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The Art of Miniature Model Making: From Imagination to Reality
Miniature model-making is an essential practice in numerous creative industries, transforming abstract ideas into concrete, scaled-down designs. Whether for architecture, film production, or hobby modeling, miniature models serve as a powerful tool to visualize, refine, and test concepts before committing to full-scale projects. In this blog, we dive into the craftsmanship behind miniature model transformation, exploring traditional techniques alongside modern innovations like 3D printing and laser cutting. Discover how these miniature works of art bridge the gap between ideas and execution, ensuring precision and clarity in the design process. Ready to learn more? Click the link and read the full blog.
by Ajuro
Scene at the Roman Baths Series: 2
Golden Gate Park
Lovers Series: 1
Carlo Bugatti - Art Nouveau Master Cabinetmaker
The work of Carlo Bugatti and his important workshop marks in Italy the transition from the furniture culture of the late nineteenth century to the modern concept of design. This new concept finds in Bugatti's activity one of the most skilled interpreters, able to anticipate, in certain experiments of the beginning of the century, solutions of great modernity, which will enter current production only in the mid-twentieth century.
His work included unique and very expensive pieces of furniture for which precious woods are used as well as ivory, copper, mother of pearl, camel and fallow deer skin. Many of his most appreciated creations that harmonize well with the inclinations of exotic-Moorish taste typical of the time.
Carlo Bugatti | ‘Bench’, 1900
Art nouveau furniture by Carlo Bugatti (Italian, 1856-1840).
Pictures from the online collections of the Musée d’Orsay, the Cleveland Museum of Art and the Art Institute of Chicago.
Carlo Bugatti
Desk and chair
circa 1910
140125. Integration.