THis is an extremely rare french vanity/perfume box decorated with the print of a valoir tapestry. 16 by 12 inches and 3 and 1/2 inches tall.

DESCRIPTION

Of rectangular shape, internally with compartments and a mirror inside of the lid. On the cover a print of one of the Valois tapestries. Carved and guilt decor around edges and bottom of Louis XVI style. 
NOTES
The Valois Tapestries. One of the most precious and celebrated tapestry series of the Uffizi Gallery collection, it portrays members of the Valois royal family at the magnificent festivals held by the French court from 1564 to 1573, with borders richly decorated with floral motifs, grotesques, fruit and putti. The series is composed of eight tapestries, woven with wool, silk, silver and gilt metal-wrapped thread, commissioned around 1575 by Catherine de’ Medici to an unidentified Brussels atelier, based on cartoons by Lucas de Heere from drawings by court painter Antoine Caron. Catherine de’ Medici, Queen of France, portrayed in her widow’s weeds in seven of the eight tapestries, probably commissioned the series for political reasons to honor the Valois family, and her granddaughter Christina of Lorraine brought it to Florence in 1589 as part of her dowry for her marriage to the Grand Duke of Tuscany, Ferdinando I de’ Medici. The tapestries value recorded in the Medici inventory of the time was 3520 scudi, the equivalent of about one million dollars today. The Valois Tapestries hung continuously for almost a hundred years – first in the Crocetta Palace and then in the Uffizi – but in 1987 they were removed from the gallery, owing to evident deterioration and fading due to continuous exposure to light. They were carefully rolled up and placed in protective storage, waiting for cleaning and reparation of the serious damages, ranging from losses in the weft and warp of the fabric to oxidation on metal threads.