also called Panel Chair, a joined wooden chair, usually made of oak, hence the name wainscot, which was used to describe a fine grade of oak usually used for paneling. Like many terms used in reference to furniture, it has a general and a particular meaning. The general sense is any heavy wooden chair of fairly simple construction. The more specific reference is to a wooden chair with turned (shaped on a lathe) front legs, square-sectioned back legs, arm supports, a simple, unupholstered seat, and a slightly raked panel back, usually with some form of incised decoration and sometimes topped with a carved cresting. Wainscot chairs were a popular feature of early 17th-century English and colonial households.
WAINSCOT CHAIR
Meaning of WAINSCOT CHAIR in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012