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Old 9th September 2015, 06:33 PM   #10
fernando
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Portugal
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ibrahiim al Balooshi
...and called sugar boxes ...which roughly I can spell in Portuguese "caixas a sugar..."
'Caixas de açucar', is the term. When speaking of furniture of the "caixa de açucar" style, we are referring to examples made with boards saved from the boxes used to transport sugar from Madeira Islands and Brasil, their great sugar competitor. Various kinds of exotic wood were used, but what counted was the box format. Although of variable capacity during periods and origin, they were 'standardized' containers for the transport of a determined quantity of 'pães de açucar' (sugar breads), so called due to the typical clay cones in which the sugar was 'packed'.
This type of furniture started by being of the utility type and later of style, namely pieces of one and two bodies, like the cup cabinets of the Dutch style, a fashion divulged in Portugal in the end of the 1600's, as well as chests.


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