
| Dimensions | Width 90 cm / Depth 50 cm / Height 85 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 |
There is a moment, when a piece of furniture stops being furniture and becomes an argument — a case made in wood, brass, and marble for a way of living. This Louis XV bombé commode makes that argument without raising its voice. Its dramatically swelling front and sides, swollen outward in the characteristic bombé silhouette of the French Rococo, fill a wall with visual energy while its gilded acanthus scrolls and floral marquetry panels quietly insist that someone, once, cared deeply about this object. The form was perfected in the Parisian ateliers of the 1740s and 1750s, when the commode replaced the heavy armoire as the defining storage piece in the chambre de parade — the reception bedroom of the French aristocracy.
The case is built from Romanian solid redwood (under 10% humidity), chosen for its dimensional stability and the warm, deep grain that accepts French polish to a mirror-like depth. The surface carries a dense programme of hand-cut floral marquetry: a central wreath cartouche on the front enclosing a rose cluster, framed by scrolling acanthus, ribbon bows, and twisting vine tendrils — all inlaid in contrasting fruitwood veneers that shift from amber to sienna against the mahogany ground. The gilt brass ormolu mounts — corner sabots on each cabriole foot, escutcheons at the drawer keyholes, and scrolled acanthus side mounts — are cast, chased, and applied by hand. The top is a shaped slab of grey-veined marble, its serpentine edge following the contour of the case below.
Three graduated drawers sit behind the bombé front, their hardware aligned precisely with the marquetry composition so that the decorative programme reads as a single continuous surface whether the drawers are open or closed. The cabriole legs, finishing in cast gilt-brass sabots, taper with the confident curve that distinguishes a French Rococo commode from any later revival. The side panels carry their own foliate marquetry sprays, ensuring the piece reads with equal richness from every angle in the room.
This commode is produced in Brass & Wood's Egyptian workshops by craftsmen who have trained in both traditional European marquetry techniques and classical French ébénisterie joinery. Each drawer is fitted individually, each brass mount cast from original pattern moulds, and the French polish built up in multiple hand-rubbed sessions until the mahogany ground achieves the depth of colour the original period pieces were known for. This is a faithful interpretation of French Rococo cabinetry, not a reproduction of a single original — it draws from the design vocabulary of the great Parisian maîtres-ébénistes to create a piece that can hold its own beside a genuine period commode.
The case is solid Romanian redwood with fruitwood marquetry veneers, finished in French polish. The mounts are hand-cast gilt brass. The top is natural grey-veined marble.
Minimal assembly only — the marble top is placed on arrival. No tools required. Full placement guidance is included.
Yes. Brass & Wood offers customization of marble colour, brass finish, and upholstered interior drawer linings. Contact our team to discuss your requirements before ordering.