Dating Antique Furniture

And no, I certainly do not mean dinner and a movie.

Dave and I were fortunate enough to pick up some beautiful antique dining room furniture today for next to nothing. They’re beautiful pieces which have dire need of refinishing; they’re at least 60 years old (based on the construction), but I think they might be much older or at least made to look much older. Does anyone here know how to date furniture? I have pictures.

Buffet
China Cabinet

I’m leaning toward Art Nouveau, myself, but I really don’t know much about furniture design outside of what I’ve read online.

The buffet is approximately 6’ long, and the china cabinet is about 4’ wide. If you need more information, just ask.

Thanks for the help!

I opened this thread expecting to see something about a dating experience with…someone old. :smack: Somehow the title seemed like a metaphor.

Sorry I couldn’t be of help. Carry on.

Well, there was this really cute Ottoman one time, but he mumbled some excuse about “his empire breaking up” and left early.

Sorry, I got nothin’.

Have you tried to find a manufacturer’s name on either of the pieces? It’ll probably be on the bottom of a drawer or somewhere inconspicuous. If you can find a name, you ought to be able to Google it and track down the dates they were active. if you’r elucky, you might even be able to track down an old catalogue or the like and find your exact furniture, if it was mass produced.

I tried to google for “dating antique furniture.” Boy, was I surprised to find something there that wasn’t work-safe.

http://www.healthyandactive.com/liweco.html

Yeah… um. I got nothin’ either.

All I’ve got is that I immediately thought “1920’s” when I saw the china cabinet. I’m basing that on furniture belonging to a friend’s mom.

Here’s an idea. See if you can find old Sear’s or Eaton’s catalogues either at the library or online. That should give you an idea of what stuff looked like during different periods. Another idea is to take a pic to your local antique dealer. A better idea might be at see if someone at your local Goodwill or Sally Ann knows. They’re a lot less likely to scam you and try to persuade you into selling the pieces.

BTW, very nice! I’m dripping envy! :wink:

The OP title immediately made me think of this website:

http://www.furnitureporn.com/

For me, it brought to mind one of those old NYNEX yellow pages ads when they were doing a pun theme and they had a sofa peforming a strip-tease of its upholstery. (The punch line of that one was “furniture stripping”. The tag line for that ad campaign was “If it’s out there, it’s in here.” Other example that I remember is “fishing tackle”)

You might want to try this site, especially if you can snap a digital photo or three of each piece to upload: http://www.whatsitworthtoyou.com/

You have to register, but simple ID of your items would be $2.25 each, and you can also get appraisals or more in-depth info for pretty reasonable fees. I tried them with some china pieces with patterns and manufacturers I couldn’t identify, and got answers back in less than a day and a half.

Actually, this link goes straight to the “Ask an Expert” section.

I’d say '20s or later. Aside from the design, the construction is the telling thing. If the backs are plywood, and carry a manufacturer’s label or stenciled and painted numbers, you’re dealing with mass-produced furniture. Also check if the wood is veneered or solid. It looks to me from the pictures like the doors and drawer fronts are probably veneered, which again would indicate mass production here, and probably a date from the '20s or later. Stylistically, these pieces seem to be derived from French provincial furniture, with, in the case of the china cabinet, an Art Nouveau overlay.

The wood is solid, no veneer, surprisingly. There is a(n unreadable) label on the back; I already knew they were mass-produced as opposed to artisan - my dad is a carpenter/cabinetmaker - you pick up things like this, being surrounded by artisan work.

I emailed a local guy who is always posting antique and vintage furniture on the local Craigslist, and he has given me an approximate of the late 1920s. Matches up with Sal’s guess.

They desperately need refinishing. They’re currently painted in this sort of streaky gold paint. Who on earth does that to beautiful old wood?

I think it was a '70s fad. I once found a dresser from about the 1840s that had been painted this way. You’ve got two choices here: you can either strip the paint, or you can install hideous wood paneling throughout your house to make it match the furniture.

Paging Lissa

Ahhh, they’re 1920’s-style “Death Dates”.

A couple of times I dated an occasional piece.

Ugh. I hate running across furniture like that. My mom has a dresser that was her great-great-grandmother’s, and it has something like four different layers of pastel paint on it. We mean to strip it some day and varnish it, but that would mean we’d have to move it and it weighs a ton.

I once stripped a French dresser.