
Presidential Billiards is the marketing arm of Wilson International, a large furniture manufacturing company based in Zimbabwe, and employs over 600 people. Presidential Billiards Table Specifications Stylish, transitional solid-wood table with an in-vogue charcoal brown finish.ĭining Top and Bench option is provided for added versatility. Oak table with a weathered natural finish with a bold shape and unique coloring. Natural variations in the wood and hand-applied finishing process give each table its own unique look. Rustic 8' table with stylish metal v-shaped pedestal legs. Solid wood with unique dark chocolate finish and diamond site wide rails.Ĭlassic style table with a Gray Walnut finish.Ĭhoice of Queen Anne or Ball + Claw legs and Leather Shield or Fringe pockets. Manufactured from Solid Rhodesian Teak with a hand carved Rams head leg.Īvailable in a natural teak finish or a Mahogany finish. Uses metal cross bars with turn buckles enhance its uniqueness. Transitional-style, black-finished billiard table. Unique 'Barndoor Gray' wood finish creates a subtle, natural look.īeautifully crafted solid Eucalyptus table available in dark Mahogany and Chestnut finish.įour leg options are available: Tapered Columns, Ball & Claw, Rams Head, and Queen Anne. It has helped us to understand what each room was used for, and how they were decorated.”įeaturing new acquisitions, paintings and artifacts relating to the time, the boudoir of one of the most famous French women in history is back – and as gilded as ever.Rustic and sturdy wooden 8' table with metal accents. “This has been a huge research project, undertaken using building plans and archives from the time. “For a long time, the second floor of Marie Antoinette’s chambers was little known, and little documented,” says Delalex.

(She and her husband would be executed in 1793.)Ĭonstantly tinkering, she kept up with every trend – likely setting many of them – including the penchant for all things ancient Egyptian that swept through France toward the end of the 18th century. She began an extensive redecoration project worthy of an episode of Queer Eye, which would continue until she left Versailles for Paris in 1789 at the start of the Revolution. Young Marie Antoinette was eager to put her own stamp on the rooms, not least due to an ardent dislike of her predecessor.
#Presidential billiards room series
Among the newly accessible rooms are the Meridian Room (cabinet de la Méridienne), the Library and the Gold Room, as well as a series of richly decorated chambers on the upper floor. Now, following a painstaking seven-year restoration project, her private chambers at Versailles will reopen to the public on June 20.

And although her infamous comment regarding bread-starved peasants (“let them eat cake”) is probably apocryphal, she wasn’t shy about enjoying life’s luxuries. Often painted wearing elaborate wigs and dresses of rich blue silk, Marie Antoinette, who lived at Versailles between 17, was known in her day as well as ours for a style that was the opposite of understated. Among its last residents was Austrian archduchess and French queen Marie Antoinette – wife of Louis XVI, the Sun King’s great-great-great-grandson – whose image has conquered the hearts, imaginations and cinema screens of generations. Welcoming almost 10 million visitors each year, Versailles today is one of the most visited monuments in the world. Discover the world’s most intriguing experiences with our weekly newsletter delivered straight to your inbox.
