Oak Antique Furniture Collections

Oak Antique Furniture Collections

50 products
50 products

Oak is one of the oldest and most enduring timbers used in English furniture-making. Hard, strong, and widely available, it dominated English joinery and cabinetmaking throughout the 16th and 17th centuries, before walnut and later mahogany came into fashion. Early country furniture, court cupboards, refectory tables, and carved chests were almost invariably made in solid oak, often richly decorated with carving.

Oak in the 17th and 18th Centuries

In the 17th century, oak was the principal timber for both rural and formal furniture. Panelled oak chests and dressers were staples of households across England. By the late 17th and early 18th centuries, however, tastes shifted toward finer veneers in walnut and later exotic imports such as mahogany. Even so, oak continued to play a vital role in English furniture-making, most often as a carcass timber beneath fine veneers. Its durability and stability made it the hidden structure behind countless veneered walnut and mahogany chests, commodes, and cabinets of the Georgian period.

Decorative Oak: Burr and Pollard

While plain oak was valued for its strength, decorative cuts were also prized. Burr oak, with its swirling knot clusters, was used for veneers in the late 17th and 18th centuries, producing richly figured panels comparable to burr walnut. Pollard oak, cut from pollarded trees with distinctive mottled grain, was used particularly in the 19th century for veneers, admired for its dramatic and irregular figuring. These cuts demonstrate that oak could be as visually striking as imported exotics when used imaginatively.

Makers and Styles

Even as walnut and mahogany rose to prominence, leading cabinetmakers continued to exploit oak. In the 18th century, Thomas Chippendale used oak extensively as a structural carcass timber beneath his finest veneered and carved creations. In the 19th century, George Bullock produced remarkable furniture in oak, often incorporating pollard and burr veneers, blending neoclassical and Regency aesthetics with inventive materials.

Legacy of Oak

Oak’s role in English furniture history is twofold: as the primary visible timber of the 16th and 17th centuries, shaping the robust and often carved character of Tudor and Stuart interiors; and as the silent carcass timber of the 18th century, underpinning the veneered elegance of walnut and mahogany. Its enduring appeal lay in its strength, versatility, and ability to showcase both plain solidity and striking decorative grain when cut as burr or pollard.

Early 17th Century Oak Joint Stool
Collection CK20
£POA
17th Century Oak Hall Chair
Nicholas Wells Antiques
£POA
Oak Welsh Dresser | 18th Century
Collection CK20
£POA
Early Georgian Oak Sideboard with brass handles, cabriole legs, flat oak top, circa 1720, elegant 18th-century design.
Early Georgian Oak Sideboard with four drawers, brass handles, cabriole legs, and polished oak finish circa 1720.
Early Georgian Oak Sideboard
Collection CK30
£19,500.00
17th Century Oak drop leaf table with turned legs and stretchers, oval top in rich oak wood finish.
17th Century Oak drop leaf table with turned legs and stretchers, featuring elm top and oak drop leaves.
17th Century Oak drop leaf table
Collection CK30
£POA
GEORGE II OAK LOW BOY with quarter veneered top, three drawers, sculptural ogee detailing, and cabriole legs circa 1735.
GEORGE II OAK LOW BOY with three drawers, cabriole legs, and carved foliate details, English 18th century style.
GEORGE II OAK LOW BOY
Nicholas Wells Antiques
£5,500.00
George I Oak Lowboy with three drawers, original brass hardware, pierced apron, and cabriole legs with pad feet.
George I Oak Lowboy showing thumb molding top, brass hardware drawers, and cabriole legs with pad feet.
George I Oak Lowboy
Collection CK30
£3,250.00
George I Oak Low Boy with thumb molded top, five drawers, gothic brass handles, ogee apron, and ball claw feet.
George I Oak Low Boy with thumb molded top, gothic brass handles, ogee apron, and ball claw feet with shell motif.
George I Oak Low Boy
Collection CK40
£6,750.00
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