right angled foot, with each inner end curved.
A low right-angled foot of a chest, etc., having two decoratively shaped ends and a vertically straight or ogee molded face.
A low furniture support which has a straight corner edge and curved inner edges. Cabriole leg: A leg or support that is designed in the form of a conventionalized animal's leg with knee, ankle, and foot.
A short foot attached to the underframe of a chest of drawers, bureau, tallboy, etc. The foot may be made in two pieces joined at the outside corner; the open side may be shaped, the corner side straight or curved in Cabriole leg with Ogee form. The term is also used to describe the short one- piece, curving foot seen on later pawfoot 18th century furniture such as Hepplewhite chests of drawers and bureaux.
Simple base on 18th-Century chests and case furniture, in which the foot runs two ways from the corner. Although usually simple in design, the style is sometimes highly ornamented.
A low foot running both ways from the corner of case goods to form a right angle.
A squared foot, the most commonly found foot on 18th C cabinet furniture.
a squared foot used on furniture in the 18th century
A low foot running both ways from the corner of wood furniture to form a right angle.
A flat two-piece (usually symmetrical) foot, used on cabinet furniture, set at a corner (usually the front) and shaped like a right-angled bracket. [ picture
Low straight vertical or ogee faced foot running perpendicular from the corner of furniture case forming a right angle foot with decorative ends.
Simple base on chests and case furniture of the 18th Century. The foot runs two ways from the corner, in more or less simple shapes. The type was highly ornamented by Chippendale in England, by Goddard and others in America.