Jump to content

centres (furniture) (Q777): Difference between revisions

From ARXIVE
Created a new Item
 
Added qualifier: link attempt run id (P34): link-moj8jbie-kjrfxknm
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Property / has broader: Item Link Placeholder / qualifier
 
link attempt run id: link-moj86457-ah8bx2i8
Property / has broader: Item Link Placeholder / qualifier
 
link attempt run id: link-moj8jbie-kjrfxknm
Property / has broader
 
Property / has broader: surface fittings / rank
 
Normal rank

Revision as of 23:10, 28 April 2026

No description defined
Language Label Description Also known as
English
centres (furniture)
No description defined

    Statements

    0 references
    Items of furniture which can be either protective or decorative (or both) found in the centre of a board. Centres are most often made of metal, typically copper alloy, but they will also be found made of iron as well as silver and silver-gilt and may be enamelled oven decorated with gemstones, and will often be of the same design as the corner pieces. Metal centres can be decorated with punches, engraving, embossing, piercing, etc., and may be square, lozenge-shaped, circular, oval, etc. Centres were used from the middle-ages onwards, but increasingly from the end of the sixteenth century, their function becomes more decorative and status-related. Some centres incorporate bosses which may be either hammered out of the centre piece itself (integral bosses) or as separate added components (separate bosses). If simple bosses without any form of decorative surround and of the same design as those found in the corners of the boards are also found in the centres of the boards, they should be described as centre bosses and not as centres.
    0 references