
| Dimensions | Width 120 cm / Depth 49 cm / Height 87 cm |
|---|---|
| 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 wall and it immediately reorganizes the room around itself. The bombé silhouette — that outward swell from top rail to cabriole foot — is one of the most structurally demanding forms in the entire repertoire of European furniture, and the Louis XV ébénistes who originated it knew exactly what they were doing: creating a piece that appears to breathe. Faithfully reproduced in the tradition of the great French commode-makers of the 1730–1770 period, this two-drawer chest draws from the same design vocabulary that furnished the private apartments of Versailles.
The carcass is built from Romanian solid redwood dried to below 10% humidity — a critical specification that prevents the warping and joint failure that plague lesser reproductions. Over this stable foundation, the craftsmen have laid a herringbone parquetry veneer in warm mahogany tones, the chevron pattern radiating from each drawer face with the precision that only hand-cut veneering achieves. The top is a slab of genuine veined breche marble — its rich brown and ivory striations providing visual weight that anchors the gilded bronze below. Every ormolu mount is cast and hand-chased: the corner espagnolettes (female-bust terminals rendered in extraordinary detail), the scrolling foliate drawer-pull backplates, the acanthus-wrapped leg sabots, and the delicate laurel-branch mounts that frame each drawer field. The cabriole legs, slender at the ankle and broad at the knee, are finished in bright gold ormolu sabots that lift the piece visually off the floor.
Two full-width drawers provide generous storage while maintaining the sweeping uninterrupted curve of the bombé profile. The front elevation shows the characteristic Louis XV asymmetric apron — a shaped serpentine rail that flows continuously from leg to leg without interruption. The side panels, visible in the detail photographs, continue the herringbone parquetry and are framed by a single ormolu laurel-branch mount running vertically — a refinement that proves this reproduction was studied, not approximated. The breche marble top overhangs the case on all four sides, as period examples required, giving the top a monumental presence that balances the richness of the bronze below.
Every commode bearing the Brass & Wood mark is produced in our Cairo workshop by craftsmen trained in both European period joinery and traditional Egyptian wood-carving. The ormolu mounts are cast in brass, hand-filed, and gold-plated to achieve the warm bright gold tone that characterizes authentic Louis XV bronzes. The parquetry veneer is cut and laid by hand, and the French-polish finish is built up in multiple sessions to achieve its deep, reflective clarity. This is the kind of piece that improves with attention — the more closely you look, the more craft you find.
The carcass is Romanian solid redwood (below 10% humidity). The decorative veneer is hand-laid mahogany parquetry. The top is genuine veined breche marble. All mounts are cast brass with a bright gold plate finish.
Minimal assembly is required — primarily attaching the marble top, which is shipped separately for protection. All other components arrive pre-assembled.
Yes. Brass & Wood offers customization of marble color, brass finish (gold, antique gold, or silver), veneer tone, and overall dimensions. Contact our team to discuss your requirements before ordering.