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Papers [1-15] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7]
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Search results on "MISSION STYLE FURNITURE MOVEMENT":

Term Paper # 58948 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Mission Style Furniture Movement, 2005.
An historical view of the Art's and Crafts (Mission Style) furniture movement. Looks at how the style is changing and advancing.
2,510 words (approx. 10.0 pages), 12 sources, MLA, $ 76.95
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Abstract
This literature review research paper examines the history of the Mission Style (Arts and Crafts) furniture and style movement. The brief history of materials and style gives a feeling of how this movement evolved and grew into the Prairie home style, which includes home design. It explains how modern reaction to the computer age has adapted the Mission style furniture to include modern materials and mass production to enable more people the opportunity to enjoy the style, function, and feeling of the original-era furniture.

From the Paper
"The start of the Mission Style furniture era started in San Francisco, California in 1894. This Mission Style movement started in the Mission Communities in California when the Missions were training people to be furniture craftspeople. Often the materials they used were what were available locally. These materials included timber, fine wood, finishes, blacksmith nails, castings and hardware. (Mission Furniture 1980). The furniture built in this Mission Style was and is a blend of form and function that blends the natural beauty and warmth of the materials used."
Term Paper # 101251 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Bauhaus and Furniture Design, 2006.
An examination of the influence of Marcel Breuer upon modern furniture design.
2,048 words (approx. 8.2 pages), 10 sources, MLA, $ 64.95
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Abstract
This paper examines the furniture designs of one of the Bauhaus' most famous designers, Marcel Breuer (in the context of the Bauhaus and the modern movement). The paper argues that Breuer's furniture designs reflect the overall Bauhaus interest in the application of industrial mass production to the creation of domestic spaces defined by quality design. The writer explains that although the Bauhaus was to only exist for a few short years before its closing by Germany's Nazi government in 1933, its ethos can be seen to be reflected in much of Breuer's innovations in furniture design. The writer also notes that Marcel Breuer's furniture design would prove so enduring and popular that it came to be characteristic of the modern movement. The writer concludes that in situating Breuer within the context of the Bauhaus, we can see how his modernist vision evolved from an emphasis upon aesthetic principles to a focus upon the primacy of industrial design that may be inexpensively reproduced through mass production techniques. An annotated bibliography is appended.

Outline:
Introduction
The Bauhaus Vision
Marcel Breuer and Modern Furniture Design
Conclusion

From the Paper
"The Bauhaus School that came into being in Germany in the wake of the First World War represented arguably the single most influential school in the history of modern design. Headed by figures such as Walter Gropius and Mies van der Rohe, and defined by a socially egalitarian ethos that envisioned industrial production as the key to presenting quality designed products for the general public, the Bauhaus was to play a critical role in the shaping of how the twentieth century perceived modern design."
Term Paper # 9479 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Furniture: Making it Movable in a Movable Society, 2002.
A discussion on how furniture design today reflects a more mobile and changing society.
1,845 words (approx. 7.4 pages), 2 sources, MLA, $ 59.95
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Abstract
The paper studies people's changing method of furniture buying as society's tastes change. Society today is very different than what it was thirty years ago. Our tastes today are very mobile, and hence, furniture is reflecting this notion. The paper shows that as technology has advanced our society, our tastes have also changed and these tastes further affect what the general public wants as far as art, film, and furniture. The paper explores how the growing aspect of technology today has influenced manufactures to develop furniture with interchangeable parts, as well as furniture that is flexible, easier to move, assemble, and reassemble. All of these factors also assist people with saving space within their living quarters as well as moving their furniture more easily. The paper explores the use of plywood and the need of saving time and space.

From the Paper
"The formation of plywood in layers permits it to be bent into curved shapes by stretching and compression under heat or steam. Again, this permits people in our ever-moving society to skew their furniture to fit their needs. For the piece that forms the continuous back and seat of a chair it can be used as thin as a quarter-of-an-inch. Because of the cross-grained lamination, expansion and contraction under changes of heat or humidity become negligible. Nor can plywood split or warp under normal conditions."
Term Paper # 91063 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Purchasing Furniture, 2006.
This paper examines the processes involved when a consumer buys furniture.
1,800 words (approx. 7.2 pages), 2 sources, $ 71.95
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Abstract
The paper discusses how furniture buying holds the same general purchase decision process as other items. The first step in the furniture buying process, for a consumer, is problem recognition. In this step, the consumer recognizes their need or desire for a piece of furniture. This can be triggered by something internally, or an external stimulus, including; a change within their own home, an in-store furniture display or even an advertisement. The paper explains that this motivation to purchase a piece of furniture may be either rational or emotional. Once this need or want is identified, the consumer then begins an information search on possibilities of how to fulfill this need or want.
Term Paper # 92315 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Ashely Furniture and its Business Model, 2007.
This paper describes the business model for Ashley Furniture.
2,671 words (approx. 10.7 pages), 2 sources, APA, $ 80.95
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Abstract
Ashley Furniture is a large, continuously growing, and dynamic organization. This paper describes the company's goals according to the outlook of its owners. The author highlights Ashley Furniture's incentive program, such as rewards for employees that strive towards improving their workplace. The paper also explores competition in the market place and how the company deals with it. Charts illustrate the company's growth, and its mission statement is given considerable attention. The author interviewed the president of the company and his comments are an integral part of the paper.

Table of Contents:
Ashley Furniture Industries Report
References
Background
Organizational Structure
Leadership
Culture
Interview Info

From the Paper
"There are formal and informal rewards for employees. Along with having competitive pay and excellent benefits, there are other programs in place to promote productivity and lower costs. Ashley Furniture can boast of a widely used suggestion program that pays rewards for suggestions that are implemented. There is also a company wide reward payout to all employees for their efforts to reduce levels of scrap and waste. There is a formal awards banquet held every year to recognize top performers. One could argue most employees utilize the suggestion system not for the monetary rewards but to truly improve their workplace. Another monetary reward comes in the form of how employees are paid. Hourly production employees are paid by the piece rate method. This method rewards or pays employees for their productivity. This is not the best system for all employees. The employees who have; the motivation and willingness to continuously improve their efficiencies, do well with this system (Wanek, 2006)."
Term Paper # 99561 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
History of Furniture Design, 2007.
This paper explores how the growth of domesticity in the Middle Ages affected furniture design.
2,618 words (approx. 10.5 pages), 10 sources, MLA, $ 78.95
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Abstract
The paper argues that the evolution of the concept of domesticity - and its associated impact upon furniture design - was closely associated with the rise of the bourgeois or middle class and the gradual preeminence of urban living as the defining lifestyle of the Middle Ages. The paper shows how the merchant classes of medieval European cities were the primary agents of historical and social change and innovations in furniture design.

Outline:
Introduction
The Rise of the Middle Class
The Early Medieval Home and Furniture
The Evolution of the Language of Domesticity
The Signification of Furniture

From the Paper
"It must be acknowledged that in making the argument that it was the early European middle classes in their small city dwellings, and not the medieval nobility in their huge, picturesque castles, who were primarily significant in terms of the evolution of domesticity and furniture design one is challenging a popular image of medieval history. However, while the nobility were undeniably the ruling class in medieval Europe, the history of the Middle Ages can also be read as a history of the decline of aristocratic power and the rise of the middle class."
Term Paper # 87082 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Furniture Manufacturing in Canada, 2005.
A case study discussing the successes and failure of the furniture manufacturing industry in Canada.
2,025 words (approx. 8.1 pages), 6 sources, $ 80.95
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Abstract
The paper describes the Canadian furniture sector prior to the advent of free trade in the 1980s. The paper then proceeds to briefly outline the impact of the free trade agreement upon Canadian furniture manufacturers. That being done, the paper reviews how Canadian industrial and furniture manufacturers were able to overcome the challenges posed by free trade to reinvigorate themselves as the 1990s drew to a close.

From the Paper
"Furniture Manufacturing in Canada: Successes and Failures and One Case Study In recent years, the issue of economic disparity within the Canadian Confederation has become a very pressing one. This is true not only in high-profile sectors but in sectors such as the furniture manufacturing sector which, although it employs more than 100,000 Canadians at last count, is often treated dismissively by those in and out of Canadian government. "
Term Paper # 88704 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Renaissance Furniture, 2006.
An examination of Renaissance furniture, its design and what it said about the people of that era.
2,475 words (approx. 9.9 pages), 2 sources, $ 97.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses Renaissance furniture and notes that the prevailing view that the Renaissance involved a growing interest in classical forms applies to many of the arts but may not apply to the design of furniture, with the ostentatious nature of many furnishings suggesting instead a desire for class distinction based on social and economic changes taking place at the time.

From the Paper
"The Renaissance was a period seen as a rebirth of learning on the classical model. The modern conception of the Renaissance actually derives from the nineteenth century in the work of Swiss historian Jacob Burckhardt, who published a pioneering work in 1860 in which he saw the Renaissance as almost purely cultural, as the work of a small Italian elite pioneering a new attitude toward human beings. They now saw human beings as people who had suddenly acquired a new consciousness of their own uniqueness and individuality."
Term Paper # 4201 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Furniture Giants, 2001.
How three furniture companies succeeded where others failed.
1,950 words (approx. 7.8 pages), 6 sources, $ 62.95
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Abstract
This paper examines the marketing strategies of three furniture companies to explain why they have succeeded where others have failed.

From the paper:

"One of the major Ethan Allen company trademarks is that they were first to display their furniture as a room would look with all the pieces arranged and thus giving customers a look at like what their home could look if they were to purchase all the included pieces."
Term Paper # 47494 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Case of Gallery Furniture, 2004.
This paper is a case study of Gallery Furniture that uses a buyer-oriented marketing approach.
980 words (approx. 3.9 pages), 0 sources, $ 34.95
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Abstract
This paper explains that the objective of Gallery Furniture is to serve a wide market at the upper-low and middle market segments; the company is well served by this strategy. The author points out that, if the company were to expand geographically, it would have to use zone pricing of delivery. The paper states that, on the company's Web site, showing the photos of the showroom exactly as a low- to-middle level showroom looks, instead of having a more artful Web arrangement of selected items as might be the case in a more upscale Web presentation, supports the firm?s strategic position.

Table of Contents
General Pricing Strategy
Pricing the Geographically Expanding Market
Internal and External Concerns
Product-Mix Pricing Strategies
Psychological Pricing
The Web Site

From the Paper
"Internal factors that would influence the decision would be: whether the store could obtain or get commitments for sufficient quantities of their online items (which in this case is the entire inventory) to serve a region or the nation; whether the logistics of setting up either distribution from a central warehouse or setting up regional warehouses is affordable and acceptable to the operation of the company without diminishing its service to markets it already serves; whether it could set up a service operation sufficient to handle orders nationally or even regionally; whether it had the advertising budget to promote its goods and services regionally or nationally, or whether it would be wise to seek investment to do so."
Term Paper # 12050 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Colonial Furniture, 1996.
Early Amer. styles (Chippendale, Queen Anne, blockfront), materials, consumer needs, British influence, paint, carvings.
2,250 words (approx. 9.0 pages), 8 sources, $ 79.95
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From the Paper
"Most colonial furniture was the product of the settlers' practical need for the basics of existence. On their arrival the first colonists had to cope with the problems of survival and the difficulties of the voyage had allowed them to bring very few of their possessions along. At first they were unable to concern themselves with any but the most basic uses of "time and precious human resources" and furniture makers' skills were needed elsewhere. But they did carry with them their "deeply embedded habits, customs and tastes" and the "old forms and the tools needed to make them were reproduced virtually unchanged and persisted long after they had been abandoned 'back home'" and were to be the basis of new, specifically American versions of European furniture styles. Within the broad field of colonial furniture styles it is possible to select a few topics that..."
Term Paper # 31779 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Marketing Plan, Outdoor Furniture, 2002.
Presents a plan to market the RelaxPak, focusing primarily on the Canadian consumer market.
2,400 words (approx. 9.6 pages), 1 source, $ 89.95
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Abstract
In this detailed marketing analysis, the plans for promoting the RelaxPak, which is an accessory for an outdoor chair called the Muskoka Chair, are provided. This plan includes an executive summary describing the product and then outlines specific issues and marketing strategies in a point-by-point analysis. The product being researched here is discussed in the contexts of marketing to Canadian consumers.
Term Paper # 88915 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Arts and Crafts Movement, 2006.
A look at how the arts and crafts movement impacted on interior design and designers.
2,475 words (approx. 9.9 pages), 2 sources, $ 97.95
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Abstract
This paper analyzes changes in interior design brought about because of the arts and crafts movement in the nineteenth century, noting that the movement made changes specifically in terms of the design of interiors, including the design of furniture. The movement was shaped by William Morris, best-known for the design of the Morris chair but also for being a leader in this artistic movement.

From the Paper
"The arts and crafts movement was a reaction to the opulence and weight of design in the Victorian era. This movement made changes specifically in terms of the design of interiors, including the design of furniture. The movement was shaped by William Morris, best-known for the design of the Morris chair but also for being a leader in this artistic movement. In the nineteenth century, the Industrial Revolution changed the nature of manufacturing and so also affected the nature of design. The Victorian style that prevailed in the nineteenth century featured heavily ornamented interiors containing many pieces of furniture, collections of ornamental objects, and surfaces covered with fringed cloths. "
Term Paper # 53703 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Zionist Movement, 2004.
A description of the founders of the modern Zionist movement and the path the movement took.
1,457 words (approx. 5.8 pages), 6 sources, APA, $ 48.95
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Abstract
This paper establishes the Jewish foundations for a claim to the Holy Land and the reasons their own nation was pursued. It traces the influential leaders who paved the way for the modern Zionist movement and describes the early leaders' successes and failures and their influence on the leaders who formed the World Zionist Organization. It also examines the steps leading up to the establishment of a Jewish homeland and the progress they made in settling and moving into this land.

From the Paper
"An early precursor to Zionistic thought was Rabbi Yehudah Alkalai. In 1834, he wrote a booklet entitled Shema Yisrael (Hear, O Israel), in which he proposed the creation of Jewish colonies in the Holy Land as necessary to the Redemption of the land. The Blood Accusation of 1840, in which the Jews of Damascus were accused of sacrificing gentiles and using the blood of the victims in the Passover, convinced Alkalai that for security and freedom the Jewish people needed a life of its own, within its ancestral home. He believed the Jews would be able to buy this land from the Turks, as Abraham had bought the land from Ephram. To fulfill this goal, Alkalai proposed the formation a ?Great Assembly? to create a national fund to purchase the land."
Term Paper # 103290 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Transnational Social Movements, 2008.
This paper examines what insight social movement theory provides for the study of transnational social movements.
2,687 words (approx. 10.7 pages), 7 sources, MLA, $ 80.95
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Abstract
In this article, the writer notes that what is fundamentally striking about transnational social movements (TSMs) is the extent to which they are able to reach beyond the restrictive confines of the nation state. The writer points out that, due to the ever-increasing opportunities that are afforded by international travel and communication, such as email and the Internet, TSMs have a way of reaching new audiences, organizing them in new collectives and voicing common grievances in new ways. The writer also notes that members of TNMs may not be working class, but they do share the common perception of themselves as small people who are being overlooked by an increasingly powerful group of leaders that are calling the shots from places and spaces in which individual national politics may not exert sufficient influence. The writer concludes that even though theories of social movements might be seen as outdated because of the global context in which movements now operate, this should not gloss over the common features that TNMs do have with social movements before them and with the insights that social movement theories can provide.

Outline:
Introduction
Objectives of Transnational Social Movements
Chief Characteristics of Transnational Social Movements
From Theories of Class to Post-Industrial Society
Conclusions

From the Paper
"Such protests were organized quite deliberately to coincide with and confront the agenda that was being put forward by intergovernmental conferences. Objecting to the global spread of the neo-liberal economic model, protestors were keen to take to task not only the governments of the leading industrialized nations, but also to criticize international organizations, such as the World Trade Organization, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, as well as multinational corporations, which, in the protestors' views, were setting out policies that could not be countered if objections remained local and national-specific.
"Even though the nature of this movement is contested, it would still be possible to note the chief concerns of protestors as being objection to the globalization of a neo-liberal, monetarist economic philosophy. The strength of the protests against this doctrine are related to what its critics in the anti-capitalist movement see as the extreme negativity of its effects."
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Papers [1-15] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7]
Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 —>