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Tudor Library & Tudor Paneling
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We make classic Tudor paneling, carvings, and cabinetry for old English or Tudor Library / study rooms.
This wonderful woodwork is
a requisite part of any historical Tudor residence and fundamental to Tudor architecture. Our Tudor paneling can be made to most any size and is ideal in library rooms, study rooms, entrance halls, stair wells, and hallways that are all important parts of
Tudor interior architecture. These panels are pre-fabricated in our shop and shipped in sections that are then easily assembled on-site. Carvings (such as linen-fold) can be ordered for some or all panel sections.
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Tudor Library Quartersawn Oak Paneling Detail |
Quartersawn Oak Paneling Detail |
Tudor Library Quartersawn Oak Paneling Detail |
Tudor Library Quartersawn Oak Paneling Detail |
Quartersawn Oak Paneling Detail |
Tudor Library Quartersawn Oak Paneling Detail |
Tudor Library Quartersawn Oak Paneling Detail |
Tudor Study Quartersawn Oak Paneling Detail |
Tudor Study Quartersawn Oak Paneling Detail with paneled doors |
Tudor Study Quartersawn Oak with Carved Coat of Arms |
Tudor Study Quartersawn Oak with Coat of Arms
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Tudor Study Quartersawn Oak Paneling Detail
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Tudor Study Quartersawn Oak Paneling Detail with paneled doors
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"Tudor Library Quartersawn Oak Paneling Detail with Tudor Fireplace and Hidden TV Cabinet
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"Tudor Library Quartsawn Oak Paneling Detail with Tudor Fireplace and Hidden TV Cabinet
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Tudor Study Quartersawn Oak Library
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Our standard woods are below - pricing is by the square foot (available by request), however we use other wood specie and cuts such as quarter-sawn oak:
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Cherry, Red Oak, and White Oak (plain cut): /sf
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Mahogany and Lyptus: /sf
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Paint Grade: Pine or Poplar /sf
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About Tudor Paneling:
Tudor interiors are typically heavily paneled. The paneling almost cannot be overdone. In the middle ages, paneling was typically added to the stone walls for warmth, to soften the hard look of stone walls, to make a room more cozy, or to make a room more formal.
The old English manors show how the warm colors of the wood harmonize wonderfully with the stone in the floors, walls, arches, and fire-piece surrounds. Typically, the paneling was found in formal areas such as entrance-ways, screens (between the entrance and the great hall), in the great hall itself, the solar, and other rooms of consequence.
The panels were almost always small - the pattern was many times interrupted by formal pilasters, and typically were topped by double-panel wide elongated rectangles that many times were filled with wonderful carving (linen-fold), heraldry, or verbiage. Additionally, it was typical for the paneling to stop two-thirds to three quarters up the wall height.
Above the paneling was either the stone behind or stone dressed with plaster. This wonderful contrast of wood with white plaster and/or stone above is a hallmark of Tudor interiors.
Today, great Tudor architecture features this patterned paneling in hallways, Library rooms, Study rooms, living rooms, entrance halls, and even dining rooms.
Date of last Modification: February
24, 2016
Contact: info@tudorartisans.com
Copyright: Tudor Artisans Inc.
1999-2016
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