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Curated category page

Antique Furniture

Use this page for chairs, tables, cabinets, mirrors, and small furniture finds when you need help reading style, construction, materials, and restoration impact.

This page helps when you have a furniture piece or decorative furnishing and need to separate style impressions from real construction clues before pricing, moving, or restoring it.

Side tables Dining chairs Cabinets Mirrors Lamps

What to capture in the photo

  • Photograph the whole piece from the front and side
  • Add underside, drawer, back, or joinery close-ups
  • Show veneer damage, hardware replacements, and repairs

What matters most

  • Joinery, materials, and underside construction details
  • Style periods versus later revival pieces
  • Restoration, veneer loss, and size-related demand

Clues to capture

  • Dovetails, saw marks, screws, and hardware type
  • Wood species, veneer use, and finish wear
  • Proportions and ornament that distinguish period from revival

What drives value

  • Original finish and structural stability
  • Regional style demand and size practicality
  • Extent of restoration, replacements, and veneer loss

Searches people usually mean when they land here

antique furniture identification how old is this chair or table is restored antique furniture valuable

How to use AntiqScope for antique furniture

Step 1

Start broad

Photograph the full item first so the app can separate type, form, and likely category family.

Step 2

Add the detail shot

Use a second photo for marks, wear, construction, or material detail where this category gets sorted accurately.

Step 3

Decide the next move

Use the result to decide whether the item looks routine, collectible, or important enough for specialist review.

Questions people ask before they scan

Can furniture be dated from photos alone?

Photos can reveal strong construction clues, but exact dating is often approximate unless labels, maker marks, or unmistakable period features are visible.

What part of antique furniture should I photograph first?

After the overall shot, photograph drawers, backs, undersides, and hardware. Those details usually tell more about age than the front view alone.

Does refinishing antique furniture lower value?

Often yes for stronger period pieces, though utility furniture can be more forgiving. Original finish and honest wear are usually safer than aggressive refinishing.