Luxury Doors Luxury
Wood Doors Luxury Teak Doors Luxury Design Doors Luxury Doors Luxury
Custom Doors and Luxury Art Doors
by The-Wood®
Studio Thailand
Custom
Work: we make luxury wood doors to
customer's design. All you need to provide is a picture or a drawing
and we take care of the rest... Shipping $500.00 USD only!
<
BACK |
NEXT >
Luxury Goods and
Doors: is a good for which demand increases more than
proportionally as income rises, contrast with inferior good and
normal good. Luxury goods are said to have high income elasticity of
demand: as people become more wealthy, they will buy more and more
of the luxury good. This also means, however, that should there be a
decline in income its demand will drop. It must be noted, though,
that income elasticity of demand is not constant with respect to
income, and may change sign at different levels of income. That is
to say, a luxury good may become a normal good or even an inferior
good at different income levels, e.g. a wealthy person stops buying
increasing numbers of luxury cars for his automobile collection to
start collecting airplanes (at such an income level, the luxury car
would become an inferior good). A luxury brand or prestige brand is
a brand for which a majority of its products are luxury goods. It
may also include certain brands whose names are associated with
luxury, high price, or high quality, though few, if any, of their
goods are currently considered luxury goods. The automobile
manufacturer Hummer is an example of such a brand, as a Hummer
automobile is considered a status symbol, even though none of the
vehicles in the Hummer line-up meet the requirements to be
classified as a luxury car. Another market characteristic of luxury
goods is their very high sensitivity to economic upturns and
downturns, high profit margins as well as prices, and very tightly
controlled brands. Other guidelines may apply to certain luxury
markets such as the luxury vehicle market.
Gothic Door:
Doors in Gothic houses were usually unglazed. In the most strongly
Gothic houses, doors were ledged, with vertical planks or planks in
a herringbone pattern. Oak was a prized wood. After 1860 it was more
common to see glazed and leaded front doors. Typical colours used
for painted front doors of pine or deal were dark blue, chocolate
brown (favoured by Eastlake), deep red, or else olive green.
Graining was also used. A key feature of the front door was a set of
ornamental fittings, ideally in wrought iron. Regular door-to-door
postal deliveries began in 1840 and the small letter-plate was
introduced. Larger items were received by a maid or other domestic
servant. The other furniture was a knocker and a pull to help to
close the door. Internal Gothic doors might have been ledged, or
else were panelled. As with the front door, those of better quality
wood were polished, while those of pine and deal were either grained
or painted. They were fitted with finger plates of iron or else
brass. |