Contained within this text is a detailed treatise on the furniture of
the 'Empire' and 'Louis XVI' styles. Complete with information on
history, popularity, manufacture, and much more besides, this text
constitutes a great book for those with an interest in furniture from
these periods and in historical furniture in general. Furniture under
the reign of Louis XVI was elegant in its form and decoration, with much
use of fluted columns, carved friezes, oak and laurel leaf wreaths, the
Greek band, and other various Neoclassical attempts to imitate the
artistic styles of the Romans and Greeks. The Empire style was the
second phase of Neoclassicism in the early-nineteenth-century design
movement - and influenced architecture, furniture, and other decorative
arts. It was most prevalent between 1804 and 1814, during the First
French Empire. We are proud to republish this book here complete with a
new introduction on the history of furniture.