![]() |
|||||||||
|
|
|||||||||
Bedroom furniture :: Bookcases :: Cabinets :: Chairs :: Chests :: Clocks :: Desks & Bureaux
|
|||||||||
| NEW: You can now click on the photos of many items for a larger image. Lots of new stock! arrived 16th May 2008 pieces include 2 stickstands, 2 hallstands, tiled Harris Lebus washstand, oak four-piece bedroom suite, oak Gothic bookcase, couple of small open bookcases, oak desk, oak seat, oak chair, stunning oak sideboard with stained glass and copper panels. photos online soon. Not all of our stock is currently online. If you are looking for something in particular please contact us and we will do our best to help. Delivery We can arrange door to door delivery, please ask for a quote. We use Forfar Removals when we cannot deliver goods ourselves.
|
|||||||||
|
About us Strachan Antiques is a family business, founded in 1989. We have a very large, ever-changing stock of oak, mahogany, walnut and ash Arts & Crafts furniture and other artefacts by famous names such as Liberty of London, Harris Lebus, Shapland & Petter, Heals and Glasgow's own Wylie & Lochhead. Our retail showroom is minutes from Glasgow City Centre and the M8. Ample customer parking. Most of our Arts & Crafts furniture dates from about 1890 –1915 We do not sell reproductions. |
|||||||||
|
Arts & Crafts The ethos of the movement was of handcrafted pieces made by traditional craftsmen: there should be no unnecessary ornament and everything should be of practical use as well as pleasing to the eye. Unfortunately to make items in this way was very expensive, compared with the machine made pieces of the new industrial age, so it proved impractical. However other furniture manufacturers caught on to the simple lines of the new Arts & Crafts style and it became very popular right into the 20th century.
It began about 1880 and became all the rage The whiplash curves of its organic decorations caused a sensation and were condemned by some as being decadent. The Art Nouveau movement was known in Spain as “Modernism”, in Germany as "Jugendstil", in Italy "Stile Liberty” and in eastern Europe as “Secessionist” – although this latter style was far more rectilinear than in other countries. Except in Glasgow – where C.R.Mackintosh and his contemporaries developed a singular style based on a combination of straight lines and curves now known as “Glasgow-Style”
|
|||||||||
|
|
|||||||||
![]() |
|||||||||