|
|
Types
of cushions:

Seat
cushions
bed
cushions
outdoor Patio cushions futon cushions
A cushion (from Old French coisson, coussin; from Latin culcita, a quilt), is a soft bag of some ornamental
material, stuffed with wool, hair, feathers, polyester staple fiber, non-woven
material, or even paper torn into fragments. It may be used for sitting
or kneeling upon, or to soften the hardness or angularity of a chair or
couch. Cushions and rugs
can be used temporarily outside, to soften a hard ground. They can be
placed on sunloungers and used to prevent annoyances from moist grass
and biting insects. Some dialects of English use this word to
refer to throw pillows as well.
how
to make a cushion templete
The cushion is a very
ancient article of furniture; the inventories of the contents of
palaces and great houses in the early Middle
Ages
constantly made mention of them. Cushions were then often of great
size, covered with leather, and firm enough to serve as a seat, but the
steady tendency of all furniture has been to grow smaller with time.
Cushions were, indeed,
used as seats at all events in France and Spain at a very much later
period, and in Saint-Simon's
time we find that in the Spanish court they were still regarded as a
peculiarly honourable substitute for a chair. In France, the right to
kneel upon a cushion in church behind the king was jealously guarded
and strictly regulated, as we learn again from Saint-Simon. This type
of cushion was called a carreau, or squaer. When seats were rude and hard,
cushions may have been a necessity; they are now one of the minor
luxuries of life.
The term cushion
is given in architecture to the sides of the Ionic capital. It is also
applied to an early and simple form of the Romanesque capitals of
Germany and England,
which consist of cubical masses, square at the top and rounded off at
the four corners, so as to reduce the lower diameter to a circle of the
same size as the shaft.
|

outdoor patio chaise cushions

throw cushions

glider cushions
|