Lalique
Lick It is a French perfume brand that clearly shows the relationship between naked art. The beginning was actually in the establishment of a French glass design house, which was founded by the ceramic artist and jewelry Renee Lake. The young Renee, born in the small village in 1860, and grew up in both Paris and the island. He was able to develop magic from the world of nature, one that would fully expressed in his later artwork. He in his official studies he began to purchase at Target College, but had to leave when his father passed away, then began at the age of 12 in a Parisian appointment, and studied lessons in the evening when he was possible. He was later able to continue to develop his education at the Sidanham Art College in London. From jewelry design for perfume bottle design with his return from England, he began to work as a freelance artist, and at the same time designed jewelry for esteemed design houses such as Cartier and Happy, before he began to engage in the field in 1885. Lalique Changed the jewelry design forever with natural -inspired jewelry, those that described the animals and female shape. Thus, he became one of the well -known (and most copied) jewelry from the famous "Art Nouveau" era. At some point he changed his focus from jewelry for glassware, even more successfully. The transition to the perfume field happened as he cooperated with Francois Couty to develop beautiful perfume tools. This is considered a revolutionary idea at that time. This is because the perfume at that time was sold in ordinary glass vials, doing so that the women who purchased it were also forced to purchase ornate bottles to their home. And thus designed Lalique The legendary and hosted containers who carried some of the beautiful labels for quite a few of Cottie's early successes, as L'Effleur and- AMBRE Antique. The extra lounging of the genius of Lick There was an improvement in a production process that allowed large -scale bottles, thereby reducing the cost and making the product more cheaper and widespread. Indeed, this new concept of marketing perfume in beautiful tools was successful, and Lick continued to design bottles for Roger & Glatt, Gerain, Molinard, D. Arsay Worth. One of his most memorable works is Nina Richie's beautiful pigeon bottle.