Louis Xv Trolley
Antique Late 19th Century French Louis XV Carts and Bar Carts
Brass, Bronze
Vintage 1930s Italian Louis XV Carts and Bar Carts
Glass, Mirror, Wood, Oak
Antique Early 1900s French Louis XV Carts and Bar Carts
Oak
20th Century French Louis XV Coffee and Cocktail Tables
Carrara Marble, Ormolu
Recent Sales
20th Century North American Louis XV Carts and Bar Carts
Walnut
Antique 18th Century French Louis XV Carts and Bar Carts
Leather, Fabric, Straw, Walnut
Early 20th Century French Louis XV Carts and Bar Carts
Bronze
Mid-20th Century Italian Louis XV Carts and Bar Carts
Brass
Antique 19th Century French Carts and Bar Carts
Antique 19th Century French Serving Tables
Metal
Early 2000s French Louis XV Card Tables and Tea Tables
Walnut, Cane, Glass
Mid-20th Century Italian Louis XV Serving Tables
Walnut
Vintage 1930s French Louis XV Side Tables
Wood
20th Century Louis XV Carts and Bar Carts
Marble, Brass
Vintage 1950s Louis XV Carts and Bar Carts
Brass
Early 20th Century European Louis XV Carts and Bar Carts
Brass
Vintage 1960s Unknown Rococo Carts and Bar Carts
Glass, Mirror, Giltwood
Vintage 1970s Louis XV Card Tables and Tea Tables
Walnut
Antique Late 19th Century French Louis XV Carts and Bar Carts
Marble, Silver Plate, Brass
Vintage 1940s French Serving Tables
Brass
Vintage 1940s French Louis XV Carts and Bar Carts
Metal
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Louis Xv Trolley For Sale on 1stDibs
How Much is a Louis Xv Trolley?
A Close Look at Louis-xv Furniture
The style of 18th-century French furniture was guided by the court. When Louis XV, who reigned from 1715–74, focused royal life on the smaller salons of Versailles rather than its grand chambers, it transformed the aesthetics away from the imposing and angular furniture that characterized the style of Louis XIV. A broader focus on comfort and more delicate forms define antique Louis XV furniture, with nature-inspired carvings, wood inlays, curved cabriole legs, asymmetrical shapes and rounded oval seat backs. The furnishings changed throughout the king’s life, as he ascended to the throne as a child and then grew to establish his own tastes.
Pieces like the bergère, an upholstered armchair with a wide cushion that fit the flowing dresses in fashion at the time, reflected this more informal court. Introduced at the start of Louis XV’s reign, bergère chairs in this style were deeper and broader than other chairs of the period.
Louis XV tapestries and carpets tended to be floral and colorful, and design elements were borrowed from Asia. Dutch-born cabinetmaker Bernard van Risenburgh brought lacquer techniques influenced by Japan and China into his luxuriously made furniture. Along with its fine details, the furniture of the era also featured new innovations including mechanical devices. Jean François Oeben, a royal cabinetmaker, created such intricate pieces as a mechanical table for Madame de Pompadour, Louis XV’s mistress. It involved a sliding top and a writing surface that extended from its marquetry panels.
During the later years of Louis XV’s reign, there was a shift from the ostentatious rocaille style, part of the exuberantly decorative Rococo movement in Europe for which designers such as Nicolas Pineau and Juste-Aurèle Meissonier are known. The style under Louis XVI would return to boxier forms, but with a neoclassical touch inspired by the ancient world.
Find antique Louis XV bedroom furniture, seating, tables and decorative objects on 1stDibs.
Finding the Right Bar-carts for You
Forever a sleek and elegant furnishing that evokes luxury and sophistication, a vintage bar cart will prove both functional and fabulous in your living room.
Bar carts as we know them were originally conceived as tea trolleys — a modest-sized table on wheels, sometimes featuring both an upper and lower shelf — to help facilitate tea service during the Victorian era in England. Modern bar carts weren’t really a common fixture in American interiors until after the end of Prohibition in the 1930s, when they were rolled onto the sets of Hollywood films. There, they suggested wealth and status in the dining rooms of affluent characters.
As tough as the 1930s had been on the average working American, the postwar era yielded economic stability and growth in homeownership. Increasingly, bar carts designed by the likes of Edward Wormley and other furniture makers became an integral part of sunken living rooms across the United States in the 1950s.
Bar carts were a must-have addition to the sensuous and sleek low-profile furnishings that we now call mid-century modern, each outfitted with the finest spirits and savory snacks that people had to offer. And partially owing to critical darlings like Mad Men, vintage cocktail carts have since seen a resurgence and have even become a selling point in restaurants.
Bar carts not only boast tremendous utilitarian value but also introduce a fun, nostalgic dynamic to the layout of your space, be it in the bar area or elsewhere. In addition to showcasing your favorite bottles of rye and local small-batch gin — or juices and mocktail ingredients — there is an undeniable allure to stacking statement glassware, vintage martini cocktail shakers and Art Deco decanter sets atop your fully stocked mid-century modern bar cart. And one size or style doesn’t fit all — an evolution of cocktail cart design throughout history has yielded all manner of metal bar carts, rattan carts and more.
We invite you to add a few more dashes of class to cocktail hour — peruse the vast collection of antique and vintage carts and bar carts on 1stDibs today.