROUSSEL, is often seen,Illustrated in James Parker, et al., Decorative Art from the Samuel H. Kress Collection at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1964:86 fig. 69, on a tall rectangular drop- front secretary desk, ca 1775-80, with panels of architectural marquetry derived from engravings and gilt-bronze moldings and mounts of generally current design. but such quantities of goods made by others, both new and old, passed through the shop, and so much cabinetwork from Roussel's workshop was sold and stamped by other marchands-ébénistes,For example, Roussel worked for Pierre II Migeon (Watson 1966:557). that it is not easy to recognize any consistent sequence of characteristic styles, characteristic constructions,Geoffrey de Bellaigue discusses a fitted drawer that does not function in the piece it has been incorporated into, a mechanical table stamped by Roussel at Waddesdon Manor (Bellaigue, The James A. de Rothschild Collection at Waddesdon Manor: II. Furniture, Clocks and Gilt Bronze, 1974:492-97, cat. no. 101).

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