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| Â | MSN Encarta - Hepplewhite Style |
 | | Hepplewhite Style, a neoclassical style of furniture designed by the English cabinetmaker George Hepplewhite. |  | | He learned the art of furniture making in... |
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http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761555267/Hepplewhite_Style.html
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| Â | Hepplewhite Furniture - Old And Sold Antiques Auction & Marketplace |
 | | George Hepplewhite, a London cabinetmaker, developed a style which found wide popularity. |  | | Hepplewhite executed many commissions for the Adams Brothers (architects and furniture designers) and was in turn influenced by their designs, the free use of painting on furniture being one of their favorites. |  | | The fact that the Prince of Wales was one of his patrons of course increased Hepplewhite's reputation as a fine craftsman. |
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http://www.oldandsold.com/articles01/article489.shtml
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| Â | First edition of Hepplewhite's Cabinet-Maker and Upholsterer's Guide |
 | | Published by George Hepplewhite’s wife, Alice, after his death, the Guide was published in an exceedingly small edition in 1788. |  | | As no piece of furniture designed by Hepplewhite’s firm has survived, the Guide is the sole accurate source of information about his style. |  | | “Hepplewhite's style and reputation rest on his Cabinet-Maker and Upholsterer's Guide (1788), which contained nearly 300 designs for furniture and other furnishings… Simplicity, elegance, and utility characterize the designs in the Guide. |
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http://www.theworldsgreatbooks.com/cabinet.htm
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| Â | Guide to Furniture Styles from Connected Lines |
 | | Named after English designer and cabinetmaker George Hepplewhite whose designs in "The Cabinet Maker and Upholsterers Guide" were published posthumously in 1788. |  | | The Duncan Phyfe style is considered by some art historians as more of an adaptation and refinement of Adam, Sheraton, Hepplewhite, and Empire than a style in itself. |  | | Combined the neoclassic furniture style characteristics of Hepplewhite and Sheraton. |
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http://www.connectedlines.com/styleguide
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| Â | The Metropolitan Museum of Art - Works of Art: American Decorative Arts |
 | | The design of these chairs is an enriched version of plate 2 from George Hepplewhite's "Cabinet-Maker and Upholsterer's Guide" (London, 1788). |  | | The chair is part of a larger set, two pieces of which are at Bayou Bend (Museum of Fine Arts, Houston), and one in the Karolik Collection (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston). |  | | The carved grape clusters in the lunette at the base of the splat and suspended from bowknots at the top of each leg are a motif traditionally associated with the work of Samuel McIntire, a Salem carver and architect. |
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http://www.metmuseum.org/COLLECTIONS/view1.asp?dep=1&full=0&item=62.16
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| Â | Hepplewhite, George -- Britannica Concise Encyclopedia Online Article |
 | | More results on "Hepplewhite, George" when you join. |  | | The delicate, graceful chairs designed by George Hepplewhite were lighter and smaller than Thomas Chippendale's and had typically straight, slender legs. |  | | "Hepplewhite, George" Britannica Concise Encyclopedia from Encyclopædia Britannica. |
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http://concise.britannica.com/ebc/article?eu=392263
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| Â | Guide to the Hepplewhite Furniture Style from Connected Lines |
 | | It is named after British designer and cabinetmaker George Hepplewhite whose designs in "The Cabinet Maker and Upholsterers Guide" were published posthumously in 1788. |  | | Guide to the Hepplewhite Furniture Style from Connected Lines |  | | Hepplewhite is a neoclassic style characterized by a delicate appearance, tapered legs, and the use of contrasting veneers and inlay. |
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http://www.connectedlines.com/styleguide/style10.htm
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| Â | Hepplewhite Sideboard |
 | | Ever since George Hepplewhite's famed Guide was published in the late 18th century, furniture makers throughout the world have never stopped making the Hepplewhite Sideboard. |  | | Miniphile is no exception and their 1:12 scale sideboard is made with the same degree of accuracy as the originals. |
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http://www.miniphile.com/Products/502.htm
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