
| 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 |
There is a particular authority that a true bombé commode brings to a room — the swelling, outward-curving form that seems to breathe, to occupy space with intention rather than by accident. This handcrafted piece draws directly from the great French Rococo commode tradition of the 1730s–1760s, when cabinetmakers working in Paris elevated storage furniture into sculpture. The exaggerated swell of the case, the restless energy of the carved frieze above, and the claw-and-ball feet below combine to produce a silhouette that is immediately recognizable to anyone who has stood in the grand rooms of the period's châteaux.
The carcase is built from Romanian solid redwood (under 10% humidity), ensuring dimensional stability and the density needed for deep relief carving. The drawer fronts and sides are dressed in a precisely laid chevron veneer in warm mahogany tones — the herringbone-like pattern catches directional light and shifts in depth as you move around the piece. The upper frieze is the work of a hand with real skill: a continuous acanthus-scroll composition, carved in high relief with tight spirals that terminate in rosette blossoms at each shoulder. Below the main case, the apron carries a central shell-and-scroll cartouche flanked by further leafwork — the Rococo refusal to leave any surface quiet. The legs are fully carved cabriole forms terminating in claw-and-ball feet, each claw individually rendered. The finish is French polish, building depth through multiple hand-applied shellac layers until the mahogany grain glows from within.
This commode features two generous drawers, the lower being the deeper of the two — a proportion faithful to the historical originals where the lower drawer held linens and the upper drawer held personal effects. The antique bronze drop-bail hardware is cast rather than stamped, with the characteristic weight and detail that pressed hardware cannot replicate. The flat top surface is finished to receive a mirror, a pair of urns, or a lamp — its proportions designed to work below a pier glass or trumeau mirror on a bedroom or hallway wall.
Every commode in the Brass & Wood collection is built by hand in Egypt by craftsmen trained in European joinery and carving traditions. The carved acanthus frieze on this piece represents several days of individual hand work — roughed out with gouges, refined with chisels, and finished with fine rifflers to achieve the crispness of the original period carving. The chevron veneer is hand-laid in sequential leaves to maintain the symmetry of the book-matched pattern across both drawer fronts. This is furniture made slowly, with the understanding that the piece will outlast the room it enters.
The structural carcase is Romanian solid redwood at under 10% humidity. The decorative veneer on the drawer fronts is mahogany-toned wood applied in a chevron (herringbone) pattern. The hardware is cast antique bronze. All carving is performed by hand on the solid wood frame elements.
Yes. Brass & Wood offers customization of wood finish color, hardware finish, and veneer species. Please contact our team with your specifications before placing your order.
Minimal assembly is required — primarily securing the top panel and attaching the hardware on-site. No specialist tools are needed. Detailed instructions are included with every delivery.