Arts And Crafts Fireplace Insert
Antique Late 19th Century British Arts and Crafts Fireplaces and Mantels
Iron
Antique Late 19th Century English Arts and Crafts Fireplaces and Mantels
Copper, Metal
Early 20th Century English Arts and Crafts Fireplaces and Mantels
Copper
Antique 1890s Great Britain (UK) Arts and Crafts Fireplaces and Mantels
Copper, Enamel
Antique Late 19th Century European Arts and Crafts Fireplaces and Mantels
Iron, Wrought Iron
Antique Late 19th Century Fireplaces and Mantels
Brass
Recent Sales
Late 20th Century British Arts and Crafts Fireplaces and Mantels
Iron
Antique Early 1900s English Arts and Crafts Fireplaces and Mantels
Iron
Antique 19th Century Fireplaces and Mantels
Antique Early 1900s Arts and Crafts Fireplaces and Mantels
Oak
Antique 1880s English Arts and Crafts Fireplace Tools and Chimney Pots
Iron
Vintage 1910s British Arts and Crafts Fireplaces and Mantels
Oak
Antique Early 1900s British Arts and Crafts Fireplace Tools and Chimney ...
Brass, Copper
Early 20th Century American Arts and Crafts Fireplace Tools and Chimney ...
Bronze
Late 20th Century English Arts and Crafts Fireplaces and Mantels
Iron
Early 20th Century American Arts and Crafts Fireplace Tools and Chimney ...
Brass
Antique 1890s English Arts and Crafts Fireplaces and Mantels
Copper
Antique 19th Century British Georgian Fireplaces and Mantels
Brass, Copper
Antique Late 19th Century English Arts and Crafts Fireplaces and Mantels
Copper, Metal
Early 20th Century American Arts and Crafts Fireplaces and Mantels
Wrought Iron
Antique 19th Century Fireplaces and Mantels
Iron
Vintage 1910s Great Britain (UK) Arts and Crafts Fireplace Tools and Chi...
Brass, Steel
Antique Late 19th Century British Arts and Crafts Fireplaces and Mantels
Antique Early 1900s English Arts and Crafts Fireplaces and Mantels
Copper
Antique 19th Century English Fireplace Tools and Chimney Pots
People Also Browsed
Early 20th Century German Arts and Crafts Shelves
Wrought Iron
2010s South African Minimalist Pedestals
Hardwood
2010s South African Minimalist Night Stands
Wood
21st Century and Contemporary American Mid-Century Modern Wall Lights an...
Brass
21st Century and Contemporary Swedish Scandinavian Modern Wall Lights an...
Metal
Antique 1890s Great Britain (UK) Arts and Crafts Fireplaces and Mantels
Copper, Iron
Antique Late 19th Century European Moorish Architectural Elements
Wrought Iron
Mid-20th Century Italian Mid-Century Modern Lounge Chairs
Brass
21st Century and Contemporary Mexican Mid-Century Modern Floor Lamps
Textile, Wood, Linen, Fiberglass
Antique Early 1900s English Arts and Crafts Fireplaces and Mantels
Berlin Iron
Late 20th Century English Art Nouveau Fireplace Tools and Chimney Pots
Iron, Wrought Iron
Antique Mid-19th Century English High Victorian Taxidermy
Other
20th Century Arts and Crafts Chandeliers and Pendants
Metal
2010s Italian Modern Chandeliers and Pendants
Brass
2010s American Ottomans and Poufs
Wool, Jute
Antique Early 1900s English Arts and Crafts Bookcases
Oak
A Close Look at Arts And Crafts Furniture
Emerging in reaction to industrialization and mass production, the Arts and Crafts movement celebrated handcrafted design as a part of daily life. The history of Arts and Crafts furniture has roots in 1860s England with an emphasis on natural motifs and simple flourishes like mosaics and carvings. This work is characterized by plain construction that showcases the hand of the artisan.
The earliest American Arts and Crafts furniture dates back to the start of the 20th century. Designers working in this style in the United States initially looked to ideas put forth by The Craftsman, a magazine published by Wisconsin native Gustav Stickley, a furniture maker and founder of the Craftsman style. Stickley’s furniture was practical and largely free of ornament. His Craftsman style drew on French Art Nouveau as well as the work he encountered on his travels in England. There, the leading designers of the Arts and Crafts movement included William Morris, who revived historical techniques such as embroidery and printed fabrics in his furnishings, and Charles Voysey, whose minimal approach was in contrast to the ornamentation favored in the Victorian era.
American Arts and Crafts work would come to involve a range of influences unified by an elevation of traditional craftsmanship. The furniture was often built from sturdy woods like oak and mahogany while featuring details such as inlaid metal, tooled leather and ceramic tiles. The style in the United States was led by Stickley, whose clean-lined chairs and benches showcased the grain of the wood, and furniture maker Charles Rohlfs, who was informed by international influences like East Asian and French Art Nouveau design.
Hubs in America included several utopian communities such as Rose Valley in Pennsylvania and the Byrdcliffe Arts and Crafts Colony in New York, where craftspeople made furniture that prioritized function over any decoration. Their work would influence designers and architects including Frank Lloyd Wright, who built some of the most elegant and iconic structures in the United States and likewise embraced a thoughtful use of materials in his furniture.
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Finding the Right Fireplaces-mantels for You
While we likely wouldn’t mourn the invention of home heating and air-conditioning, these innovations did tragically reduce the widespread need for fireplaces and mantels in our living rooms.
Once an essential fixture in all homes, the fireplace, which, along with the chimney, is as old as the Middle Ages, was actually rendered redundant with the advent of the cast-iron heating stove during the 18th century. Victorian-era heating stoves were popular in the common areas of a living space for their capacity to heat as well as for their lack of smoke compared to fireplaces. However, improvements in craftsmanship as well as the Industrial Revolution meant that fireplaces were evolving in form and functionality.
Even as HVAC systems would eventually see to it that fireplaces weren’t a necessity, no mechanically engineered thermal heating and ventilation technology can replicate the feeling of warmth and camaraderie that a flickering fire guarantees. We just love a good fireplace.
“With antique fireplaces, you get heart, soul, character and architecture,” says Tony Ingrao, a Manhattan-based interior designer who purchased an important 16th-century French limestone fireplace for a client’s Greenwich Village townhouse.
Vintage fireplaces and mantels have earned their coveted position as desirable focal points in any room over the course of a staggering evolution in design that has yielded everything from intricately carved works of limestone to sleek works of wood paneling and rolled steel.
As log after log turns into ash, these iconic designs prove their timelessness and value, monetarily and as prized decorative monuments. Whether you seek to simply warm a space or completely transform it, an eye-catching new mantel for your blazing hearth — be it an elegant neoclassical design, a marvelous work of marble in the Louis XV style or an unconventional contemporary variation — is the perfect solution.
Find a collection of antique and vintage fireplaces and mantels on 1stDibs today.