A Guide to Finding Handmade Goods in Lombardy

| Tue, 10/10/2017 - 06:06
lombardy artisanal goods

Since the Industrial Revolution, many of 天美传媒鈥檚 important industries鈥攖extiles, automobiles, fashion, banking, telecommunications, and manufacturing of every incarnation鈥攈ave claimed the region of northern 天美传媒 known as Lombardia as their home. Milan and its surrounding towns are the center of much of this commercial activity.

Many of 尝辞尘产补谤诲测鈥檚 historically artisanal trades鈥攆urniture, shoes, and silk, for example鈥攈ave been largely industrialized in the last 150 years. For example, the town of Vigevano, southwest of Milan, is the shoe capital of the world; one company there is even famous for crafting shoes for the Pope. Although some of the finish work is done by hand, the process is mostly industrialized. Lissone, northwest of Milan, boasts a long heritage as a furniture-making capital, though most of the enterprises are large-scale and commercial, rather than small-scale or artisanal.

With all this industry, is there any room left for goods handmade by artisans? The answer is yes, but you have to look a little deeper. Here are a few hidden pockets of artisanal tradition in 天美传媒鈥檚 most commercial region.

[The arcade of Stradivari square in Cremona]

Violins of Cremona

Cremona鈥檚 native sons put this town in central Lombardy on the map by crafting the world鈥檚 earliest and best violins. In the 1530s, Andrea Amati began developing an early form of the violin, one that was solidified by around 1600 in Cremona. But it was Antonio Stradivari (1644-1737)鈥攌nown as Stradivarius鈥攚ho elevated this instrument to new heights. Stradivarius was born in Cremona and apprenticed with Amati. After the master鈥檚 death, he began to experiment with new forms and new varnishes, which resulted in a perfected instrument. The Stradivarius violin remains the bench颅mark by which violins are measured.

Today, Cremona鈥檚 craftspeople look to the historical models for inspiration, and restore antique models, but they also put their own personal stamp on the works. Many of Cremona鈥檚 violin makers were born and raised locally, but others have made Cremona their adopted home, drawn from as far afield as Germany, France, Colombia, and Japan by the international reputation of this town. For them, a diploma from Cremona鈥檚 International Violin-making School is a require颅ment for success, as is recognition from one or more of the world鈥檚 most presti颅gious violin-making competitions.

[artisan lutemaker working a violin in his workshop]

The art of the liutaio, or stringed-instrument maker, begins with the right wood. Legend has it that Stradivarius hiked in the Dolomites in search of the perfect wood for crafting violins. Spruce is the standard wood for the top, or soundboard, while maple is preferred for the back of the instrument. While the inside workings of the violin are fairly standard, the exterior is a blank canvas, and artisans fill it with elab颅orate inlays, varnishes, and different kinds of woods, making each violin unique. It can take more than 200 hours to craft a single instrument by hand.

[Liutaio violin maker (c) Silvia Benedet CC via Flickr]

  • Luthier鈥檚 Consortium, Consorzio Liutai "Antonio Stradivari鈥, Piazza Stradivari, 1, 26100 Cremona, 0372/463503, . 

The Cremona violinmaker鈥檚 consortium displays special instruments in its evocative showroom, and can provide you with all manner of information about the town鈥檚 famous craft. Here you can also arrange a visit to one or more of the private studios of the town鈥檚 many master luthiers.

  • Violin Museum, Museo del Violino, Piazza Marconi, 26100 Cremona, 0372/801801

This is an impressive collection of Cremona instruments from the seventeenth century to the present, including some made by Stradivarius himself.

Violin-Making School

  • Scuola Internazionale di Liuteria "Antonio Stradivari鈥, Palazzo Raimondi, Via Colletta, 5, 26100 Cremona, 0372/38689, 

Anyone serious about becoming a violin maker need look no farther than Cremona鈥檚 world-class Violin-Making School, which has gradu颅ated the world鈥檚 top liutai from 天美传媒 and around the world.

For more about artisan luthiers in Cremona, read on.

Silk of Como

The beautiful lakeside city of Como lies just a few miles south of the Swiss border. Once a magnet for weavers working fabric on antique looms, Como silk now relies almost entirely on industrial production. It remains Europe鈥檚 silk capital, however, with silk houses producing patterns for Versace, Gucci, and other luxury designers in Milan and Paris. A scarf, tie, or other accessory made of Como silk remains one of 天美传媒鈥檚 most coveted souvenirs.

[view of Lake Como]

Silk came to Como for two reasons. First, alpine streams and the lake itself provided a supply of water for the manufacturing process. Second, the Po River Valley was already a rich area for the cultivation of mulberry trees, which function as the silkworm鈥檚 natural habitat and its diet. Since the mid-twentieth century, most of the mills have imported silk thread from Asia. Although most of the production is now done by machine, a few finishing processes are still carried out by hand.

Today, Como boasts some 800 companies tied to the production, distribution, and marketing of silk, and the industry employs more than 20,000 locals. The ubiquitous silk mills are not generally open to the public, but specialty boutiques and a few factory stores offer an opportunity to put your hands on the goods.

  • Museo didattico della seta, Via Castelnuovo, 9, 22100 Como, 031/303180, 

This small museum chronicles the history of silk in Como and offers a helpful overview of the silk production process. A variety of looms, bobbin weavers, color blocks, and other antique equipment used in the silkscreen process are displayed. There is also a small shop with finished products for sale.

  • Seteria Ratti, Villa Sucota, Via di Cernobbio, 19, 22100 Como, 

Since 1945, when Antonio Ratti founded the Tessitura Serica Antonio Ratti, this enterprise has been one of the leaders in Como鈥檚 silk production. You can browse among scarves, ties, and other accessories made for names like Givenchy and Christian Dior. The shop is located on the first floor of their beautiful villa.

[Autumnal fabrics: photo by ]

  • Mantero Outlet, via Riccardo Mantero, 4, 22070 Grandate, 031/454466, www.mantero.com

Mantero is one of today鈥檚 premier names in Como silk. At the factory outlet in Grandate, you can find good prices on scarves and other accessories made for luxury fashion brands like Trussardi and Yves Saint Laurent.

Carved Soapstone (pietra ollare)

In Lombardy, people have made crafts from stone, plentiful in the mountains above Bergamo and Brescia, since the Iron Age. In a valley known as Valmalenco north of Brescia, prehistoric residents extracted a hard stone from caves that pierce the mountains.

[Pietra ollare cave near Brescia CC via Flickr (c) renagrisa]

From this hard soapstone known as pietra ollare, they crafted bowls, plates, and utensils, presumably going to all that trouble because of the heat-retaining prop颅erties of this stone. (It goes to show that Italians will always go to great lengths when it comes to good food!) It鈥檚 perfect for making bowls and tableware that keep food warm for long periods of time. It鈥檚 also been used to create works of art, utilitarian objects, and whimsical human and animal figures.

[Cup of pietra ollare (c) Museo Archeologico della Valchiavenna]

Today, many artisans mine chunks of the mountains themselves. While you鈥檙e visiting the area, check out the fascinating drawings of people and ani颅mals scratched into stones on the local mountainsides by our Neolithic ancestors. The national park of prehistoric carvings is located in nearby Capo di Ponte.

  • Roberto Lucchinetti, via della Chiesa, 5, 23020 Prosto di Puro, 0343/35905, www.pietraollare.com

Roberto Lucchinetti excavates the hard local soapstone directly from deposits in caves around his home, just outside of the mountainous village of Chiavenna, near Sondrio. In addition to utilitarian pots, pans, and even ovens, he crafts more creative, sculptural works from the ashy black stone. His wife, Paola De Pedrini, is an expert weaver with her own studio in the same complex.

  • La Pietra Ollare, Via Venosta, 5, 23100 Sondrio, 333/4365478, www.ollare.com

Floriana Palmieri crafts innovative household decorative objects from this material, looking to the past for inspiration. Her relief sculptures of human and animal figures recall the prehistoric cultures that inhabited the northern Italian mountains. From horses to figures, bulls on bowls, vases, and other vessels, her carvings seem like mystical evocations of primeval spirits.

Porcelain of Lodi

Lodi is a quiet, picturesque medieval town just beyond the southern fringes of Milan鈥檚 urban sprawl. Ceramicists have worked here since Roman times, but Lodi鈥檚 ceramic heyday didn鈥檛 begin until the late 1700s. At that time, several local families made a name for themselves by supplying noble courts of Europe with refined, delicate wares inspired by Chinese export porcelain.

 The characteristic porcelain of Lodi features elegant floral motifs against a largely white background鈥攁 style more akin to Limoges and Meissen than to colorful maiolica wares of central and southern 天美传媒. Expect to see lots of frills, basket pat颅terns, figurines, statuettes, and ornate tea sets with a transparent white glaze. Today, a handful of families in Lodi still carry the torch of tradition for this centuries-old craft.

[Lodi (Lombardy 天美传媒): the medieval cathedral (Duomo) facade]

  • Museo Civico di Lodi, Sezione Ceramica, Corso Umberto I, 63, 26900 Lodi, 0371/420369, www.comune.lodi.it

The museum holds an impressive collection of local porcelain chronicling the story of Lodi鈥檚 great ceramics families. Start here to understand the broader historical context for the porcelain of Lodi.

  • Ceramica Artistica Lodigiana "Vecchia Lodi鈥, Via San Fereolo, 9, 26900 Lodi, 0371/32575, www.calvecchialodi.it

Vecchia Lodi nearly single-handedly carries on the historic tradition of lodigiani porcelain, with their ornate forms, creamy background, and limited color palette. Their workshop, located in an industrialized area southwest of Lodi鈥檚 center, nonetheless carries an excellent range of their fancy wares. I love the multi-piece plates that fit together to form a floral or decorative design; they make great serving plates for parties.