Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Chippendal­e-style table found on street will be antique soon

- By Helaine Fendelman and Joe Rosson

Q: We found this pie crust table on the street and rescued it. The finish on the top is crackled and peeling, but otherwise, it is in good condition — including the tilt top mechanism. The wood appears to be mahogany. What are its age and value? Should we refinish it? And what is its monetary value?

A: Joe vividly remembers careening through the streets in the environs of White Plains, New York, with Helaine behind the wheel. Suddenly, Helaine made a U-turn, stopped the car and jumped out. A somewhat bewildered Joe wondered what the heck was going on, but it soon became apparent when Helaine ran over to the curb where a bunch of garbage had been piled waiting for the refuse people to pick it up.

Much of the garbage heap consisted of an old sofa — Helaine’s target. Using her headlights to inspect the sofa, she soon shook her head and came back to the driver’s seat pronouncin­g the sofa to be truly “garbage.” An embarrasse­d and bewildered Joe was thinking he could have told her that all along.

But both of us knew many people search the trash on the streets looking for discarded treasures — and sometimes they find them.

This particular table is in the style of English cabinetmak­er Thomas Chippendal­e, whose London workshop was the meeting place for London’s fashionabl­e and artistic communitie­s. In 1754, Chippendal­e published The Gentleman and Cabinet Maker’s Directory, which allowed

other craftsmen to copy his style.

This style crossed the Atlantic and could be found in America’s fashionabl­e dining rooms and parlors. The Chippendal­e style went out of fashion in the early 19th century but was revived around America’s Centennial celebratio­n in 1876. After that, Victorian reinterpre­tations and “Mission” furniture forms intervened, but the Chippendal­e style was revived once again during the first two quarters of the 20th century.

The tilt-top tea table in today’s question was probably new in the early second quarter of the

20th century. It has many of the calling cards of an 18th century piece with a well-turned pedestal and good-looking ball and claw feet, but its pie crust top is a bit too thick and lacking in grace.

The carved acanthus leaves on the knees of the

legs are attractive, but they are not nearly as well-executed as they would have been on an 18th century example. The table is a good 80 to 90 years old and will be an antique soon and is worth preserving as a useful part of home decor. Give it a good cleaning or have it lovingly refinished — no sandpaper and no polyuretha­ne — and this street find should be worth $225 to $275 for insurance purposes.

Helaine Fendelman and

Joe Rosson have written a number of books on antiques. Do you have an item you’d like to know more about? Contact them at Joe Rosson, 2504 Seymour Ave., Knoxville, TN 37917, or email them at treasures@knology.net. If you’d like your question to be considered for their column, include a high-resolution photo of the subject, which must be in focus, with your inquiry.

 ?? READER SUBMITTED/TNS ?? Give it a good cleaning or have it lovingly refinished and this street find should be worth $225 to $275 for insurance purposes.
READER SUBMITTED/TNS Give it a good cleaning or have it lovingly refinished and this street find should be worth $225 to $275 for insurance purposes.

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