WE PROVIDE INSURANCE FOR YOUR ORDER
With more than 138 years of experience, our export team takes the greatest care to package each order. A damaged product? We will send a new one. A lost parcel? We will send a new one. The shipping cost include an insurance break and lost.
CUSTOMER REVIEW
ENJOY TAXFREE
For a delivery outside the European Union, you can pay your order without VAT. Please, use the coupon code FREETAX into your cart.
RECEIVE A GIFT FOR EACH ORDER
We take care of our customers. For each order, you can select a gift in you cart. More you buy, bigger the gift is. Follow this link to discover the gift list.
WIN FIDELITY POINTS
We reward your fidelity. Each order allows you to win fidelity points, that you can use for your next order. Enjoy extra discount. Don't forget to creat an account or to login into it. Learn more ?
ADDITIONNAL INFORMATIONS
TUMBLERS 100 POINTS LALIQUE :
āBeautiful yet functionalā is how internationally acclaimed wine critic James Suckling describes the 100 POINTS collection. James suckling 100 points glasses Lalique.
♦ JAMES SUCKLING 100 POINTS GLASSES LALIQUE :
“I look, i observe: the woman, th child, the flight of a bird, a tree, a fish; suddenly, the harmony of a form, a pose, a gesture, a movement, imprints itself on my mind and does not leave, it combines with other compositional elements that i have seen … the work is ripe, and i have only to pick it …” (RenĆ© Lalique in an interview).
Lalique can look back with pride on a wonderful tradition. One hundred and thirty years of savoir-faire and creative excellence in the French “Art of living”, producing timeless creations: art objects, light fixtures, furniture, jewellery, fragrances and more – all “made in France”. The name of Lalique is associated with glass and crystal, a tradition passed down with passion by generations of its artists and outstanding French craftsmen.
Its undisputed master: RenĆ© Lalique. Designer, jeweller of Art Nouveau, master glassmaker of Art Deco, decorator, industrial entrepreneur – RenĆ© Lalique had the ingenious idea of making art a part of daily life, conceiving artistic creation as “total art”: sculpture and modeling to render contours; architecture to encompass his eye for line and planning; precious stones, mother-of-pearl, horn and enamel to refine the shimmering interplay of material and color. And finally, he was captivated by the effects of transparency and opalescence inherent in glass, which he harnessed to create a new, aesthetic form of light.