Having visited the furniture museum, you can see how its appearance has changed. The first wardrobes were made of wood massif, they were low and had swing doors. Decorated wardrobes with carved details.
Turning milling cutting work made it possible to make any part of decorative elements. Old cabinets were sometimes so decorated with carvings that they were the most striking object of the room in which they stood. In the manufacture of ancient furniture, valuable varieties of wood were used. However, such furniture cost a lot of money, and only very rich citizens could afford it. The bulk of ordinary people to store clothes used ordinary chests made of cheap pine wood. By the way, in the village houses of our compatriots you can still meet this piece of furniture.
However, in the chest, the clothes crumbled quite a lot and cream. In the wardrobes, it was possible to hang clothes on the shoulders.
Modern wardrobes are made of wood plates and finished with veneers of valuable wood species. The location of the doors of this cabinet model allows you to place it anywhere in the apartment.
However, a wooden cabinet cannot be placed in those places where there is increased humidity. Excess moisture will conquer a tree over time, and the product will acquire an ugly appearance. For example, in the washing rooms of public baths, they try to make shops out of an authentic. He can withstand moisture well. Moreover, the hydrobrand cutting significantly reduced the cost of sawing stone. Previously, sawing work has always taken a lot of time and physical forces from decorative stone handlers.
To date, the marble familiar to us is replaced by a new material by porcelain stoneware. In terms of physical indicators, it is practically not inferior to natural granite. He combined two materials – ceramic tiles and granite. Moreover, the cutting of porcelain tile is much easier than a cut of natural stone, so this material is available to any builder. Due to the low price, porcelain tiles are used in the decoration of public baths, halls, interiors of public and private buildings.