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Parchment Wine Bucket

Recent Sales

Aldo Tura Emerald Green Parchment Beverage Cooler / Ice Bucket
By Aldo Tura
Located in North Hollywood, CA
Aldo Tura emerald green parchment beverage cooler / ice bucket
Category

Late 20th Century Italian Hollywood Regency Wine Coolers

Materials

Brass

Aldo Tura, Brass and red Parchment cooler / Ice bucket, Italy, 1960s
By Aldo Tura
Located in Firenze, IT
Aldo Tura, Brass and red Parchment cooler / Icebucket Italy 1960s H 23 cm diam. 22 cm
Category

Vintage 1960s Italian Mid-Century Modern Wine Coolers

Materials

Metal, Brass

Aldo Tura Ice Bucket, Goat Skin Parchment, Italy, circa 1950
By Aldo Tura
Located in New York, NY
Decorative ice bucket by Aldo Tura, Italy, circa 1950. The goat skin parchment and the brass
Category

Vintage 1950s Italian Mid-Century Modern Wine Coolers

Materials

Brass

Aldo Tura Huge Cream Goatskin Champagne Cooler, Italy, 1960s
By Aldo Tura
Located in Munich, DE
Huge Aldo Tura cream oval parchment champagne, wine cooler or ice bucket with a brass inlay. This
Category

Vintage 1960s Italian Hollywood Regency Barware

Materials

Brass

Aldo Tura Huge Green Goatskin Champagne Cooler Italy 1960s
By Aldo Tura
Located in Munich, DE
Huge Aldo Tura green parchment champagne, wine cooler or ice bucket with a brass inlay. This
Category

Vintage 1960s Italian Hollywood Regency Barware

Materials

Brass

Rare Brown Parchment Ice Bucket or Wine Cooler by Aldo Tura, Italy, 1970
By Aldo Tura
Located in Madrid, ES
A rare brown parchment ice bucket or wine cooler by Aldo Tura, Italy, 1970.
Category

Vintage 1970s Italian Wine Coolers

Green parchment Aldo Tura ice bucket with bronze detailing
Located in Dallas, TX
Green parchment Aldo Tura ice bucket with bronze detailing.
Category

Vintage 1960s Italian Wine Coolers

Materials

Bronze

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Aldo Tura for sale on 1stDibs

One of the most enigmatic and polarizing figures to emerge in Italian design, Aldo Tura is an outlier in the world of mid-century furniture. The designer’s glamorous bar carts, coffee tables, cabinets and more resist categorization and draw inspiration from Art Deco, Art Nouveau, Baroque, Surrealist and modernist styles.

Tura moved through distinct phases in his career in terms of aesthetics, influences and finishes, rendering his life’s work exciting and diverse. Despite these phases, he held a singular devotion to one material: lacquered goatskin. Tura established a furniture production house in 1939 in Lombardy, and some of his early work focused on tables, decorative lamps and more. He later expanded to bar furnishings like rolling carts, cabinets and complementary barware accessories like ice buckets and cocktail shakers. The eccentric, gleaming and luxe surface of lacquered goatskin was a constant, along with eggshell, parchment and leather.

By the 1950s, Tura had begun to use hand-painted figural panels on the surface of cabinets, serveware (such as carafes) and other pieces. He even replicated famous works by artists like Monet and Bruegel the Elder and art from the Middle Ages, sometimes playfully embedding the paintings on cabinets shaped like oversize books. Even though he had a favored color palette of rich chocolate browns and deep emeralds, his style remained consistently hard to define.

Tura was unlike most of his Italian contemporaries but held a similar reverence for the nation’s traditional craftsmanship and artisanal techniques. He never followed the growing trend of mass-produced, industrial furniture and stuck to creating small, meticulously handcrafted collections. This principled choice means that today, a Tura piece is a rare and highly coveted collectible. The Tura firm continues to operate in Brianza, promoting Italian craftsmanship and the eclectic materials embraced by their namesake designer.

Find authentic vintage Aldo Tura furniture today on 1stDibs.

Finding the Right Dining-entertaining for You

Your dining room table is a place where stories are shared and personalities shine — why not treat yourself and your guests to the finest antique and vintage glass, silver, ceramics and serveware for your meals?

Just like the people who sit around your table, your serveware has its own stories and will help you create new memories with your friends and loved ones. From ceramic pottery to glass vases, set your table with serving pieces that add even more personality, color and texture to your dining experience.

Invite serveware from around the world to join your table settings. For special occasions, dress up your plates with a striking Imari charger from 19th-century Japan or incorporate Richard Ginori’s Italian porcelain plates into your dining experience. Celebrate the English ritual of afternoon tea with a Japanese tea set and an antique Victorian kettle. No matter how big or small your dining area is, there is room for the stories of many cultures and varied histories, and there are plenty of ways to add pizzazz to your meals.

Add different textures and colors to your table with dinner plates and pitchers of ceramic and silver or a porcelain lidded tureen, a serving dish with side handles that is often used for soups. Although porcelain and ceramic are both made in a kiln, porcelain is made with more refined clay and is more durable than ceramic because it is denser. The latter is ideal for statement pieces — your tall mid-century modern ceramic vase is a guaranteed conversation starter. And while your earthenware or stoneware is maybe better suited to everyday lunches as opposed to the fine bone china you’ve reserved for a holiday meal, handcrafted studio pottery coffee mugs can still be a rich expression of your personal style.

“My motto is ‘Have fun with it,’” says author and celebrated hostess Stephanie Booth Shafran. “It’s yin and yang, high and low, Crate & Barrel with Christofle silver. I like to mix it up — sometimes in the dining room, sometimes on the kitchen banquette, sometimes in the loggia. It transports your guests and makes them feel more comfortable and relaxed.”

Introduce elegance at supper with silver, such as a platter from celebrated Massachusetts silversmith manufacturer Reed and Barton or a regal copper-finish flatware set designed by International Silver Company, another New England company that was incorporated in Meriden, Connecticut, in 1898. By then, Meriden had already earned the nickname “Silver City” for its position as a major hub of silver manufacturing.

At the bar, try a vintage wine cooler to keep bottles cool before serving or an Art Deco decanter and whiskey set for after-dinner drinks — there are many possibilities and no wrong answers for tableware, barware and serveware. Explore an expansive collection of antique and vintage glass, ceramics, silver and serveware today on 1stDibs.