I wanted to be further educated and also have reasonable expectations if I choose to sell. I've previously looked on sites like Ebay, Craigslist and Etsy and am asking the question above because it's common to see furniture of little or no value being sold for much more than they are worth. *Edit* This is NOT to identify the furniture. As a family heirloom it has it's own value, but what is its face value today? Potentially looking to sell it as it's not our taste.Īlso, does it hold more or less value if it's refinished vs. It's in fair vintage condition and am wondering what it's worth. All of that furniture, however, has superior build quality to most common furniture made today, of course (with the exception of high-end luxury lines…but even then, I’ve seen some real junk.My parents passed down a Drexel Touraine French Provincial bedroom set with a queen size headboard, 9 drawer dresser and mirror, highboy and two nightstands. Heritage and Drexel were functionally luxury lines and Broyhill was more accessible, though both had excellent style. Broyhill was (and is) a step down from Heritage and Drexel (now combined as DrexelHeritage Furniture) – Broyhill used lower quality secondary woods and veneers and less expensive joinery. I have two nightstands, a queen headboard, dresser with separate mirror, and chest.īasilia is a line from Broyhill that is very famous and well known as a mid-century furniture line. ![]() I have a vintage bedroom set as well, though mine is Drexel Declaration. Douglas Camin Post author Novemat 4:01 pmĮdgar – So sorry I missed replying to this message right away, I must have missed the notice for your comment! That’s a great story about the set you have, and it’s one of those funny historical things that your parents had separate twin beds – my other grandparents (not the Rynkus’s) had that setup in their house too.So, here it is, all 45+ pages in high resolution for your viewing enjoyment: It’s pretty interesting seeing the different pieces, the fabrics and suggested layouts. For posterity (and because Pam over at Retro Renovation archives these too, which I will send her way) I went ahead and scanned the entire catalog. One of the things that I did keep was the original Perennian catalog from 1962. I very, very rarely see Perennian furniture out in the wild – but interestingly, Tricia over at Modchester (in her fancy Rochester mid-century house) inherited a beautiful group of Perennian furniture from the original owners of her place. Ultimately, we kept one of the end tables, and Grandma wanted the others for her new apartment after moving out. The living room also has several Perennian pieces as well – a three-part coffee table set and two end tables. In the end, my aunt took the dining room set to a new house she bought, so this problem went away on it’s own, fortunately. Interestingly, the fact that this furniture wasn’t worth “a lot” became a point of contention – my grandmother and aunt insisted they were worth more than an appraiser said. Much nicer and higher quality than vintage Acclaim and Broyhill Brasilia, for instance. It’s also very nice, sturdy, high quality, mostly solid wood furniture, which is typical of Heritage. In spite of the subdued looks, it is very mid-century. Perennian furniture represented a bridge between very contemporary mid-century furniture designs from makers like Knoll (who produced Eames, Saarien, Noguchi and others) and the more traditional furniture that Heritage had been known for previously (and is known for today.) The furniture featured subdued but modern lines and made extensive use of woods such as walnut, pecan, and wormy chestnut. ![]() Perennian isn’t a very “hot” vintage mid-century item, precisely because it wasn’t very avant-garde for its time and therefore stand out as must-have mid-century for collectors today. ![]() Heritage today is known as Drexel Heritage (a combination made in the late 1950s, though for a time they were still marketed separately.) In the living room and dining room spaces, they purchased higher end Heritage furniture, from a collection called Perennian. They shied away from “traditional” furniture and lines. My grandparents were no slouches when it came to purchasing durable goods for the house – they saved up and purchased things that were nice, and generally contemporary for their time.
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