- cheval glass
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/sheuh val"/a full-length mirror mounted so that it can be tilted in a frame.[1830-40; < F cheval horse, supporting framework (see CHEVALET)]
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▪ mirroralso called horse dressing glass or psychetall dressing mirror, suspended between two pillars, usually joined by horizontal bars immediately above and below the mirror and resting on two pairs of long feet. The cheval glass was first made toward the end of the 18th century. The glass could be tilted at any angle by means of the swivel screws supporting it, and its height could be adjusted by means of lead counterweights and a horse, or pulley, from which the name was taken. Thomas Sheraton (Sheraton, Thomas), in The Cabinet Dictionary (1803), included a design with a nest of drawers at one side and another with a writing surface. When wardrobes were fitted with mirrored doors, the cheval glass became unnecessary in bedrooms.* * *
Universalium. 2010.