- he
published his
masterwork treatise on woodworking,
titled L'Art du
Menuisier. This long-standing work
covered practically all
methods and
trades ****ociated...
- André
Bervil as Anatole, le
Boulanger Charles Blavette as Pamphile, le
Menuisier Jean-Marie Bon [fr] as
Cabridan Marguerite Chabert [fr] as La Mère de...
-
force until the Revolution,
French chairmaking was the
business of the
menuisier alone,
whose craft was
conjoined with that of the
upholsterer (****ssier)...
-
French and
translates to "ebonist". As
opposed to ébéniste, the term
menuisier denotes a
woodcarver or
chairmaker in French. The
English equivalent for...
- [yɡ sɑ̃bɛ̃]; ca. 1520–1601) was a Franc-comtois sculptor,
trained as a
menuisier or wood-worker; as a
designer of
Mannerist ornaments, his
published designs...
-
edition of
Mechanick Exercises and André
Jacob Roubo's 1774 L'Art du
Menuisier. The term has been in use
since at
least the 16th Century. Use declined...
- Paris, a chair-maker was a
menuisier, or joiner:
guild regulations forbade menuisiers to
engage in
cabinet making. Some
menuisiers produced the
planed and...
-
Corporation des
Menuisiers-Ébénistes was a
French craft guild which was
concerned with the
profession of woodworking. "Corporation des
Menuisiers-Ébénistes...
-
apprentice to John
Gosden and is also ****ociated with the
stables of
David Menuisier and
Kevin Philippart De Foy. De la
Sayette is the son of
Geoffroy de la...
- The work of
making furniture was
strictly divided into
several crafts:
Menuisiers were
allowed to work only on the
wooden frame. Ébénistes
applied the marquetry;...