One of the reasons it is believed to have been used as a dining room is the crystal chandelier (seen from the dining room picture post linked above and also in the top picture of this post). Like I mentioned in the dining room, all other rooms in the PT have neoclassically appropriate lanterns. The room also features beautiful gilded bronze sconces which have been electrified and add soft lighting.
The room features a beautifully colorful mantelpiece of red Italian Griotte marble with a matching hearth which is featured elsewhere in the room (in the floor at the window surrounds). The red curtains play up the use of this red stone. The elevation below shows the wall as it is featured in the Boston Architectural Club Yearbook from 1913.
Love those old moldings!
ReplyDeleteBetsy
Good grief. The red stone seems to have a direct connection to my brain's pleasure centers. I wonder if it is still quarried?
ReplyDeleteI just love these lessons. I also love knowing that Marie Antoinette must have eaten cake there.
ReplyDeletepve
The fireplace is a standout. All these posts have been like taking a little virtual vacation.
ReplyDeletetotally agree Michele! Those moldings are the most exquisite things I've seen in days.
ReplyDeleteHope you're staying cozy Stefan!
Stefan, again,again, Your photographs are so beautiful-You have the eye (of course) and you can translate it from a Lens. The first image is something else. I have to go(though I would never hone in on everything as you have done here), an enriching lesson and record.
ReplyDeleteI love the idea of a small salon. We have a small informal dining room/gaming room we call the "dessert room". Nothing nearly as elegant but a surprisingly useful space. I love the history behind this post.
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