This listing is for a

c. 1930 Painted Dresser 

in 

REALLY RARE SPANISH GREEN 

Original Paint!!


This has an ORIGINAL c.1930 Polychrome Painted finish by with wonderful original details. 

This 90 year old piece is a survivor! It is estate fresh with original paint, no overpaint or repairs (see pictures)

Please see my other auctions for the RARE matching MONTEREY DESK and NIGHTSTAND in Spanish Green!

Found in the same estate as the other MONTEREY Furniture Spanish Green Desk and Nightstand, this is a c.1930 example of a Transitional Dresser - it is unsigned but has the wonderful and Rare SPANISH GREEN paint that matches the MONTEREY Furniture. There is a lovely center medallion and the drawers have wooden knobs, unlike the Monterey which had painted motifs and iron hardward.

I believe this was also made by the Mason Manufacturing Company, or by another rival company producing Monterey Style painted furniture. Since this has the same style painted polychrome finish, it dates from the same time period and seems to be a transitional style between the earlier more neo-Victorian and the Western influenced Monterey.

There are four drawers. This is estate fresh without any alteration or cleaning. The finish is original without overfinish or waxes.

It measures 30 inches wide, 17 inches deep, and it is 35 3/4 inches tall from floor to apron.

There looks to be original factory stock numbers written on the back that reads "6191(?)". It also has the remnants of a factory tag attached with a staple - this matches the tag on the bottom of the Monterey Desk in my other listing.

Condition is as follows:

This has its original vibrant and unfaded Spanish Green paint. This matches the paint style on my other Monterey pieces up for auction There is some wear of the paint on the top and small nicks and knocks of wear along edges and knobs. Overall, the paint is bright and original and 99% intact (please see pictures).

This is PICKUP only from Portland, Oregon - no shipping.

However - I am willing to take it and drop it off to a shipper here in Portland for you but you will need to arrange that - I am unable to do any packing and shipping for this item.

Payment must be received within 7 days of auction end - please email with any questions!

Please check out my other items that I have up for auction and in my store!  I am always listing wonderful Rare Books and Signed First Editionsas well as special Antiques found on my many travels across the US and Europe...


Remember - this is coming from OREGON 
which is a NO SALES TAX STATE.
  
If you this, you will not be charged any Oregon sales tax by me or eBay on this listing!!
(But also remember, your own state may still charge you!)

Thanks for looking!

Monterey Furniture

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Monterey Furniture refers to several furniture lines made from 1930 to the mid-1940s in California. Uniquely western, the line derived its character from Spanish and Dutch Colonial styles, California Mission architecture and furnishings, ranch furnishings, and cowboy accoutrements such as might be found in a barn (lariats and branding irons). Mason Manufacturing Company, founded by Frank Mason and his son, George, are credited with the original style of its time. Other lines were made by Imperial Company, Angeles Furniture Company (the line called Coronado), Del Rey, Brown and Saltman, but even Sears (La Fiesta) and Stickley created Monterey-style furniture.

Mason Monterey was generally made from Oregon alder, and the "classic period", from 1930–1932 was painted with a lively Mexican palette toned down with an asphaltum glaze that created the look of antique furniture. Many layers of paint went into the final finish in the Mason line. The colors used were bold: Spanish Red, Spanish Green, Spanish Blue, Straw Yellow. Neutrals had an old antiqued charm in Straw Ivory and Old Wood. In the beginning most pieces had some sort of decorative elements, such as the "river of life," a lively squiggle, or a floral decoration. The Mexican cartoonist Juan Intenoche or Juan Duran Tinoco headed the paint department, and the most valuable pieces of Monterey contain his whimsical designs. Donkeys, caballeros, sleeping men under wide hats, cactus and other images are his trademark. Mason branded most of their furniture with a horseshoe and the name, "Monterey," though not all are branded. Smoke from the branding occasionally was too thick for the workers; on those days they simply stopped branding. The company produced furniture for 14 years, and went through the following periods: classic, transitional, and middle. Toward the end of its manufacturing career, the company began making rather mundane furniture that did not look like Monterey style, but was a revival of American Colonial.

Hollywood and Barker Brothers were influential in the creation of Mason's furniture line, in that Barker Brothers approached Frank Mason with the idea of creating a line of furniture based on furniture seen in a popular early "talkie," In Old Arizona by Fox Film Corporation, 1929. Spanish Revival homes were being built all over Los Angeles, and Barker Brothers wanted a line of furniture that could complement the style of the homes. The largest public collection was bought for the Chateau in 1933 at the Oregon Caves National Monument; most of the collection is from the early classic period. In 2010, the first two dozen pieces of Mason Monterey were conserved and restored.

Imperial Monterey was made from mahogany. It was a heavier line, well built and well designed, with quality iron work to reinforce the structure. The color palette occasionally contained decorative floral designs, but Imperial was known for the simpler brown finish akin to the Old Wood finish of the Mason line. The largest original public collection of Imperial Monterey was recently conserved, and is in use at Crater Lake National Park's superintendent's home, now the Science and Learning Center.

The Coronado line was generally a lighter blonde shade of antiqued oil paint, and the design contained more angles and had wrapped rope decor. Intenoche apparently moonlighted at the Angeles Factory, as his designs are also found on Coronado furniture. The company branded its line with a crown featuring the word Coronado.

 

Keywords: Art Deco Mission Rancho Western Rodeo Bungalow bathroom vintage antique house part salvage Modern Moderne Mid Century Modern MCM 1920's 1930's 1940's 1950's Thirties Twenties Forties Fifties