Confidante

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File:Indiscret Napoléon III.jpg
Second Empire style confidante

A confidante (also known[1][2] 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.[3] The ends were sometimes detachable, and could be removed and used on their own as Burjair chairs.[4][5] The name Confidante was coined by cabinetmaker George Hepplewhite,[6] 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, […]".[7]

References

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Reference bibliography

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Further reading

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  1. DeJean 2009, pp. 123–125.
  2. Banham & Shrimpton 1997, pp. 1194.
  3. Zoglin & Shouse 1999.
  4. Clouston 1975, pp. 161–162.
  5. Burton 1967, pp. 141.
  6. Yaxley 2003, pp. 50.
  7. Singleton 1970, pp. 642.