Double Body Dresser Cherry Oak Mahogany Italy 19th Century

Code: ANTLIB0000200

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Double Body Dresser Cherry Oak Mahogany Italy 19th Century

Code: ANTLIB0000200

not available
Add to cart
SAFE PAYMENTS
pagamenti sicuri
Request information
Book a date
Go to noleggio.dimanoinmano.it to rent the product
Rent

Double Body Dresser Cherry Oak Mahogany Italy 19th Century

Features

Age:  19th Century / 1801 - 1900

Origin:  Italy

Main essence:  Cherry Mahogany Sessile Oak

Description

Double body dresser, base made of cherry and oak with a pair of doors and drawers. Mahogany upper case with a pair of doors with glass. Base and upper case probably joined at a later time. Manufactured in Italy, first half of the 19th century.

Product Condition:
The cabinet shows signs of wear due to age. Any damage or loss is displayed as completely as possible in the pictures. It may require restoration and recovery of french polish.

Dimensions (cm):
Height: 223
Width: 129
Depth: 41

Additional Information

Age: 19th Century / 1801 - 1900

19th Century / 1801 - 1900

Main essence:

Cherry

Obtained from prunus cerasus , a plant of oriental origin, it is a hard wood with a light and delicate color, with a reddish vein. Due to its diffusion and availability it was used in Europe in popular furniture. In cabinet making, in the seventeenth century, it was widely used in France and England for inlay work. In Italy it was very successful in Lucca. It was also very popular in the United States for the manufacture, from the late 1600s, of commonly used furniture.
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Mahogany

It is one of the most precious and sought-after woods in cabinet making. It was discovered in Central America around 1600 and began to be imported to England in the 1700s. Much appreciated for its hardness and indestructibility, it became widespread following the blocking of walnut exports from France in 1720 and the consequent elimination of English import duties on mahogany from the colonies in America and India. The most valuable version comes from Cuba, but it became very expensive. At the end of the 18th century it began to be used also in France in Louis XVI, Directory and Empire furniture, its diffusion declined starting from when Napoleon, in 1810, forbade its import. It was generally used in the manufacture of elegant furniture, due to its characteristics and beautiful grain.

Sessile Oak

Under the name of oak or oak various types of woods derived from plants of the genus quercus are grouped. They are always resistant, hard and compact woods. Oak is lighter than oak, both are used for more rustic furniture or for the interiors of French and English antique furniture. In other processes it was gradually replaced by the advent of exotic woods considered more valuable since the 18th century.
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