According to MSNBC:
At a ceremony in the brick church at Jamestown, built in 1907 near the
original church frame dating to 1617, the queen presented a handmade,
elaborately carved Windsor chair as a gift to the people of Virginia.
----
Of course, the Queen is from the house of Windsor (is that where the
name cames from?). However,
anyone know where 1) a picture of it is 2) who made it?
A Norm special?
MJ Wallace
> : During yesterday's visit, the monarch presented a high-back,
> : Mendlesham-style, Windsor chair, which had been hand-crafted by
> : Saxmundham-based company Finewood.
>
> --
> Drew Lawson I had planned to be dead by now, but
> [email protected] the schedule slipped, they do that.
> -- Casady
This gets you to the company, probably something like this one custom
carved.
http://www.mendleshamchairs.co.uk/range/range.php?rangeid=11
On 7 May, 19:37, "[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote:
> Of course, the Queen is from the house of Windsor (is that where the
> name cames from?
Yes. Although this chair is from Suffolk (SE coast), the "typical"
mass-market Windsors in the UK were made and sold around the Windsor
area.
The Queen's bizarre history of names are the result of a country that
doesn't much like foreigners finding itself ruled by offshoots of
European minor nobility. They deliberately renamed themselves from the
German "Battenburg" to the more English-sounding "Mountbatten" to
avoid being mistaken for a cheap pink cake. Swapping "Schleswig-
Holstein-Sonderburg-Gl=FCcksburg" with a side-order of "Saxe-Coburg
Gotha" for "Windsor" makes it easier for our illiterate tabloids to
spell.
On May 7, 3:39 pm, [email protected] (Drew Lawson) wrote:
> In article <[email protected]>
> "[email protected]" <[email protected]> writes:
>
> >According to MSNBC:
>
> >At a ceremony in the brick church at Jamestown, built in 1907 near the
> >original church frame dating to 1617, the queen presented a handmade,
> >elaborately carved Windsor chair as a gift to the people of Virginia.
>
> >----
>
> >Of course, the Queen is from the house of Windsor (is that where the
> >name cames from?). However,
> >anyone know where 1) a picture of it is 2) who made it?
>
> I can't help you with the picture, but according to
> http://www.eadt.co.uk/content/eadt/news/story.aspx?brand=EADOnline&ca...
>
> (sorry about the linewrap)
>
> : During yesterday's visit, the monarch presented a high-back,
> : Mendlesham-style, Windsor chair, which had been hand-crafted by
> : Saxmundham-based company Finewood.
>
> --
> Drew Lawson I had planned to be dead by now, but
> [email protected] the schedule slipped, they do that.
> -- Casady
Drew,
Thank you for posting this interesting sidebar to the Queen's
activities in Virginia. I would not have known where to look.
Joe G
This is probably the best link for a picture of the Windsor chair in
question:
http://www.mendleshamchairs.co.uk/philanthropy/index.php
On May 7, 1:37 pm, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
wrote:
> According to MSNBC:
>
> At a ceremony in the brick church at Jamestown, built in 1907 near the
> original church frame dating to 1617, the queen presented a handmade,
> elaborately carved Windsor chair as a gift to the people of Virginia.
>
> ----
>
> Of course, the Queen is from the house of Windsor (is that where the
> name cames from?). However,
> anyone know where 1) a picture of it is 2) who made it?
>
> A Norm special?
>
> MJ Wallace
"mike hide" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> snip
>
> Anyway getting back to the Windsor chair not the most attractive design
> too much machining for me .Prefer the ones made by the bodgers wherever
> they could find a source of wood [many places including Windsor],the ones
> with the crelated stretchers the yew wood bentwood and the elm seats
> ...mjh
>
>
Have any of you been to Bayou Bend (Houston) and seen the collection of
Windsor Chairs they have?
If you haven't and your close by, it's worth the trip.
You'll see some Newport, Philadelphia, and Boston secretaries and cases
also.
"Andy Dingley" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
On 7 May, 19:37, "[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote:
> Of course, the Queen is from the house of Windsor (is that where the
> name cames from?
Yes. Although this chair is from Suffolk (SE coast), the "typical"
mass-market Windsors in the UK were made and sold around the Windsor
area.
The Queen's bizarre history of names are the result of a country that
doesn't much like foreigners finding itself ruled by offshoots of
European minor nobility. They deliberately renamed themselves from the
German "Battenburg" to the more English-sounding "Mountbatten" to
avoid being mistaken for a cheap pink cake. Swapping "Schleswig-
Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg" with a side-order of "Saxe-Coburg
Gotha" for "Windsor" makes it easier for our illiterate tabloids to
spell.
Hey who pulled your chain ? How about getting on to the likes of wilson and
his cronies who let in half of asia and africa and then enacted laws to say
you have to like them and support them .
Anyway getting back to the Windsor chair not the most attractive design too
much machining for me .Prefer the ones made by the bodgers wherever they
could find a source of wood [many places including Windsor],the ones with
the crelated stretchers the yew wood bentwood and the elm seats ...mjh
replying to [email protected], Cath wrote:
> mjmwallace wrote:
>
> According to MSNBC:
> At a ceremony in the brick church at Jamestown, built in 1907 near the
> original church frame dating to 1617, the queen presented a handmade,
> elaborately carved Windsor chair as a gift to the people of Virginia.
> ----
> Of course, the Queen is from the house of Windsor (is that where the
> name cames from?). However,
> anyone know where 1) a picture of it is 2) who made it?
> A Norm special?
> MJ Wallace
These company that made these chairs is now Treeincarnated, owned by the
son of the original company, now based in Dennington, Suffolk
http://www.treeincarnated.co.uk
--
In article <[email protected]>
"[email protected]" <[email protected]> writes:
>According to MSNBC:
>
>At a ceremony in the brick church at Jamestown, built in 1907 near the
>original church frame dating to 1617, the queen presented a handmade,
>elaborately carved Windsor chair as a gift to the people of Virginia.
>
>----
>
>Of course, the Queen is from the house of Windsor (is that where the
>name cames from?). However,
>anyone know where 1) a picture of it is 2) who made it?
I can't help you with the picture, but according to
http://www.eadt.co.uk/content/eadt/news/story.aspx?brand=EADOnline&category=News&tBrand=EADOnline&tCategory=News&itemid=IPED04%20May%202007%2017%3A42%3A33%3A900
(sorry about the linewrap)
: During yesterday's visit, the monarch presented a high-back,
: Mendlesham-style, Windsor chair, which had been hand-crafted by
: Saxmundham-based company Finewood.
--
Drew Lawson I had planned to be dead by now, but
[email protected] the schedule slipped, they do that.
-- Casady
>> : During yesterday's visit, the monarch presented a high-back,
>> : Mendlesham-style, Windsor chair, which had been hand-crafted by
>> : Saxmundham-based company Finewood.
>>
>
> This gets you to the company, probably something like this one custom
> carved.
> http://www.mendleshamchairs.co.uk/range/range.php?rangeid=11
That's a pretty good example of why Mike Dunbar contends that Windsors
should be painted not stained. Notice how the grain distracts the eye from
the pure form and shape of the chair (which isn't especially lovely for a
Windsor).
For the same reason, girls shouldn't get tattoos.
Another more practical reason is that Dunbar's chairs use at least three
different types of wood: maple turnings, pine seat, red oak arm, bow and
spindles, cherry hand rests (added to the oak arm). Each wood offers
desirable properties for the components.
YMMV,
Dean