Is Adams manufacturing still in business?
Due to the COVID-19 situation, Adams Manufacturing is currently conducting limited operations.
Where are Adams chairs made?
Portersville, Pennsylvania
Our furniture and accessory product lines are considered “Made in the USA of domestic and globally sourced material.” We are 100% headquartered in the USA and all of our products are conceived, design-engineered, and transformed at our state-of-the-art manufacturing facility located in Portersville, Pennsylvania.
Where is Adams manufacturing?
Headquartered in the small picturesque town of Portersville, Pennsylvania and with other support facilities throughout the region, our state-of-the-art manufacturing plant transforms resins into a wide variety of products sold to leading mass merchant, online, and hardware retailers around the world.
What does Adams manufacturing do?
With a customer base that includes some of the world’s most prestigious mass merchant and hardware retailers, Adams Manufacturing is the leading supplier of high-quality resin furniture and accessories—as well as suction cups.
What is an Adam chair?
Adam Chair is a mid century classic. Hand crafted of warm Walnut the chair frame is available in Natural & Medium Walnut finishes. The cushions are upholstered in a choice of6 easy tomaintain fabric colors. Cushion covers are zippered for easy cleaning. Also available: the Adam Sofa in either 60″ or 70″ lengths.
What is Adams style furniture?
Crafted between 1760 and 1792, Adam style furniture is neoclassical in design. However, it is different from other neoclassical styles in that it incorporates more of the small but elegant curves and straight lines of Greek and Roman architecture rather than the ornateness.
What period is Adam style?
century neoclassical style
The Adam style (or Adamesque and “Style of the Brothers Adam”) is an 18th-century neoclassical style of interior design and architecture, as practised by Scottish architect William Adam and his sons, of whom Robert (1728–1792) and James (1732–1794) were the most widely known.
How can you tell a Hepplewhite chair?
Some of the distinguishing traits of a true piece of Hepplewhite furniture include a consistency of formal design attributes. Hepplewhite pieces typically have straight legs which may be square or may be tapered at the bottom or foot. A Hepplewhite style foot is simple and straightforward in its design.
What is a Sheraton chair?
Thomas Sheraton inspired Furniture Chair and sofa backs are mostly rectangular and eschew the cabriole leg in favor of straight, rounded thin legs often fluted like columns of a Greek temple. Back legs were occasionally splayed with most ending in simple, unadorned feet.
What is Chippendale style?
Today, Chippendale style furniture generally refers to English furniture made in a modified Rococo style. Chippendale’s Rococo-influenced designs were in part a reaction to the staid formality of earlier periods. However, he adapted the elaborate French style for the somewhat less extravagant English market.
How do I identify a Hepplewhite chair?
When was Hepplewhite furniture made?
about 1780-1810
Hepplewhite furniture dates from about 1780-1810. It’s simplicity reflects the neo-classical style influences in France inspired by motifs from ancient Greek artifacts and architecture. Compared to Chippendale, Hepplewhite’s famed style is more easily identifiable. There is a lightness and elegance to his designs.
How can you tell if a chair is a Chippendale?
You can also find the following characteristics in Chippendale furniture.
- Fine silk fabric upholstery on settees, stools, and chairs.
- Yoke-shaped splats on chairs.
- Top railings on arm and side chairs are intricately designed with ribbon motifs.
- Shell motifs reminiscent of the Queen Anne Style.
How can you tell if you have a Queen Anne chair?
Queen Anne chairs are known for their cabriole legs, mimicking the natural curvature of an animal’s leg. As the most recognizable characteristic of the Queen Anne furniture style, the cabriole leg is the easiest way to spot a piece from this era. Chairs typically have a single vase shaped back, as pictured below.