
| Dimensions | Width 56 cm / Depth 40 cm / Height 105 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 beside a bed or against a salon wall and the room shifts — the hand-painted figure of an 18th-century noblewoman, rendered across four drawer fronts in soft blues and warm ochres, commands attention the way a framed oil painting does. The bombé silhouette swells outward with characteristic Second Empire confidence, its serpentine curves catching the light on a lacquered mahogany ground. This is a piece that refuses to be background furniture.
Faithfully reproduced in the tradition of Napoleon III Rococo Revival cabinetmaking — the defining era of mid-19th century French decorative excess — this commode is built from Romanian solid redwood (under 10% humidity) finished in a deep, high-gloss mahogany lacquer. The drawer fronts have been individually hand-painted by skilled artisans: a full-length portrait of a Gainsborough-era lady on the front, a luminous landscape scene in autumnal golds on the side panel. Cast gilt brass mounts — scrolled foliate handles, corner espagnolettes, and a shaped apron mount at the base — complete the Second Empire vocabulary. The top is a genuine shaped pink marble slab, cut and fitted to follow the bombé contour of the case below.
The commode presents four generous drawers, each fitted with a cast gilt-brass pull in a scrolling acanthus form. The cabriole legs terminate in gilt sabots, adding the final Rococo flourish. The marble top, shaped to an octagonal profile at the corners, rests securely in a fitted frame — its rose-veined surface contrasting warmly with the amber-mahogany below. Dimensions are available on request; this piece is also available for customization in alternative marble colors and brass finishes.
Every commode bearing the Brass & Wood name is built and finished by hand in Egypt, drawing on decades of accumulated craft knowledge in classical European furniture reproduction. The hand-painting technique — applied in layers over the lacquered ground — is a direct inheritance of the decorative painting tradition that flourished in Second Empire France. This is not a transfer or a print: each stroke is applied by hand, making every piece genuinely individual.
The case is built from Romanian solid redwood finished in high-gloss mahogany lacquer. The decorative mounts are cast gilt brass. The top is a shaped pink marble slab. All hand-painting is applied directly to the lacquered wood surface.
Minimal assembly is required — typically attaching the marble top and fitting the drawer pulls, which can be completed without specialist tools.
Yes. Brass & Wood offers customization in marble color, brass finish tone, and painted panel subject. Contact our team to discuss your requirements before placing your order.