Magazine Antiques
View more issues: March 2005, April 2005, June 2005
Articles in May 2005 issue of Magazine Antiques
- The Indians' most versatile tool
by Allison Eckardt Ledes - Early Georgian Interiors
- Folk Furniture of Canada's Doukhobors, Hutterites, Mennonites and Ukrainians
- The 1772 Philadelphia furniture price book rediscovered
by Alexandra Alevizatos Kirtley - Living with antiques: a Federal collection
by Clark Pearce - The arts and crafts movement, here and abroad
by Allison Eckardt Ledes - Made in China: Export Porcelain from the Leo and Doris Hodroff Collection at Winterthur
- Marks of Distinction: Two Hundred Years of American Drawings and Watercolors from the Hood Museum of Art
- Calendar of shows
- Moorish fretwork furniture
by Paul Tucker - American Quilts
by Allison Eckardt Ledes - Ming Furniture in the Light of Chinese Architecture
- Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, 1805-2005: 200 Years of Excellence
- Garden accessories by Wright
by Allison Eckardt Ledes - Museum accessions
by Eleanor H. Gustafson - East Anglian Silver 1550-1750
- People of the River: Native Arts of the Oregon Territory
- June fairs in London
by Miriam Kramer - Antique Tools and Instruments from the Nessi Collection
- The Tudor House and Garden: Architecture and Landscape in the Sixteenth and Early Seventeenth Centuries
- Are you sitting comfortably?
by Miriam Kramer - International Arts and Crafts
- Calendar
by Kathleen Luhrs - Circling the Square
by Miriam Kramer - White Salt-Glazed Stoneware of the British Isles
- 18th century AD
by Wendell Garrett - Cotman bicentenary
by Miriam Kramer - Newport and the Townsend inheritance
by Morrison H. Heckscher - The British Stable
- Mother Russia
by Alfred Mayor - The Shipcarvers' Art: Figureheads and Cigar-Store Indians in Nineteenth-Century America
- Edward Holmes and Simeon Haines, cabinetmakers in Empire New York City
by Erik Rini - Queries
by Remi Spriggs - The Arts and Crafts Movement in Europe and America: Design for the Modern World
- Early American furniture in the New Castle Historical Society in Delaware
by Philip D. Zimmerman