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Antique Parlor Chair Identification Composite Figural Face
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<p>[QUOTE="Ghopper1924, post: 9545129, member: 5170"]Doubt very much that this is a reproduction. It's an armchair ca. 1890-1900, part of a parlor set as you mentioned. It's in the late Renaissance Revival 1880s-1900 style of Karpen (Chicago) and Horner (New York), although not by either of them. Still, a nice - though slightly lower budget - iteration of the style. </p><p><br /></p><p>I have a clock with a non-wood face kind of like yours. It's a composite material. Without having it in hand, however, I couldn't say exactly what yours is made from.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="Ghopper1924, post: 9545129, member: 5170"]Doubt very much that this is a reproduction. It's an armchair ca. 1890-1900, part of a parlor set as you mentioned. It's in the late Renaissance Revival 1880s-1900 style of Karpen (Chicago) and Horner (New York), although not by either of them. Still, a nice - though slightly lower budget - iteration of the style. I have a clock with a non-wood face kind of like yours. It's a composite material. Without having it in hand, however, I couldn't say exactly what yours is made from.[/QUOTE]
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