102745216

Vendu
Tabouret - Chêne - Un tabouret de siège sculpté à la main.
Offre finale
€ 36
Il y a 1 semaine

Tabouret - Chêne - Un tabouret de siège sculpté à la main.

    •    Authentic 19th-century cobbler’s work stool with original three-leg construction     •    Rich, untouched patina documenting genuine artisan use     •    Rare surviving example of rural European shoemaking craftsmanship     •    Ideal for collectors, interior decorators, and lovers of primitive folk furniture     •    Highly decorative, sculptural, and suitable for rustic, wabi-sabi, farmhouse or minimal interiors ⸻ 19th-Century Traditional Shoemaker’s Three-Legged Work Stool — A Rare Survivor of European Craft Heritage This authentic 19th-century shoemaker’s work stool represents one of the most fundamental tools of the traditional cobbler’s trade. Created in an era when every household relied on handmade footwear, this low, three-legged bench was an essential workshop platform, supporting the artisan through long hours of stitching, shaping, repairing, and assembling leather goods. Its asymmetrical slab top, hand-hewn surface, and tool-worn edges reflect a lifetime of practical use, offering the kind of genuine character that only generations of manual labor can impart. The solid timbers, original leg joints, and irregular contours speak to an age before industrial mass production, when joinery, durability, and material integrity defined the standards of everyday craftsmanship. The stool’s weathered patina displays deep traces of historical handling. Subtle abrasions, natural oxidation, and darkened grain patterns give the piece a rich visual depth, making it both a documentary artifact and a sculptural decorative accent. The compact form and slightly angled support legs create excellent stability, a necessity on the uneven floors of rural workshops. Its format made it easy for the shoemaker to lean forward while working with awls, lasts, needles, tacks, and wooden molds. The shallow cavities, small socket marks, and embedded details on the surface also hint at its practical function as a platform for tools, fittings, threads, nails, leather scraps, and hand-forged accessories. Today, this stool has exceptional value for interior design and collecting. It blends effortlessly with rustic, vintage, Nordic, farmhouse, country, industrial, loft, Japanese, organic, and wabi-sabi aesthetics. Its sculptural simplicity makes it suitable as a side display, plant stand, low table, art base, photographic prop, gallery accent, or entryway feature. The tactile texture and timeworn imperfections add authenticity to curated spaces, giving a room the warm individuality of reclaimed wood, antique folk furniture, primitive craft, and rural workshop heritage. Whether placed in a modern minimalist apartment or a historic home, the stool becomes an immediate conversation piece, offering a sense of continuity with traditional European artisan culture. Because original cobbler stools of this age rarely survive intact, especially with their three-leg design preserved, this example represents a desirable collector’s item. Its functional sculpture quality, raw material presence, and honest workmanship provide a tangible connection to a world of manual skill, local production, and pre-industrial ingenuity. For anyone seeking an object with genuine provenance, decorative versatility, and strong aesthetic appeal, this 19th-century cobbler’s stool is an exceptional and highly decorative find, ready to enhance any collection of antiques, ethnographic pieces, vernacular furniture, or early workshop implements.

102745216

Vendu
Tabouret - Chêne - Un tabouret de siège sculpté à la main.

Tabouret - Chêne - Un tabouret de siège sculpté à la main.


    •    Authentic 19th-century cobbler’s work stool with original three-leg construction
    •    Rich, untouched patina documenting genuine artisan use
    •    Rare surviving example of rural European shoemaking craftsmanship
    •    Ideal for collectors, interior decorators, and lovers of primitive folk furniture
    •    Highly decorative, sculptural, and suitable for rustic, wabi-sabi, farmhouse or minimal interiors



19th-Century Traditional Shoemaker’s Three-Legged Work Stool — A Rare Survivor of European Craft Heritage

This authentic 19th-century shoemaker’s work stool represents one of the most fundamental tools of the traditional cobbler’s trade. Created in an era when every household relied on handmade footwear, this low, three-legged bench was an essential workshop platform, supporting the artisan through long hours of stitching, shaping, repairing, and assembling leather goods. Its asymmetrical slab top, hand-hewn surface, and tool-worn edges reflect a lifetime of practical use, offering the kind of genuine character that only generations of manual labor can impart. The solid timbers, original leg joints, and irregular contours speak to an age before industrial mass production, when joinery, durability, and material integrity defined the standards of everyday craftsmanship.

The stool’s weathered patina displays deep traces of historical handling. Subtle abrasions, natural oxidation, and darkened grain patterns give the piece a rich visual depth, making it both a documentary artifact and a sculptural decorative accent. The compact form and slightly angled support legs create excellent stability, a necessity on the uneven floors of rural workshops. Its format made it easy for the shoemaker to lean forward while working with awls, lasts, needles, tacks, and wooden molds. The shallow cavities, small socket marks, and embedded details on the surface also hint at its practical function as a platform for tools, fittings, threads, nails, leather scraps, and hand-forged accessories.

Today, this stool has exceptional value for interior design and collecting. It blends effortlessly with rustic, vintage, Nordic, farmhouse, country, industrial, loft, Japanese, organic, and wabi-sabi aesthetics. Its sculptural simplicity makes it suitable as a side display, plant stand, low table, art base, photographic prop, gallery accent, or entryway feature. The tactile texture and timeworn imperfections add authenticity to curated spaces, giving a room the warm individuality of reclaimed wood, antique folk furniture, primitive craft, and rural workshop heritage. Whether placed in a modern minimalist apartment or a historic home, the stool becomes an immediate conversation piece, offering a sense of continuity with traditional European artisan culture.

Because original cobbler stools of this age rarely survive intact, especially with their three-leg design preserved, this example represents a desirable collector’s item. Its functional sculpture quality, raw material presence, and honest workmanship provide a tangible connection to a world of manual skill, local production, and pre-industrial ingenuity. For anyone seeking an object with genuine provenance, decorative versatility, and strong aesthetic appeal, this 19th-century cobbler’s stool is an exceptional and highly decorative find, ready to enhance any collection of antiques, ethnographic pieces, vernacular furniture, or early workshop implements.

Offre finale
€ 36
Francisco Álvarez
Expert
Estimation  € 230 - € 270

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