Vitrine vs Curio - What's the difference?
vitrine | curio |
A glass-paneled cabinet or case, especially for displaying articles such as china, objets d'art, or fine merchandise.
* 1896 , Edward L. Wilson (ed.), "The Review of the Year Past", Photographic Mosaics , page 82
* 1919 , Brand Whitlock, Belgium: A Personal Narrative , volume I, page 256
* 1996 , Leslie Glass, Hanging Time
As nouns the difference between vitrine and curio
is that vitrine is a glass-paneled cabinet or case, especially for displaying articles such as china, objets d'art, or fine merchandise while curio is a strange and interesting object which invokes curiosity.vitrine
English
Noun
(en noun)- Lastly, when great numbers of the plates are treated with the hot or boiling water, it should be done in a vitrine or cabinet ventilated directly into the open air.
- The Princess offered us tea and wine, and we talked for a long time, and then she must show us her house, filled with tapestries, paintings and bibelots'' and, in a ''vitrine in a room upstairs, a wonderful collection of fans painted by Carlo van Loo
- Checking behind him nervously, the dealer was trying to concentrate on showing Bouck some small art-glass pieces in a vitrine in the middle of the booth.
