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  2. Italian design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_design

    At first, in the early 1900s, Italian furniture designers struggled to create an equal balance between classical elegance and modern creativity, and initially, Italian interior design in the 1910s and 1920s was very similar to that of French art deco styles, using exotic materials and creating sumptuous furniture.

  3. Italian Renaissance interior design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_Renaissance...

    The sumptuous palazzi of noblemen and the middle-classes began to be decorated with tapestries, sculptures, frescos and lavish furniture. The most powerful Italian families of the time, such as the Florentine Medici, the Roman Farnese, the Milanese Sforza, the Italo-Spanish Borgia and the Urbinese Montefeltro had their palaces decorated with ...

  4. Eugenio Quarti - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugenio_Quarti

    Eugenio Quarti was born in Villa d'Almè, a small village in the province of Bergamo, from an artisan family of woodworkers. [1] In 1881, at the age of 14 years old he travelled to Paris, where he learned new techniques and broadened his horizons. [2]

  5. Italian Baroque interior design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Italian_Baroque_interior_design

    Italian Baroque interior design refers to high-style furnishing and interior decorating carried out in Italy during the Baroque period, which lasted from the early 17th to the mid-18th century. In provincial areas, Baroque forms such as the clothes-press or armadio continued to be used into the 19th century.

  6. Italian Neoclassical interior design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_Neoclassical...

    Italian Neoclassical furniture was loosely based on that of Louis XVI styles but was made unique by the usage of exaggeratedly shaped backs and necks which were recessed. [1] Armoires, or armadi made by the Venetians were more geometrically shaped than the Rococo ones, but were usually gilded in gold and silver, and had a few intricate details ...

  7. Category:Italian furniture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Italian_furniture

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  8. These Italian designers are using fruit peel to make furniture

    www.aol.com/italian-designers-using-fruit-peel...

    Krill’s designs include bookends, stools, clocks, bowls, and a lamp named Ohmie. “After three or four years, you have to change your furniture [anyway],” says Marco Di Maio, director of ...

  9. Cassina S.p.A. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cassina_S.p.A.

    Today Cassina is the exclusive worldwide licensee of the Le Corbusier designs. [ 12 ] The "Cassina I Maestri" collection was widened in 1968 with the acquisition from Bauhaus-Archiv in Berlin of reproduction rights to some of the Bauhaus objects and, in 1971, the designs of Gerrit Rietveld , Frank Lloyd Wright , and of Charles Rennie Mackintosh ...