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Vitrines

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Vitrines For Sale
Style: Victorian
Style: Regency
A Pair of Regency Japanned Display Cabinets Provenance: Doris Duke Collection
Located in Sheffield, MA
A Pair of Regency Cream, Black and Gilt-Japanned Display Cabinets Late 18th Century/Early 19th Century Provenace; Doris Duke Collection Each wi...
Category

Late 18th Century English Regency Antique Vitrines

Materials

Wood

Pair Impressive Knife Urns, Regency Style Custom Bench Made Carved Finials
Located in West Palm Beach, FL
A fine and impressive pair of knife urns by the custom cabinet maker W.K. Cowan of Chicago. Hand crafted to his exacting standards this pair feature...
Category

Early 1900s American Regency Antique Vitrines

Materials

Wood

Antique Victorian Slim Bookcase
Located in London, GB
A very unusual and useful original antique Victorian bookcase. This was made in England, it dates from the 1860-80’s. It has very slim design and takes up very little floor space, w...
Category

1860s British Victorian Antique Vitrines

Materials

Glass, Wood

Rare Unique Walnut Luigi Frullini Attributed Vitrine Sideboard Winged Griffins
By Luigi Frullini
Located in Swedesboro, NJ
The masters of Europe who carved furniture all agreed that one of the best, if not THE best carvers was the great Luigi Frullini of Italy who may have d...
Category

1870s Italian High Victorian Antique Vitrines

Materials

Glass, Walnut

19th Century British Oak Vitrine
Located in High Point, NC
This vintage oak vitrine makes a charming country accent. Built in Great Britain in the 19th century, the ridges of the paneling evokes the bygone flurry of washboards on laundry day...
Category

19th Century British Victorian Antique Vitrines

Materials

Glass, Oak

Antique and Vintage Vitrines

Why not give your precious collectibles the case pieces they deserve? Antique and vintage vitrines can be used to safely store and display your most treasured objects.

While they were initially used to display relics in churches or to preserve specimens for scientific observation, vitrines are best known for their place in retail spaces and museums. The name for these glass display cases comes from the Latin word “vitrum,” meaning glass, as well as the Old French word “vitre,” which also refers to glass. Instead of simply showcasing collector’s items on shelves, you can bestow extra importance on them by displaying them in a vitrine for passers-by to observe and admire.

Not all vitrines are created equal. Over time, furniture makers have explored different shapes and sizes for vitrines. A display case you’ll find in a retail store will likely look drastically different from what you’ll see in a museum or art gallery. A vitrine in a shop is likely there to best market specific wares to the general public, while in museums there is usually a range of different vitrines intended to house and protect single objects or to display a grouping of artifacts.

Most of us have an antique, new or vintage case piece in our home. Though the terms “case pieces” and “case goods” may cause even the most decor-obsessed to stumble, these furnishings have been a vital part of the home for centuries. Any furnishing that is unupholstered and has some semblance of a storage component — cabinets, dressers, buffets — may be properly termed a case piece.

Mirror-backed vitrines, which refer to cases that usually feature shelved and mirrored interiors, are a most appropriate home for your jewelry or decorative objects. Adding such items to a vitrine already suggests that there is an irreplaceable preciousness to the case’s contents, and the mirrors will emphasize as much as well as refract more light to render the display eye-catching.

On 1stDibs, find a wide variety of antique and vintage vitrines to protect and preserve your most prized items. The collection of mid-century modern vitrines and Art Deco vitrines is mostly inclusive of those built with a wooden frame, but there are many other types to choose from as well. It’s time to give your collectibles a good home!

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