
| Dimensions | N/A |
|---|---|
| Weight | 4 kg |
| Materials | Solid Wood, Brass |
| Country of Origin | Egypt |
| Design Style | Louis XV Rococo |
| Ideal Placement | Living Room, Bedroom, Hallway, Reception, Library |
| Delivery Time | 30-45 Days |
| Handcrafted | Yes — by Egyptian artisans |
| Customizable | Yes — contact us for custom orders |
Place this commode against a panelled wall and something shifts in the room — the swell of the bombé front pushes outward with an almost organic confidence, the gilt brass catches the light in layered flashes, and the richly figured mahogany surface seems to deepen with every shadow. This is the language of French Rococo at its most assured: movement built into structure, ornament that is never incidental. Faithfully reproduced in the tradition of the Louis XV commode, this piece draws from the design vocabulary of the great Parisian ébénistes of the 1730s–1760s, who first perfected the swelling, asymmetric case form that broke permanently from the rigidity of Baroque furniture.
The carcase is built from Romanian solid redwood dried to below 10% humidity — a foundation chosen for dimensional stability and its ability to hold both the shaped bombé profile and the fine stringing detail visible along drawer edges and the serpentine apron. The surface carries a French polish finish that brings out the depth of the mahogany grain without obscuring its natural figuring. Every drawer face swells and recedes in true bombé form — not a veneer applied over a flat carcase, but a genuinely shaped front that rewards close inspection. The cabriole legs, cast in confident S-curves, terminate in foliate sabots that anchor the piece with visual weight appropriate to its scale.
The commode houses three full-width drawers, graduated in depth from top to base. The shaped top follows the contour of the body below it, its edge moulded to a gentle concave profile that frames the surface without competing with the mounts below. Cast ormolu hardware — the defining luxury material of 18th-century French court furniture — covers the drawer pulls, escutcheons, corner guards, and leg sabots. The drawer pulls are formed as paired C-scroll drops; the corner mounts cascade as scrolling acanthus; a central cartouche mount at the top drawer carries a ribbon-tied torch motif. On the side panels, additional ormolu sprays of flowers and leaves complete the decorative programme — the same vocabulary used on documented pieces by Charles Cressent and the atelier of BVRB.
This commode is handcrafted in Egypt by Brass & Wood artisans who combine traditional European joinery methods with hand-applied French polish and individually fitted brass hardware. Each ormolu mount is cast, chased, and gilded before being fitted to the piece — no two commodes leave the workshop in identical condition, as the hand-finishing process ensures every surface is individually attended to. The result is a piece that carries the warmth and slight variation of genuine handcraft, rather than the uniformity of industrial reproduction.
The carcase is Romanian solid redwood (below 10% humidity), finished in French polish over a deep mahogany tone. All decorative hardware — pulls, escutcheons, corner mounts, and leg sabots — is cast brass with a gold finish, replicating the ormolu standard of Louis XV court furniture.
Minimal assembly is required — typically attaching the legs and fitting the hardware upon delivery. Full instructions are provided, and the process requires no specialist tools.
Yes. Brass & Wood offers customization on wood finish tone, brass hardware finish (antique gold, bright gold, or bronze), and overall dimensions. Contact our team to discuss bespoke requirements before placing your order.