Video Chest (furniture)
Introduction
The box (also called crate or kist ) is a form of furniture that is typically rectangular with four walls and a removable cover for storage. The interior space can be shared. The earliest use of crate or antique chests include the storage of fine fabrics, weapons, food, and valuables. This is a box with a hinged cover that can protect your personal belongings. Some chests are equipped with locking mechanisms or metal bands that can be secured locks. In the Webster's Dictionary 1988 version, a crate is defined as "a box with a cover and often, a key, to store or transport goods" or as "a closet like holding medical supplies, toiletries, etc."
Cassone is a type of engraving or chest painted associated with the late Middle Ages and the Italian Renaissance. Cassones, also called wedding crates or chests of hope, are often used to carry dowry items in wedding ceremonies.
Simple casket, called wakis (wagon-kist) is usually used in the Cape Colony as a seat on the cart. To make it more useful, there is often wood support along the top of the center so that the seated driver will not slip easily. In addition to these uses, they are also used for home storage; keeping clothes, food, and other commodities safe. They are often made with one or more sloping sides down, although the top is always horizontal. Many are made of very fine wood, such as yellow wood and survived well. Some manufacturers also paint the front of the kist with a relatively simple design that is reminiscent of, and possibly derived from a smelly European smell.
Maps Chest (furniture)
History
In medieval and early Renaissance times in Europe, small coffins were often used as benches while higher crates were used as side tables. By placing the chest next to each type of rough table, the inside surface of the lid can be used as a proper writing surface while the interior can be a home of stationery and related material, as is the case with the BargueÃÆ' à ± o Spanish table. Many early Portable tables are stacked with crates, with the top having a lid on the side, to serve as a writing surface when opened.
Many European chests use standard iron bands over the lid and the chest to cover it or lock it. There are several different styles of chest like square boxes or dome crates, so different there is no effective way to categorize them. Each has its own decoration, so each has its own purpose. The dome of the crate with its lid shape will be thrown from the water and undermine its use as a seat. The use of this chest in 15 th to 16 th for centuries makes chest have a longer life because chest conditions are avoided , like water or using them as a seat.
In fantasy, fables, and games, "treasure chests" are often used as plots to store treasures such as gold or gems. Its meaning can be many things. The classic is a gift for the protagonist. In some stories, the form of MacGuffin, a literary tool that exists solely to encourage a plot. "Toy crates" are the kind of chests that usually carry children's toys, like dolls or building blocks.
In some Slavic countries, for example, in Ukraine, crate is a family relic, especially in farming families. Every Ukrainian girl receives her breasts at the age of 15 years for her bride-to-be. Peeking at the girl's chest was deemed impolite. Coffers are an indicator of family wealth. Ukrainian girls and women also use them to store their clothes and personal items - towels, jewelry, tools to embroider etc. A large collection of traditional Ukrainian crate dates by 18-20 cc. stored in Radomysl Castle (Zhytomyr Region, Ukraine).
In many Arab countries, crates are used to store personal belongings of ship captains, such as Kuwaiti crates. Today, many Middle Eastern furniture boxes are known by place names, such as Omani or Bahrain, but this most often refers to where they are bought from where they are made. Others are used to holding linen and household items collected by girls in preparation for the end of their marriage, and are often called the chest of hope. In Arabic, two terms are used for dowry: Muqaddimah specifically for the personal belongings of the bride; and "sunduq", which usually come in pairs that match, are for other items.
Usage
Chests designed for linen or other soft objects will have a very smooth or sanded interior, and chests made for heavy equipment or weapons, will have a rougher interior. The crates back on that day are used primarily as storage units rather than just furniture similar to those used today. The furniture chests have now evolved from those that have been designed to store items for practical use, to the one used to store family knick-knacks or toys for children or grandchildren. They have also been used for primarily as decoration and a place that can serve as a seat rather than just a means of transportation.
In popular fiction
In the Discworld series by Terry Pratchett, a living chest with legs called The Luggage is owned by the first tourist, Twoflower. Twoflower then gives Koper to Rincewind.
See also
- Ark of the Covenant
- Closet
- Drawers, furniture often referred to as crates.
- Chests of hope
- The trunk, a piece of luggage, is similar to a chest
References
External links
- ARTESO, furniture reproduction and medieval art
- antique drawers, Cabinet drawers from the Georgian, Regency, Victorian, and Edwardian periods
- Radomysl Castle Official Website
Source of the article : Wikipedia