DFP Oakhampton Oak with Ash Single Pedestal Dressing Table
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Product code: PCS24
Dimensions:
Depth: 486mm
Width: 1065mm
Height: 760mm
Further product information:
DFP Oakhampton Oak with Ash Single Pedestal Dressing Table:The Oakhampton Bedroom Range is made throughout of hardwoods which ash and oak is featured.
With its tough chuncky construction and fully dovetailed drawers it makes it very durable.
Its beautiful clear lacquer finish makes it more resistant than oiled furniture.
DFP Oakhampton Ash Bedroom Range
The Oakhampton range is made from solid hardwoods. Oak is used exclusively on smaller items while larger furniture features solid oak and ash attractively matched together.
Cabinets and tables are of jointed and glued construction and solid wood panelling is used for drawer bases and cabinet backs.
Drawers are made using dovetailed joints and are mounted on traditional wooden runners. Oakhampton furniture is finished in a low-gloss lacquer.
Oakhampton is sometimes referred to as Oakleigh, click to the
Oakleigh Bedroom Collection.
It is a fully assembled range although some larger items such as beds and wardrobes may be partially dismantled to facilitate delivery.
Please note: Much of the hardwood used for furniture manufactured in Asia may be described locally as Oak. While its appearance, density and durability is almost identical to oak, sometimes this timber is actually from the Ash (Fraxinus) family. In order to be as accurate as possible, we therefore market this furniture as being made from Ash, even though the manufacturer’s packaging may say Oak.
0804 Another Ash Furniture Fact
The dawn of mechanised transport often saw ash being used to make the framework for railway coaches, lorry cabs and car bodies. Even today, the British car manufacturer Morgan still uses ash frames to make the bodywork for its range of classic sports tourers.
2703 Dressing Table History
The earliest references to dressing tables appeared in the 17th Century, but these dressing tables were designed to hold a basin for washing (like a wash stand) or a candle as a reading light (like a bedside table).
It was not until the 18th Century that a style of dressing table that could be recognisable today came into being.