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- Q2992489 subject Q6154037.
- Q2992489 abstract "A confidante (also known as a canapé à joue, a canapé à confidants, or a canapé à confidant(e)) is a type of sofa, originally characterized by a triangular seat at each end, so that people could sit at either end of the sofa and be close to the person(s) sitting in the middle. The ends were sometimes detachable, and could be removed and used on their own as Burjair chairs. The name Confidante was coined by cabinetmaker George Hepplewhite, who described it in his Cabinet-Maker and Upholsterer's Guide as being "of French origin, and is in pretty general request for large and spacious suits of apartments. An elegant drawing-room, with modern furniture, is scarce complete without a Confidante, […]".".
- Q2992489 thumbnail Indiscret_Napoléon_III.jpg?width=300.
- Q2992489 wikiPageWikiLink Q131514.
- Q2992489 wikiPageWikiLink Q17050313.
- Q2992489 wikiPageWikiLink Q320552.
- Q2992489 wikiPageWikiLink Q6154037.
- Q2992489 wikiPageWikiLink Q820539.
- Q2992489 comment "A confidante (also known as a canapé à joue, a canapé à confidants, or a canapé à confidant(e)) is a type of sofa, originally characterized by a triangular seat at each end, so that people could sit at either end of the sofa and be close to the person(s) sitting in the middle. The ends were sometimes detachable, and could be removed and used on their own as Burjair chairs.".
- Q2992489 label "Confidante".
- Q2992489 depiction Indiscret_Napoléon_III.jpg.