
| Dimensions | Width 80 cm / Depth 46 cm / Height 200 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 vitrine in a room and something shifts — the eye travels upward along the flowing cabriole legs, lingers at the gilt bronze acanthus scrolls flanking the glazed door, then rises to the rocaille cartouche crest. It is a piece that announces itself without demanding attention. Faithfully reproduced in the tradition of Second Empire Parisian salon furniture, this single-door vitrine draws from the Napoleon III Rococo Revival — the moment in the 1850s and 1860s when French craftsmen revisited the curves and ornament of the Louis XV era and elevated them with heavier ormolu, richer upholstery, and a theatrical confidence that suited the grand interiors of Haussmann's Paris.
The case is built from Romanian solid redwood with a moisture content below 10%, selected for dimensional stability and the rich grain that responds so well to French polishing. The warm mahogany tone is achieved through a multi-layer French polish process — hand-applied and hand-rubbed to a depth that reads as surface warmth rather than surface shine. The gilt bronze ormolu mounts — the corner acanthus appliqués, the floral spray at the door's center rail, the running egg-and-dart frieze along the cornice, and the leaf-capped cabriole foot mounts — are cast and finished by hand, each one anchored to the frame individually. The glass shelves rest on adjustable brass supports, allowing the interior to be reconfigured around whatever the collector chooses to display.
The capitonné back panel — button-tufted in a muted champagne fabric — transforms the interior into a stage. Whatever is placed inside is set against a softly textured ground that both protects delicate objects and frames them with the quiet luxury of a jeweler's case. The single glazed door is framed in gilt bronze and secured with a lock, keeping contents secure without interrupting the visual flow. Three glass shelves divide the interior into generous display zones. The pronounced cabriole legs, each capped with gilt bronze acanthus sabots, carry the visual weight of the piece with characteristic Rococo lightness.
Every vitrine bearing the Brass & Wood name is built by hand in Egypt by craftsmen trained in classical European cabinet-making techniques. The joinery is mortise-and-tenon, the gilding on the bronze mounts is applied by hand, and the French polish is rubbed through multiple sessions to achieve the warmth visible in the grain. This is not furniture assembled from components — it is furniture made the way it was always meant to be made: slowly, by skilled hands, with attention to how the finished piece will hold light across the room.
The frame is Romanian solid redwood finished in French polish with a mahogany tone. The decorative mounts are gilt brass (ormolu-style), and the shelves and door panel are clear glass. The interior back is upholstered in button-tufted champagne fabric.
Minimal assembly is required — primarily attaching the legs and setting the glass shelves in place. Full instructions are included, and the process requires no specialist tools.
Yes. Brass & Wood offers customization on wood finish tone, brass finish color, upholstery fabric color, and shelf configuration. Contact us before ordering to discuss your requirements.