Alana sent in a good question: Can anyone tell me the name for this style of chair? I'm looking for a set of used chairs like this to recover with something fun. The search would go a whole lot better if I knew what I was searching for!
Email questions and pics with QUESTIONS in subject line to:
chicago(at)apartmenttherapy(dot)com)




Louis Chair
view sarcasticone's profile
It's a Louis XVI-style fauteuil. Bergeres have enclosed sides (arms), fauteauils have open arms or no arms at all, like these.
view ChrisToronto's profile
Louis style medallion back chairs.
view marc from vancouver's profile
or simply gorgeous decadence. I love this style and bergeres, especially original ones. Mmmm.
view suziwest7's profile
Ditto Louis XVI.
view enmnm's profile
Louis XVI shield back fauteauil
view parttimedesign's profile
Also: a balloon-back (Louis XVI fauteuil).
http://www.bondandbowery.com/item/5072
view trikitixa's profile
OK, I have to ask ... How do you people know this stuff? Is there some sort of "Furniture Styles 101" book that I missed? A secret club? Or do you just pick it up from reading millions of decorating magazines?
I mean, I had a vague memory from a Domino article that these were Louis XVI, but otherwise I'd have been stumped; and where would your average person learn a word like "fauteauil"?
Not a criticism; I want to know how I'd go about it myself.
view Cheryl's profile
I agree with Cheryl! Any "one stop shop" in the book world about this stuff?
view Christina @ 2230H's profile
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_ss_gw?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=%22history of furniture%22&x=0&y=0
...or get an ID degree and take the classes.
view tx1979's profile
I know I learned it at design school, but there are a ton of "textbooks" on amazon you could use for easy reference. The Fairchild Dictionary is pretty comprehensive, and has more than you'd ever need as an "average person" :) . I might actually still have mine if anyone is interested in buying it...barbie@level3dg.com
Oh, and Alana, if you can't find them used, try ballard designs.
view bunnyfoofoo's profile
Sorry, the link didn't work. Just search for "history of furniture" on Amazon. Lots and lots of information on different style periods and their respective influences.
view tx1979's profile
The gray finish of the chairs makes me think Gustavian, which is Louis XVI filtered through Sweden.
view ilima's profile
Wow! Thanks everyone!
As a design manager (but graphically, not interior-ally) I'm embarrassed that I didn't know. But hey, it won't be the last time today that I look like an idiot. :)
view pxlchk1's profile
This is why I read apartmenttherapy.com on a daily basis: there are so many informed, intelligent people out there that widen my understanding and expand my view. Thank you for the Louis XVI info and the word "fauteuil". I will add it to my nomenclature. (And, buy the book y'all recommended.)
view ShellyinMSP's profile
Thanks for the posts & the 2 new additions to my summer reading list! I was a year into a law degree until I realized I love furniture & all things interior design.. and hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt is not a good place to hit the breaks haha I still devote the summers to my love for fine design as a welcomed break from case law =)
Thanks again for the amazing book suggestions!
view neverxlookback's profile
The legs are straight, which makes it Gustavian. Louis XIV furniture has cabriolet legs; despite Philippe Starck calling his Ghost chair Louis, it actually isn't. Also per Ilima's comment, the grey finish is especially/characteristically Swedish.
view SFNYgirl's profile
Since we're talking about things Swedish, fåtölj is Swedish for arm-chair, which seems a lot like the word fauteuil.
Swedish has a lot of French borrowed words. Though I don't really associate distressed finishes with Gustavian, which would have more of a white or cream finish - or I could be wrong, judging from the search I just did...
https://www.auktionskompaniet.com/items/20853-soffa-med-karmstolar-1 2-gustaviansk-stil?locale=en-US
or
http://www.gudrunodmann.com/02chairs/3
view dn's profile
Gustavian finishes are indeed distressed, since they were created by "restorers" stripping layers of oil paint off of old furniture until they reached the original lead white undercoat.
view marie516's profile
I would also say that this is more Gustavian. Which is the Scandinavian version of the Louis style. Less flourished, often white or gray.
view Lilli K.'s profile