The drawing below was made by Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres, an artist renown, among many other things, for getting his props right:
Like other history painters working in the early decades of the nineteenth century, Ingres would have appreciated Douce’s well-stored repository of images of chairs, bedsteads, tables, bath-tubs, lamps, stoves, etc. Some might have been given to Douce by friends:
The chair on the left could have been made in the late seventeenth century, since it is very similar to this side chair from Nymans, West Sussex:
It is also the type of chair chosen by George Clint (1770-1854) to furnish the room where Mistress Ford waits for Falstaff in this scene from The Merry Wives of Windsor:
The two chairs could have been drawn in the course of Douce’s friends’ tours and excursions around Britain: a few drawings of gates and lanterns kept with his prints were, for instance, a gift from the topographical and antiquarian draughtsman William Alexander (1767-1816). Another example is the bed below, which according to Douce’s annotation on the verso, was copied “from a small brass plate on the floor of Hurst church, Berks by J. Hare Esq. 1827”:
Other furniture drawings in Douce’s collection could have been preparatory designs for prints published as part of pattern books, as is probably the case of these eighteenth-century chairs: