Enrico Bartolini's products are classic pieces of furniture that can be identified as originals by the quality and true value of material and craftsmanship.
Enrico Bartolini’s start in the furniture industry is firmly rooted at home– an idea conceived with a friend took shape because of his family. Bartolini was 25 years old and working as a carpenter when a friend asked for help building a table for a client of his boss. Amazed by the amount of value the finished table garnered, Bartolini was determined to get his own furniture business started. Without much experience, but a tremendous amount of determination, he cleaned out his parents’ two car garage and set up a small wood shop and finishing room. After taking over the back side of the garage and his grandmother’s garden, he asked his mother, a skilled seamstress, to set up a table and cutting room in their small basement. She agreed and guided him through the process of making cushions for his furniture. A career was born.
Bartolini went from a sole proprietor, churning out original designs in his parents’ home to employing over 30 people and establishing his own shop in less than two years. At one point he had over 140 employees, all building furniture for his company. Bartolini was credited with being a leader in the RTA (ready-to-assemble) furniture industry (think Ikea). After a decade of selling to the largest furniture retailers in the country, business began to dwindle as Taiwanese and South American companies infiltrated and eventually took over the industry. Enrico closed his enterprise, but recalls the experience of being a business owner fondly. His best memories were made on his grandmother’s picnic table. “My salesmen would stop by and we would sit at the picnic table because the shop did not have an office. I would give them peaches and pears from the trees in the yard along with some tomato sandwiches from the garden,” Bartolini reminisces.
After a quick Google search earlier last year, Bartolini noticed that one of his earlier chaise designs was sold by a high-end antique dealer for thousands of dollars. He decided to get his work back into the public view. Bartolini’s pieces have evolved over the years, from the more mainstream, mass-produced furniture, to the present high-end, one-of-a-kind designs which savvy customers appreciate for their quality and unique design. “I love working with unique woods and blending them with polished metals and dyed finishes,“ Bartolini explains as he walks through the crowded warehouse, once a part of the Schooley Colliery, adjacent to the Knox Mine shaft in Luzerne County. “When I come up with a design, I always see the shape and then I build it from there,” he explains. “Over the years I have come to meet and build relationships with many manufacturers around the world and have used some of their parts in the recipe of my designs.”
Ideas are overflowing in his workshop and the love of what he does is present in every detail. “There is a trend for Mid-Century pieces right now,” explains Bartolini. His style (or recipe) is bold yet simple and organic. Bartolini’s pieces are one-of-a-kind and every one is a piece of art. Still based in northeastern Pennsylvania, Enrico Bartolini continues to craft his pieces from his hometown for homes all over the world.
To view the collection go to: enricobartolini.com