Dictionary Definition
washstand
Noun
1 furniture consisting of a table or stand to
hold a basin and pitcher of water for washing: `wash-hand stand' is
a British term [syn: wash-hand
stand]
2 a bathroom or lavatory sink that is permanently
installed and connected to a water supply and drainpipe; where you
wash your hands and face; "he ran some water in the basin and
splashed it on his face" [syn: washbasin, basin, washbowl, lavatory]
User Contributed Dictionary
Translations
- Dutch: wastafel
Extensive Definition
A washstand is a table or stand containing
conveniences for personal ablutions. In its 18th-century form it
was called a basin, stand or basin frame, and is still sometimes
described as a washhand stand. Its direct, but remote, ancestor was
the monastic lavabo, ranges of basins of stone, lead or marble fed from a cistern. They
were usually of primitive conception, and a trough common to all
was probably more frequent than separate basins. Very occasionally
they were of bronze
adorned with enamels and blazoned with heraldry.
Very similar usages obtained in castles and
palaces, fixed lavatories being
constructed in the thickness of the walls for the use of their more
important residents. These arrangements were obviously intended
only for the summary ablutions which, until a very late date,
sufficed to even the high-born.
By degrees the lavabo became portable, and a
basin frame is mentioned as early as the middle of the 17th
century. Examples of earlier date than the third or fourth
decade of the 18th century
are, however, virtually unknown. Thenceforth, until about the end
of that century, this piece of furniture was usually
literally a stand. It was supported upon a tripod; a circular
orifice in the top received the basin, and smaller ones were
provided for a soap dish
and a water-bottle. Sometimes a stand for the water-jug when the
basin was in use was provided below, and very commonly there was a
drawer, sometimes even two drawers, below the basin.
Great numbers of these stands were made to fit
into corners, and a corner wash-stand is still a common object in
old furniture shops. Chippendale
designed such stands in an elaborate rococo fashion, as well as in
simpler form.
As the 18th century drew to its close the custom
of using the same apartment as reception room by day and sleeping
room by night produced a demand for what was called harlequin
furniture pieces which were contrived a double or triple debt
to pay. Thus a variety of complicated combination washstands and
dressing tables were made, and fitted with mirrors and sometimes
with writing conveniences and drawers for clothes. Sheraton developed
astonishing ingenuity in devising a type of furniture which, if we
may judge by the large number of examples still existing, must have
become highly popular.
With the beginning of the 19th century
and the expansion of ideals of personal cleanliness, the washstand
grew in size and importance. It acquired the form of an oblong
wooden table provided, like its smaller predecessors, with orifices
for basins and fitted with a brad shelf-like stretcher upon which
the jugs were placed when they were removed from the basins. Ample
space was provided for soap-dishes and water-bottles. These tables
were single or double, for the use of one or two persons. The
washstand, as we know it in the 20th
century, took its final form when the wooden top was replaced
by marble, unpierced, the basins being placed upon the slab, which,
in the beginning almost invariably white, were later made of red or
other warm-tinted marble.
References
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
aquamanile, automatic
dishwasher, basin,
bath, bathtub, bidet, dishpan, dishwasher, ewer, finger bowl, kitchen sink,
lavabo, lavatory, piscina, shower, shower bath, shower
curtain, shower head, shower room, shower stall, showers, sink, tub, wash barrel, wash boiler,
washbasin, washbowl, washdish, washer, washing machine, washing
pot, washpot, washtub