2MK POSTERS - BRITISH PERIOD AND ANTIQUE FURNITURE - PATRICK MOORHEAD ANTIQUES

Welcome to the new 2MK Patrick Moorhead Antiques website

This Patrick Moorhead British antique furniture website is best viewed using the latest version of adobe flash. Please click on the link below

Get Adobe Flash player

The 2MK Patrick Moorhead Antiques Website

This is the 2MK British Antiques HTML text version.

Patrick Moorhead British Period and Antique Furniture

This Patrick Moorhead antiques website was designed and developed by Patrick Moorhead

Patrick Moorhead Period Antiques and Antique Furniture.

Patrick Moorhead Antiques is an internet period and antique furniture dealer based just outside of Brighton. We are a friendly family run British antiques business who welcome questions.

Patrick Moorhead stocks over 100 pieces of british antique furniture at any one time specialising in Victorian antique furniture, Edwardian antique furniture, Art and Crafts antique furniture, Art Deco antique furniture and Art Nouveau movement antique furniture. We also sell antique porcelain, antique pottery, antique silver, antique mirrors, antique glassware + many other antiques and collectables dating back to the 18th Century + beyond.

Patrick Moorhead british antiques operates from a 3000 Sq Ft purpose built premises allowing us to sell, store and ship furniture in a modern day business approach which allows us to sell at more competitive prices.

We aim to offer a unique and different perspective on buying antiques and collectables to traditional methods. All our pieces are shown on-line. This method of antiques trading offers you the customer an opportunity to buy antiques and collectables at trade prices with all the benefits of retail protection. The joy of buying and looking still remains as we sell through the exciting and wonderful market window of ebay. As a professional company we set the standard in customer satisfaction and protection, with a no-quibble 7 day return policy, there is no safer way of buying. We are open to the general public and antique viewings are possible through an appointment basis only. Our antiques stock turnover is no more than 10 days so if you are interested in an item, please declare your interests in our furniture early as it will be gone quicker than you know.

Patrick Moorhead Antiques Furniture Testimonials

Lovely piece of antique furniture, Patrick is a lovely gentleman to deal with
Thanks

Thanks - I'm really delighted with my Patrick Moorhead purchase! Even better antique furniture than I thought it would be! Thanks

Excellent communication with the Patrick Moorhead staff.....very helpful indeed.
A Pleasure to do business with.

A Bit about Antiques and Patrick Moorhead

16th Century Furniture - If you visit any antique shop (such as Patrick Moorhead in Brighton) or auction, a large quantity of surviving antiques are furnishings. Furniture made even 500 years ago is very durable, and often has a distinct style about it. Fine craftsmanship was always admired and in demand, so furniture began to pass through the generations accruing in value right up to the present day.

Originally oak was the main timber used in Elizabethan times. Furniture was heavy and serviceable, with bulbous legs, and chairs were either turned or wainscoted. Benches were very common at refectory-style tables. The beds were 4-poster beds with heavy drapes to keep out the draughts, with a canopy and carved posts.

17th and 18th Century Progress - Later, in the 17th century, the ornamentation became flatter, and as the bustles of ladies’ dresses appeared, so chairs changed to accommodate them too. Chests gave way to chests of drawers and furniture became more gracious, refined and decorative.

As Charles II ascended the English throne he wanted his court to emulate the fine furnishings that were in vogue in France and Holland. Talented craftsmen produced ornate furniture to please the extravagant taste of Louis XIV and his successors. Typically the furniture had gilded mounts and was beautifully decorated with carving and small moldings. Even today, the French influence is very obvious in furniture. Generally French-style cabinets are curved in shape and beautifully decorated with carved moldings and trims along the front, and down the elegant S-shaped legs.

These distinct styles and skills were copied and honed back in England. Rooms were smaller, so the furniture was scaled down, and as Queen Anne came to the throne in the early 1700’s the Queen Anne chair was developed. With curving lines and comfortable upholstery, this chair style is still popular today.

20th Century onwards - As time passed finer woods were found and used – walnut with its whorled patterns; mahogany with its red-brown colour; cherry; and rosewood with its distinctive dark streaks.   In the later 20th century, teak and pine gave way to different materials, which brought new possibilities to challenge traditional designs.

Chrome, PVC, plastic and glass are some of the exciting materials used in many colours to create modern bar stools, kitchen furniture, shelving and modern office furniture. Laminating steam-bent timber brought costs down and raised new designs in chairs and tables. The armchairs and chaises-longue of the past became sprung sofas with padded cushioning in a range of textiles that were unthinkable before.

Progress has brought change, but newest and boldest does not suit every home. There is still a place in the Victorian properties, which many of us call home, to furnish in the grander styles of yesteryear. Patrick Moorhead

 

 

free counters