Pair of Early 19th Century French Charles X Oval Leaded Mirrors













Pair of Early 19th Century French Charles X Oval Leaded Mirrors
Paris, just after empire. The heavy drama of Napoleon gives way to something lighter—more romantic, more refined. During the brief Charles X period (1824–1830), French designers traded martial grandeur for elegance, favoring graceful lines, jewel-like ornament, and a quiet sense of luxury.
These rare oval mirrors capture that moment perfectly. Each frame is composed of delicately leaded glass panels that shimmer with subtle geometry, their intersections punctuated by small faceted yellow jewels that catch and refract the light like tiny sparks. The effect is both architectural and decorative—part mirror, part luminous ornament.
Hung on the wall, they behave less like ordinary looking glasses and more like fragments of a chandelier translated into architecture. Light dances across the leaded pattern, the jeweled details flickering gently as the room shifts around them.
The result is unmistakably French: romantic, slightly decadent, and exquisitely crafted. Rare survivals from a fleeting design moment—mirrors that reflect not just a room, but a period of style.
EACH: 16.5 in. W x 1 in. D x 25 in. H