Log Cabins on the Frontier Build Your Own Log Home Could You Live in a Log Cabin? Log Homes From Our Readers ...
Cabin - A room constructed with non load bearing partition/ partitions with minimum width of 2.0 mtr.
Furniture: Cabinet - Independence Hall, Philadelphia Furniture: Gothic Chair - Hofmobiliendepot Imperial Furniture Collection, Vienna, Austria ...
cabinetry, cabinetwork - the craft of making furniture (especially furniture of high quality) seat - put a seat on a chair 2.
Cabinet piece the front of which has one or more projecting portions. Brocade A jacquard weave fabric, with pattern in low relief, usually on a satin background. It may be in one or more colors and has an embroidered effect.
Log cabin style (exterior and interior) reflecting the rustic theme (cost 10-15 percent more) 19th century features: high ceilings, porches, steep gables, especially over windows ...
Finished woodwork, cabinetry, carving, etc. minar free-standing tower such as the Qutb Minar ...
cabinet in gardening, a term that refers to a hedged enclosure at the end of a walk. capital a carved or molded decorative head to a column or pilaster, denoting one of the five architectural orders.
The double file kitchen (also known as galley or corridor) has two rows of cabinets at opposite walls, one containing the stove and the sink, the other the refrigerator. This is the classical work kitchen.
In America, the style found expression in objects as diverse as locomotives, skyscrapers, roadside diners, radio cabinets, jukeboxes, and advertising displays.
This example of a Log House illustrates the basic log cabin built by the first settlers in Canada. The chimney was placed in the center of the house so that heat could radiate in all directions.
OVERMANTEL, the name given to decorative cabinet work, or joinery, applied to the upper part of a fireplace.
The style had its roots in either the Spanish patio villa or the summer cabin resort in the woods. The architectural styles of the courts varied widely from Swiss Chalet to Spanish Colonial Revival to Tudor Revival.
bidet (F le bidet, R bideu) toilet paper (F le papier hygienique, R hirtie igienica) toilet, lavatory (F les cabinets, R toaleta, closet, WC, veceu) toilet bowl (F la cuvette de cabinet, R toaleta) ...
Millwork - Finished woodwork, cabinetry, carving, etc. Modillion - A bracket supporting the upper part of a composite or Corinthian cornice.
Interior view of bedroom Interior view of Catherine's cabinet Interior view #1 of Gaston staircase Interior view #2 of Gaston staircase ...
Japanning is the use of coloured laquers on imported japanese cabinets, usually black or red, the laquer was derived from plants.
Torus Torus is a convex molding that is a semi-circle or semi-ellipse. It might be used along the lower section of a cabinet and was commonly seen in the base of Classical columns.
Due to the overall warm and inviting appeal, cottages are perfect vacation homes that do well in a lake or wilderness setting. Cottages have also been referred to as bungalows or cabins because of their size and tendency to be vacation homes, ...
FINIAL Pointed wood or metal ornament at the peak of a roof. A decorative, terminal part of a spire, gable, etc., or projecting upward from the top of a cabinet, breakfront, etc. FRENCH DOORS Pair of identical glass-paned doors.
Gothic Revival Colonial Floor Plans Greek Revival Floor Plans Italianate Floor Plans Log Cabin Floor Plans Mediterranean Floor Plans Mission Floor Plans Modern Floor Plans Neoclassical Floor Plans Neotraditional Floor Plans ...
The finished surface below the fascia and rafters is called the soffit or eave. A soffit is also often installed between the ceiling and the top of wall cabinets in a kitchen, ...
(Pronunciation: "chee-GUY-dah-nah") In Japanese shoin architecture, a special shelving unit—literally "staggered shelves"—for the display of smaller art objects. This built-in shelving unit replaced the freestanding bookcases and cabinets ...
bargeboards, porches with square-tapered columns or piers, and pergolas; common interior features included connected spaces separated by low-height walls, little or no applied ornament, straight lines, varnished wood, built-in benches and cabinets, ...
See also: Architecture, House, Member, Well, Frame
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