Kittinger Furniture Serial Numbers

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Kittinger furniture, Kindel furniture, Baker furniture, pre-owned reproductions, restoration and upholstery services - Americana Furniture and Interiors. Americana Furniture and Interiors, we buy, sell and trade vintage Kittinger furniture and specialize in Kittinger Furniture period reproductions made for Colonial Williamsburg.

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Kittinger Company
Family business
IndustryFurniture
Founded1866
Headquarters,
ProductsResidential and Contract Furniture
OwnerRaymond Bialkowski, President/CEO
Number of employees
< 50
Websitewww.kittingerfurniture.com

The Kittinger Company is an American maker of traditional colonial reproduction furniture that was founded in 1866. Today Kittinger is known for the high-quality furniture it produces that is featured prominently in the White House.[1]

  • 3Special projects

History[edit]

The Kittinger Company was founded in Buffalo, New York in 1866 as 'Thompson, Colie & Co.' Around 1870 the company began crafting hand-made upholstered furniture and by this time had changed its name to 'Colie & Son' after George and Oliver Colie took control. The furniture business proved so successful for the Colie's that in 1885 they built a factory specifically for the crafting of furniture.[2] Advertising in 1904,[3] Colie and Son illustrated one of their armchairs, that showed they were still making furniture in the free Colonial Revival style for their 'snappy, original styles in Parlor Suites, Odd Chairs, Divans, Easy Chairs etc.' Reproductions more closely based on original American 18th-century pieces of furniture would come to characterize the firm's production under George Colie's son-in-law[4]

In 1913, Irvine J. Kittinger, George Colie's son-in-law, and his brother Ralph purchased the company from the Colie family and changed the company's name to the Kittinger Furniture Company. Under the Kittinger family's control, the company’s primary focus was to craft the highest quality furniture possible with Irvine Kittinger saying 'Our business is not primarily to turn furniture into money, but to produce something really worthwhile.' By 1929, the company was grossing $1,000,000 annually.[5] The Kittinger family controlled and remained involved with the Company until they sold their interests in 1966.

Between 1966 and 1990, Kittinger Furniture had a total of six owners due to mergers and acquisitions of its corporate owners. In 1995 the company entered bankruptcy after a private owner was sentenced on fraud charges.

Raymond Bialkowski, a former Kittinger cabinet maker, purchased the Kittinger name and production rights in 1996. Since coming under Bialkowski’s control, the company has returned to profitability.

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Today Kittinger is one of the oldest surviving crafters of fine built-to-order furniture in the United States.

Showrooms & Production[edit]

Kittinger Furniture is available through several showrooms across the country. Kittinger's primary showroom is located at its factory and corporate offices. Showrooms in Georgia, New Jersey, New York City and Pennsylvania represent and carry Kittinger. In 2012 Kittinger Furniture opened a showroom in Tokyo, Japan at the Sala Azabu store.

Kittinger Furniture Serial Numbers

Every piece of Kittinger Furniture is built-to-order to customers specifications and needs in Buffalo, New York and can be shipped around the world. In recent years Kittinger has become a resource for collectors to create reproductions of hard to find pieces or in different scales that fit their needs.

Special projects[edit]

The White House[edit]

Nixon's Cabinet with Kittinger furniture

A number of Kittinger reproductions can still be found in the West Wing office area of the White House in Washington, D.C. Colonial Williamsburg Foundation interior designers were commissioned by President Richard Nixon in 1970 to redo the interior design of the President's offices. Kittinger Company furniture was used extensively in the redesign since this company was the sole licensee of furniture for the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation's famous program to produce exact reproductions of 18th century antiques.[6] Included in the redesign was a new conference table and chairs for the cabinet room. President Nixon wrote a personal check to pay for the new cabinet room table custom made by The Kittinger Company and donated it to the White House.

Along with furnishing areas of the White House, the Kittinger Company has also produced furniture for the inaugurations of former President George W. Bush and President Barack Obama. In 2005, the White House commissioned six chairs from Kittinger for the second inauguration of former President George W. Bush. In 2009, the White House commissioned an additional two chairs and utility table for the inauguration of President Barack Obama.[7] The White House reused the pieces crafted by Kittinger again for the second inauguration of President Barack Obama in 2013.[1]

Colonial Williamsburg Foundation[edit]

In 1937 the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation selected the Kittinger Company as the exclusive licensed reproducer of furniture at Colonial Williamsburg[8] Kittinger reproductions were sold through the Williamsburg Reproductions program, the Craft House, established that year.[9] Visitors to Colonial Williamsburg could see Kittinger cabinetmakers in period costume at work in the workshop established in the Ayscough house.[10] Williamsburg reproductions came with a bill of sale detailing the history of the original piece and were branded with the Williamsburg stamp. Other reproductions by Kittinger were labeled with a letterpress label in the 18th-century style. Like their rivals Biggs Furniture of Richmond, Virginia, Kittinger served an upper middle class market in search of mostly mahogany, reproduction furniture with dovetailed oak drawer lining, frame-and-panel backs and other mark of quality comparable to the originals, in the Queen Anne, Chippendale and Hepplewhite styles. In 1990 the license expired and was granted to Baker Furniture Company.

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Download 3ds max 2013 64-bit full crack. Apart from the Williamsburg reproductions other series were marketed under names evoking the colonial period: Richmond hill Collection,[11] Old Dominion Collection[12] and the like.

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Historic Newport[edit]

Kittinger furniture craigslist

The success of Kittinger reproductions licensed by Colonial Williamsburg Foundation encouraged the Preservation Society of Newport County to license Kittinger to reproduce 18th-century pieces by the Goddard and Townsend families of cabinetmakers and other furniture made in colonial Newport, Rhode Island in the Society's possession. Paper labels on this series of furniture read 'For the Preservation Society of Newport County'.

George W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum[edit]

The Kittinger Company was commissioned to produce several of its pieces from the White House including fireside chairs, coffee table, pen book table, telephone table, council table and mahogany chairs with cane backs.[13] These pieces are on display in the replica Oval Office in the George W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum.

Government[edit]

In the past, the Kittinger Company has been commissioned to craft furniture for the Capital Building, Supreme Court, and several government officials.[14] Kittinger also reproduced under license furniture for Independence Hall, Philadelphia, and Historic Savannah.[15]

White House Down (film)[edit]

Sony Pictures commissioned Kittinger to make reproductions of its furniture in the White House for its film White House Down, released in 2013. Kittinger crafted several sets of furniture for the production of the film.[16]

References[edit]

Ethan Allen Furniture Serial Numbers And Meanings

  1. ^ abBuffalo Rising staff (February 3, 2016). 'Kittinger chairs headed for the White House'. Buffalo Rising. Retrieved 4 February 2016.
  2. ^Design Journal:Kittinger Furniture, Inc.
  3. ^The American Cabinet Maker and Upholsterer October 15, 1904, p. .
  4. ^Kittinger Furniture Company: history
  5. ^Design Journal: Kittinger Furniture, Inc.
  6. ^'Douglas W. Kenyon Biography'. Hunton and Williams. Retrieved 2007-11-25.
  7. ^http://www.furnituretoday.com/article/162714-Kittinger_Vanguard_help_furnish_White_House.php
  8. ^Pollard, Garland (2004-03-01). 'Colonial Williamsburg, its history'. brandchannel.com. Interbrand. Archived from the original on 2007-10-17. Retrieved 2007-11-25.
  9. ^'Archives: Case Pieces'. Americana Furniture and Interiors. Retrieved 2007-11-25.
  10. ^History of Colonial Williamsburg Kittinger Company reproductions, 1937-1990
  11. ^Branded 'Richmond Hill Collection by Kittinger' within a cartouche.
  12. ^In collaboration with Biggs, Richmond, which became a subsidiary of Kittinger.
  13. ^http://www.woodworkingnetwork.com/articles/Kittinger-Replicated-Furniture-for-George-W-Bush-Library-204539991.html#sthash.6ASZLzZR.dpbs
  14. ^http://www.bizjournals.com/buffalo/stories/2009/01/19/daily2.html?page=all
  15. ^Americana interiors: Kittinger Company
  16. ^http://www.woodworkingnetwork.com/articles/Kittinger-Replicated-Furniture-for-George-W-Bush-Library-204539991.html#sthash.6ASZLzZR.dpbs

External links[edit]

  • Antique Reproduction Furniture Indodeco was established by Con Spiros in 1995 to provide Melbourne with a quality source of antique furniture reproduction and custom furniture design.
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Abstract

In July 1936 Tomlinson of High Point, a mid-priced North Carolina furniture manufacturer, began a franchising and marketing concept called the Williamsburg Galleries that gained broad national acceptance in stores and among consumers. Outraged by Tomlinson’s actions and unwilling to abandon the retail market to those it felt were interlopers, Colonial Williamsburg set up a subsidiary corporation, Williamsburg Craftsmen, Inc., that licensed manufacturers to create reproductions of objects owned by the Restoration. Furniture was the most important part of the plan, and Williamsburg licensed the Kittinger Company of Buffalo, New York, as the manufacturer. Selected department stores were encouraged to build sales spaces that were period replicas of Raleigh Tavern rooms, and craft shops were developed in the historic area to promote the work of the various manufacturers. Because a number of stores sold both Tomlinson and Kittinger products, Williamsburg developed the concept of “authenticity” to distinguish the copies being made by Kittinger from Tomlinson’s generic eighteenth-century adaptations. Virtually handmade, said the Restoration, these Kittinger pieces were line-by-line reproductions, inside and out, of originals on display in Williamsburg, Virginia. Regardless of what Colonial Williamsburg said and believed, however, recent examination of individual pieces of Kittinger furniture made for the Restoration reveals that the New York factory relied far more on modern machine production methods than on craft methods of the eighteenth century.