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Source Description
Needlework typically occupied several hours of a well-to-do woman's day. Worktables are compact, lightweight, and therefore portable. Casters permitted one to move the table around a room and to reposition it easily for sewing or writing. The top drawer of this example was designed to hold writing equipment and contains a writing tablet that could be placed at a convenient slant. The second drawer is divided into compartments for sewing equipment. Needlework was stored in a bag below, accessible by pulling its frame out of one of the table's shorter sides. This simple, small table with its slender, tapered legs is decorated with painted landscapes almost certainly copied from engravings. From about 1800–1825 furniture decoration of this kind was taught in schools for proper young ladies of New England.
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
150521
label
Work Table
core
obj
dtoType
object
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
150521
contentType
object
title
Work Table
description
Needlework typically occupied several hours of a well-to-do woman's day. Worktables are compact, lightweight, and therefore portable. Casters permitted one to move the table around a room and to reposition it easily for sewing or writing. The top drawer of this example was designed to hold writing equipment and contains a writing tablet that could be placed at a convenient slant. The second drawer is divided into compartments for sewing equipment. Needlework was stored in a bag below, accessible by pulling its frame out of one of the table's shorter sides. This simple, small table with its slender, tapered legs is decorated with painted landscapes almost certainly copied from engravings. From about 1800–1825 furniture decoration of this kind was taught in schools for proper young ladies of New England.
date
1800–1825
citation
rights
CC0
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
wikidata
Q79933102
genreSpecific
Furniture and woodwork
imageCount
1
source
import
dimensionsRaw
Overall: 69.9 x 51.5 x 40 cm (27 1/2 x 20 1/4 x 15 3/4 in.)
cul
America, Massachusetts, Boston, 19th century
accession
1981.75
Source extras
tec
maple, brass hardware
tombstone
Work Table, 1800–1825. America, Massachusetts, Boston, 19th century. Maple, brass hardware; overall: 69.9 x 51.5 x 40 cm (27 1/2 x 20 1/4 x 15 3/4 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Gift of Miss Elizabeth Bartol, 1981.75
collection
Furniture
citations
citation
Lee, Sherman E. “The Year in Review for 1981.” <em>The Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art</em> 69, no. 2 (February 1982): 39–82.
page_number
Reproduced: p. 536; Mentioned: p. 79, no. 30
citation
Hawley, Henry. “Four Pieces of American Furniture.” <em>The Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art</em> 69, no. 10 (December 1982): 324–339.
page_number
Mentioned and reproduced: p. 324-327, figs. 1-5
creditline
Gift of Miss Elizabeth Bartol
updatedAt
2026-05-29 07:46:10.208000
sourceId
150521
dept
Decorative Art and Design
coll
Furniture
med
maple, brass hardware
thumbnail_url
image_url
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
6aff4d638a24a6d3