Painted Furniture
Early 19th Century American Antique Painted Furniture
Late 19th Century American Folk Art Antique Painted Furniture
Wood
1790s French Louis XVI Antique Painted Furniture
Paint, Wood
Early 20th Century American Arts and Crafts Painted Furniture
Wood
Late 19th Century American Country Antique Painted Furniture
Pine
Late 20th Century Moroccan Folk Art Painted Furniture
Wood
1820s American American Colonial Antique Painted Furniture
Paint, Wood
Late 19th Century American Folk Art Antique Painted Furniture
Leather, Wood
Early 1900s German Folk Art Antique Painted Furniture
Wood
Late 18th Century Italian Rococo Antique Painted Furniture
Wood
1810s American Country Antique Painted Furniture
Wood
19th Century Scandinavian Gustavian Antique Painted Furniture
Wood
Mid-20th Century Indian Folk Art Painted Furniture
Metal
Mid-19th Century Chinese Qing Antique Painted Furniture
Elm
18th Century American Folk Art Antique Painted Furniture
Wood
1930s Folk Art Vintage Painted Furniture
Wood
1750s Italian Rococo Antique Painted Furniture
Iron
Mid-19th Century American Country Antique Painted Furniture
Pine
Early 19th Century American Folk Art Antique Painted Furniture
Pine
1780s Italian Neoclassical Antique Painted Furniture
Gold
19th Century Danish Gustavian Antique Painted Furniture
Wood
Late 18th Century Danish Rococo Antique Painted Furniture
Brass
1820s English Regency Antique Painted Furniture
1790s French Louis XVI Antique Painted Furniture
Paint, Wood
18th Century and Earlier Spanish Antique Painted Furniture
Wood
19th Century American Antique Painted Furniture
Wood
1810s American American Empire Antique Painted Furniture
Cane, Pine, Paint
19th Century French Antique Painted Furniture
19th Century Scandinavian Folk Art Antique Painted Furniture
Pine
19th Century American Folk Art Antique Painted Furniture
Wood
19th Century French Antique Painted Furniture
1810s English Regency Antique Painted Furniture
Beech, Paint, Upholstery
1820s Antique Painted Furniture
Wood
19th Century American Antique Painted Furniture
Poplar
19th Century French Neoclassical Antique Painted Furniture
Cane, Wood
19th Century Antique Painted Furniture
Wood
1790s French Louis XVI Antique Painted Furniture
Paint, Wood
1780s Italian Neoclassical Antique Painted Furniture
Gold Leaf
1810s American American Colonial Antique Painted Furniture
Wrought Iron
19th Century Italian Antique Painted Furniture
Softwood
Mid-20th Century American Adirondack Painted Furniture
Twig, Cherry
Early 19th Century Swedish Gustavian Antique Painted Furniture
Delft, Wood
1790s Italian Neoclassical Antique Painted Furniture
Fir
1810s Italian Folk Art Antique Painted Furniture
Fir
1810s Italian Neoclassical Antique Painted Furniture
Fir
Early 19th Century American Federal Antique Painted Furniture
Gold, Steel
Late 19th Century French Antique Painted Furniture
Wood
1810s American Adirondack Antique Painted Furniture
Pine
Late 17th Century American Antique Painted Furniture
Wood
19th Century Hungarian Country Antique Painted Furniture
Wood, Paint
1830s Austrian Renaissance Antique Painted Furniture
Fir
Early 18th Century Italian Antique Painted Furniture
Wood
Early 2000s American Queen Anne Painted Furniture
Brass
Mid-20th Century Painted Furniture
Metal
19th Century American Adirondack Antique Painted Furniture
Pine
Early 19th Century Italian Folk Art Antique Painted Furniture
Fir
18th Century and Earlier British Regency Antique Painted Furniture
Vintage, New and Antique Painted Furniture
Vintage, new and antique painted furniture enhances a room through patterns, blocks of color and ornamental flourishes. Decorating furniture with paint was especially prominent in the 18th and 19th centuries in the United States when folk artists used chairs, chests, tables and cupboards as their canvases. Although a later trend involved stripping antique pieces of their paint, early American homes were vivid with furniture painted in an array of colors.
The practice of painting furniture has a rich heritage, with remnants of pigment identified on a 12th-century painted chair from Sweden. It has come in and out of fashion over time — in the design of 17th-century Mannerist furniture, paint was lightly used to enhance carved ornamentation, and painted furniture gained popularity with designers working in the chinoiserie style, as 18th-century European artisans mimicked Chinese lacquer in furniture motifs. In France in the 18th century, furniture was lavishly painted or gilded in gold.
Now painted furniture is popular for pieces that are both utilitarian and works of art. A color from a pattern can inform the whole design of a room, or, as bold and saturated tones are in vogue, a vibrantly adorned piece can be a bold focal point. Muted palettes can contribute to an air of calm for a study or bedroom while bright reds, yellows or blues can enliven a dining room or living room.
On 1stDibs, find a variety of vintage, new and antique painted furniture to match any space or taste.