Cabinet shipowner certainly La Rochelle or Rochefort-en-Mer, in solid mahogany and burr elm panels, decorated with a shell and finely carved foliage, opening to double doors, cornice cocked hat, opening a drawer in the bottom of the eighteenth century Louis XV.
This cabinet is in very good condition. Espagnolette locks are original, the ironwork working well. The panels have certainly been changed in the nineteenth. They are clad in mahogany. The funds that the rear amounts in pine.
A note: some wear and repairs wear see photos, the rear feet etet réentés.
WARNING: FOR DELIVERY CONTACT US WITH CITY AND COUNTRY OF DESTINATION. BE CAREFUL: PLEASE CONTACT US FOR THE DELIVERY PRICE.
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* THE PORT OF FURNITURE:
Term for solid wood furniture (mahogany, aramante, rosewood, satinwood) manufactured in the late seventeenth century in the port of the Atlantic coastline from Bordeaux to Boulogne.
Tree trunks used on seagoing vessels returning from the "Isles" Arimage as wood or as return freight were recovered by carpenters and transformed into luxury furniture custom rich owners, merchants and notables of prosperous cities such as Bordeaux, La Rochelle, Nantes and Saint-Malo. These furniture, built with great care and often adorned with fine sculptures, had the advantage, thanks to their hardness, to escape the wood pests.
Locks entries and pull handles are made ??of copper; they brighten the dark wood and are resistant to salty air. The port of Bordeaux furniture, mostly Cuban mahogany or Santo Domingo, are characterized by quite heavy with sharp curves shapes. The Nantes orders are usually front crossbow between uprights terminated with little feet snail. Falkland cabinets are decorated octagonal motifs in high relief. Some cabinets North Finistère include lemon framed panels of aramante. Shipping furniture, sought for the beauty of their wood and their flawless finish, have not been the subject of copies, for lack of sufficient quality wood species to reproduce.