- A trap,
pony trap (sometimes
pony and trap) or
horse trap is a light,
often sporty, two-wheeled or
sometimes four-wheeled horse- or
pony-drawn carriage...
-
landscape and
Rouen pottery.
After luncheon my
friends took me on a
pony chaise,
across the
beauties of the park to the keeper's lodge. I saw conservatories...
- A bath chair—or Bath chair—was a
rolling chaise or
light carriage for one
person with a
folding hood,
which could be open or closed. Used
especially by...
- hooves.
Perriand took this and ran with it,
finding pony skin from
Parisian furriers to
cover the
chaise.
Perriand wrote in a memoir: "While our
chair designs...
- ISBN 0-7478-0208-4.
Retrieved 20 May 2014. "Princess (Soon to be Queen)
Victoria in Her
Pony Phaeton Carriage in
About 1835 -". "Henry
Holford attempts to ********inate...
-
usually drawn by a
single horse and with
seats for four or more p****engers.
Chaise: A
light two- or four-wheeled
traveling or
pleasure carriage, with a folding...
-
Fairly lowslung with a
chaise-like body and long,
flexible shafts,
which aided the
suspension and
eliminated sway.
Three or more
ponies were
harnessed abreast...
- used as open
pleasure or
sporting vehicles. They
could be
drawn by a horse,
pony or dog.
Examples include: ****ing cart: short-bodied, high, two-wheeled,...
-
Norfolk shooting cart,
Nottingham cart,
Oxford bounder,
Oxford dogcart,
Pony dogcart,
Ralli dogcart,
Sliding bodied dogcart,
Surrey cart,
Tandem cart...
- long-distance land
travel became known as
staging or posting. Stagecoaches, post
chaises,
private vehicles,
individual riders and the like
followed the already...