Umbertine dressing table with open finish supported by shelf feet, on the front it has two doors decorated with characteristic frames, surmounted by drawer and opening top, concealing compartment with mirror and covered in marble, with sink and soap holder in ceramic painted with blue phytomorphic motifs . In walnut and walnut burl.
Product Condition: Product that due to age and wear requires restoration and resumption of polishing.
The name of this style should be the ruler of the time, Umberto I appointed King of the Kingdom of Italy on January 9, 1878 and killed on 9 July 1900. The late nineteenth-century style is typically Italian and belongs to that period of Eclectic, that marked the second half of'800, it lasted a little less than twenty years the Umbertine-style spread in the 1880s and finished to the 1895 when it was substituted by a new style called art nouveau and is universally known as the Art-Nouveau, followed by Art-Deco. In this style, mostly eclectic and monumental, were repurposed in the mobile, from the bedside to the large closet or dresser, Gothic and Baroque elements belonging originally to the Renaissance, but also adorned with masks of large dimensions, frames and decorations.