Im clueless with this mirror & console

Discussion in 'Furniture' started by Hallingdalen, Jan 22, 2026 at 6:35 AM.

  1. Hallingdalen

    Hallingdalen Active Member

    From what I can see, it’s a fairly light construction: softwood core with veneered surfaces, traditional joinery (mortise & tenon, glue blocks under the top), and a very plain, unfinished back. The table top looks to be set to allow for wood movement rather than screwed down.

    The turned elements (legs and finials) are quite restrained, and the carved crest is shallow and symmetrical – more about shape than heavy ornament. There’s also some contrasting dark moulding framing the mirror, which feels intentional rather than decorative for its own sake.

    Any thoughts? IMG_5404 (1).jpg IMG_5407.jpg IMG_5408.jpg IMG_5409.jpg IMG_5388.jpg IMG_5385.jpg IMG_5405.jpg IMG_5382.jpg
     
    Roaring20s likes this.
  2. Hallingdalen

    Hallingdalen Active Member

    It gives me "The eye of Sauron" vibes
     
    Any Jewelry and Marote like this.
  3. verybrad

    verybrad Well-Known Member

    Some of the details are renaissance revival. However I get the feeling that they are older than everything else and tacked on to a newer piece. Cabinet maker was skilled. That veneer work is not done by just anyone.
     
    komokwa and Hallingdalen like this.
  4. Hallingdalen

    Hallingdalen Active Member

    I can see how some of the motifs could read as Renaissance-derived in isolation.

    What makes me hesitate on a revival interpretation is that the ornament feels structurally and proportionally integrated rather than applied or quote-like. To my eye it comes across more as classical vocabulary used in a restrained way, rather than a later historicist reference.

    Fully agree on the skill level though – the veneer work especially feels very confident.

    Any thoughts on dating the piece based on construction etc.,? Mirrors are not something I'm very comfortable with.
     
  5. Hallingdalen

    Hallingdalen Active Member

    Quick follow-up after looking closer at construction rather than style:

    Early 1800s doesn’t really fit. The veneer work is too deliberate (bookmatched flame/rot veneer used as a visual feature), the black ebonised lines are very systematic, and the overall build feels more like an established workshop than early Empire handwork.

    That said, mid-19th century isn’t off the table. I’d place it late 1850s at the very earliest, but more comfortably around 1860–80 based on materials, joinery and overall production logic. The old silvered mirror and solid secondary woods are also pointing pre 1900?
     
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