| European Style |
Arts & Crafts Style e |
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| The European
style draws from English and Continental influences spanning the 16th through
19th centuries, encompassing Regency, Georgian, Louis XIV, and others. The
revival of European styling resulted from growing middle class affluence during
the 1920s, when people expressed interest in regal "old world"
furniture. The European tradition exemplifies stately, aristocratic elegance,
celebrating organic patterns and complex wood grains. |
The Arts
& Crafts movement originated in London in 1888, inspired by the
pre-industrial, rural design style of William Morris. Arts & Crafts is
known for honesty of expression in workmanship and materials. Tables in the
Arts & Crafts style are true to their inspiration: simplicity, honesty, and
utility. They favor pure lines over baroque ornamentation, and lighter stains
to accentuate the beauty of wood grain. |
| Traditional Style |
Casual Style |
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| Traditional styles are
17th and 18th century interpretations of the design and architecture of ancient
Greece and Rome. Displaying restraint, harmony, proportion and reason, the
grand Greco-Roman style uses sparse ornamentation, chaining, beaded moldings,
and large turned posts. Using hardwoods, such as cherry and oak, Traditional
furniture represented the art of rich ancient cultures that flourished long
before the Dark Ages, and were the basis of pre-industrial European style.
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The Casual style is based
on rustic American Northwest and European "Cottage" styles of the
18th and 19th centuries. Defined by lightly stained non-exotic hardwoods or
pine, and unpretentious, simple function design. With its warm, comfortable
appeal, Casual styles feature broad planks reminiscent of cottage beams and
joists, with mechanical ornaments and few curves. |
| Transitional Style |
Competition Commercial Style |
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| The Transitional style
represents the ultimate in functionality. Strongly rooted in the late 20th
century minimalist movement, Transitional furniture celebrates clean simplicity
with strong proportions based on straight lines and tapered legs. Finely
finished with pure stains that accentuate the wood grain, Transitional style is
highly flexible, and fits well with a variety of motifs. |
Brunswick Competition
tables are renowned by players and room owners for quality, accuracy, and
supreme playability. For sheer performance, more professionals play on
Brunswick tables than on any other brand. The result of more than 150 years of
refinement by Brunswick engineers, Competition tables is designed specifically
for a variety of commercial applications in billiard parlours, resorts,
hospitality suites, and game rooms. |
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Contemporary
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Brunswick Limited Edition Table 2010
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| The
Contemporary style honors current living and values. In the 1990s and today,
interiors are functional, physically comfortable, environmentally conscious,
and versatile to suit the hurried individual's idiosyncratic tastes and needs
of the moment. Bright, airy, and uncluttered, the style embraces white walls,
blonde woods, fresh colors, sensual textiles, clean-lined furniture, and
materials that are natural, recyclable, or industrial such as glass and steel.
The result: eclectic yet cozy retreats from fast-paced pressures.
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The
Exposition Novelty™ table was originally introduced in 1878 winning Gold
Medals at both the San Francisco and Cincinnati Exposition. An extraordinary
limited edition, the commemorative antique replica Exposition Novelty boasts
of magnificent craftsmanship through the use of sapele rails, solid white oak
legs, a variety of beautifully grained veneers, solid brass rosettes and rail
sights made of Asian Water Buffalo bone.
Only 25 available
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| video
on slate
Why Brunswick slate rocks
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video
on cushions (rubber) |
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Contender line of table
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| Brunswick
economical line of pool tables. For all homes |
Capture home table
advantage with a Contender, by Brunswick. Designed to deliver years of
accurate, consistent play and generations of entertainment, Contender tables
live up to the Brunswick tradition of quality and performance.
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