Italian Fan Making 2026: Naples Was the European Fan Capital in the 18th Century, the Surviving Neapolitan Fan Workshops Use the Same Bone-Carving Techniques as the Court Artisans, and an Authentic Carved Bone Fan Costs 80-400 Euros
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: April 2026.
The Italian ventaglio (the decorative hand fan — the specific folding fan (the ventaglio pieghevole) or fixed fan (the ventaglio fisso) that the Italian aristocratic tradition used as the most socially coded single accessories in the 17th-18th century court environment) represents the most internationally underappreciated single Italian artisan tradition and the one whose specific Neapolitan production centre (the Naples ventaglio (the evantail napolitain — the specific French designation that the 18th-century Parisian luxury market used for the finest Italian fans, establishing the Naples fan reputation at the highest single European luxury level)) produced the most technically refined and the most artistically complex single European fan of the baroque and rococo periods. The specific Naples fan historical context: the Bourbon court of Naples (the specific 18th-century Kingdom of the Two Sicilies court of Charles III and Ferdinand IV (the most culturally sophisticated single Italian court of the 18th century (the specific Royal Palace of Caserta (the Reggia di Caserta — the most ambitious single 18th-century palace complex in Europe))) was the most important single European patronage centre for the ventaglio artisan: the specific Naples court fans (the ventagli di corte) carved from the specific Cape Breton ivory (the avorio del Capo — the specific elephant ivory imported through the Naples trading houses from the West Africa coast) with the specific mother-of-pearl (the madreperla from the specific Pacific pearl oyster shell) and the specific painted silk (the seta dipinta in the specific Neapolitan trompe-l'oeil technique) constitute the most specifically complex single 18th-century Italian artisan production.
Italian Fan Making: The Craft, the Materials, and Where to Buy
The Traditional Fan Materials
The specific Italian fan material categories: the bone fan (il ventaglio in osso — the specific bovine bone (the osso di bovino) or the specific Cape Breton ivory substitute (the osso di bue bianchito — the whitened ox bone that the post-CITES (1989 elephant ivory ban) ventaglio artisan uses as the specific ethical substitute for the elephant ivory): the carved bone fan is the most technically demanding single fan production — the specific bone carving (the intaglio in osso) of the fan sticks (the stecche) requires the specific piercing (the traforo — the specific openwork carving through the bone stick that creates the specific lace-like perforated pattern (the merletto d'osso — the "bone lace") that is the most specific single Naples fan quality indicator)); the mother-of-pearl fan (il ventaglio in madreperla — the specific pearl oyster shell (the Pinctada maxima from the Pacific) cut into the fan sticks and polished to the specific iridescent finish (the lucentezza madreperlata)): the most specifically luxurious single Italian fan material and the one that the specific 18th-century Naples court fan used for the highest social register); and the paper/silk fan (the ventaglio in carta o seta — the painted paper or painted silk stretched over the bone or carved wood sticks): the most accessible single fan material and the one with the widest range (from the 5-euro tourist souvenir to the 500-euro hand-painted silk specialist production).
The Surviving Naples Fan Workshops
The specific Naples fan artisan workshops in 2026 (the most practically accessible for the visitor): the Antica Manifattura Capodimonte (the specific heritage artisan production in the Capodimonte museum complex north of Naples — the specific porcelain and fan artisan workshop whose specific collaboration with the Museo di Capodimonte produces the most specifically historically connected single Naples artisan fan product); and the specific San Gregorio Armeno fan artisans (the via San Gregorio Armeno in the Naples historic centre — the most concentrated single Naples artisan street whose specific December presepe artisan concentration includes the specific fan artisan stalls that operate year-round). The specific workshop visit (the laboratorio aperto — the specific Naples artisan open-studio programme (the Napoli Artigiana initiative of the Camera di Commercio di Napoli that certifies and publicises the specific Naples artisan workshops open to visitors for the production observation visit): the most specifically educational single Naples artisan experience and the one that the visitor who calls ahead (the specific appointment (the appuntamento) required for the private workshop visit) receives at zero cost in exchange for the specific potential purchase.
Q&A: Italian Fan Making
What is the most historically significant Italian fan in any collection?
The specific Marie Antoinette fan (the specific queen's fan — the 1780s Parisian fan commissioned for Marie Antoinette whose specific ivory sticks (the brisé fan in ivory) decorated with the specific Vernis Martin lacquer painting (the Martin brother's specific oil-varnish painting technique (the Vernissage Martin) that creates the most luminous single painted surface of any 18th-century European fan) were sold at the specific Sotheby's New York auction in 2012 for 230,000 USD — the most expensive single fan ever sold at auction): the specific provenance (the Versailles royal collection inventory of 1789 that lists the fan as property of the Dauphine apartments) makes it the most specifically historically documented single royal fan. Italian-made examples: the specific Museo di San Martino in Naples houses the most comprehensive public collection of 18th-century Neapolitan court fans (the Collezione di Ventagli Borbonici — the specific collection of fans from the Bourbon court of the Two Sicilies, the most important single public collection of Italian baroque fans).