THE NEO-CLASSIC MOVEMENT 471 ITALY Italian Directoire furniture was copied from the French, for France set the standards of taste in Europe at this time. However, the Italian designers employed the Classic motifs such as the lyre, acanthus, scrolls, and flutings in a more lavish manner than the French. Italian Empire furniture faithfully copied the French. In fact, this style was so pleasing to upper-class Italians that it cofi- tinued in fashion during most of the nineteenth century, although Napoleon fell in 1814. The furniture was chiefly walnut, which was the most plentiful wood in Italy. SPAIN Spanish Directoire and Empire furniture was made for palaces; provincial products were not affected by this French style. Ex- quisite metalwork, decorative nail heads, and inlay were the dec- oration. Upholstery materials were heavy and richly colored. ENGLAND The English Regency is the period when George IV was regent for his insane father, George III. However, the Regency style began about 1793 and continued to the beginning of Victoria's reign in 1837, Although the English disliked France and French politics, their furniture designers copied the French Directoire and Empire styles. By this time original furniture designing had ceased in England. The furniture was interesting, however, in the early part of the period, but at the end it was coarse, grotesque, and ugly, lacking proportion and comfort. Regency furniture was dark mahogany or rosewood, or painted black and touched with gold paint. The fret and the Prince of Wales feathers were favorite motifs in ornamentation. Typical Regency pieces were sofas with flaring curved lines in legs and backs, cross-legged stools, chaises longues, four-legged console tables mounted on very thick bases, three- or four-legged pedestals holding urns or marble busts, and huge sideboards and bookcases with temple fa9ades. See page 88 for a modern Regency room. The walls were of plain, lively colors. Broad pilasters, wide flat cornices, flat arches over doors and recesses, and black-and-white marble floors in important rooms were typical features.