• All prices are in US dollars • Enjoy FREE SHIPPING to USA, Canada & Mexico! •

Spanish Colonial Trestle Table
Spanish Colonial Trestle Table
Spanish Colonial Trestle Table
Spanish Colonial Trestle Table
Spanish Colonial Trestle Table
Spanish Colonial Trestle Table
Spanish Colonial Trestle Table
Spanish Colonial Trestle Table
Spanish Colonial Trestle Table
Spanish Colonial Trestle Table
Spanish Colonial Trestle Table
Spanish Colonial Trestle Table
  • Cargar imagen en el visor de la galería, Spanish Colonial Trestle Table
  • Cargar imagen en el visor de la galería, Spanish Colonial Trestle Table
  • Cargar imagen en el visor de la galería, Spanish Colonial Trestle Table
  • Cargar imagen en el visor de la galería, Spanish Colonial Trestle Table
  • Cargar imagen en el visor de la galería, Spanish Colonial Trestle Table
  • Cargar imagen en el visor de la galería, Spanish Colonial Trestle Table
  • Cargar imagen en el visor de la galería, Spanish Colonial Trestle Table
  • Cargar imagen en el visor de la galería, Spanish Colonial Trestle Table
  • Cargar imagen en el visor de la galería, Spanish Colonial Trestle Table
  • Cargar imagen en el visor de la galería, Spanish Colonial Trestle Table
  • Cargar imagen en el visor de la galería, Spanish Colonial Trestle Table
  • Cargar imagen en el visor de la galería, Spanish Colonial Trestle Table

Spanish Colonial Trestle Table

Precio habitual
$8,500.00
Precio de venta
$8,500.00
Precio habitual
Agotado
Precio unitario
por 
Los gastos de envío se calculan en la pantalla de pagos.

Spanish Colonial Trestle Table Circa 1750-1800

Anonymous Artisan

Country Antiques

Ht. 32" x W. 57" x D. 32"

 

 

When the Spanish flooded “New Spain” in the 16th to 18th centuries, they brought the apprenticeship system with them. Spanish artisans taught their skills in carpentry, ceramics, weaving, leather, and other crafts to indigenous craftspeople. They had to rely on handmade tools and hand forged hardware. Many beautiful items remain from those centuries, now labeled Spanish Colonial antiques because they date from the Spanish Colonial period. They were used by the Spanish in their elegant mansions, churches, and huge haciendas. (New Spain was not actually a colony; it was a viceroyalty, but the name “colonial” sticks to refer to that period.)