The Property of a Lady
A set of quartetto tables, each on slender turned baluster lees joined by turned stretchers, the rectangular tops veneered and crossbanded in different specimen woods, the smallest inset with a chessboard, 19th Century, restorations, the largest 23in. (58.5cm) wide
Details
A set of quartetto tables, each on slender turned baluster lees joined by turned stretchers, the rectangular tops veneered and crossbanded in different specimen woods, the smallest inset with a chessboard, 19th Century, restorations, the largest 23in. (58.5cm) wide
Post lot text
This set of tables is of unusual design with three tiers of baluster stretchers uniting the legs, it is based on a similar set at Leighton Hall, Lancashire, a house owned by Richard Gillow and containing several pieces of furniture which can be assigned to his company Gillows of Lancaster (See: Ralph Edwards, The Shorter Dictionary of English Furniture, Country Life, 1983, London, p.575, fig.2.1)