Description

These types of tables were located in the atrium or tablinum of many Roman houses of a certain economic level. They were tables made up of two marble feet decorated with mythological animals and plant motifs that supported a large marble plate on top. It was representative furniture that, on many occasions, could be seen from the entrance of the house and that gave an account of the socio-economic level of the family. The virtual reconstruction presented here is based on examples from Pompeii such as the House of the Prince of Naples or the House of Cornelius Rufus.

Data sheet

LOD0: 306 K Polígonos / 306 K Tris
LOD1: 92 K Polígonos / 92 K Tris
LOD2: 46 K Polígonos / 46 K Tris
LOD3: 9 K Polígonos / 9 K Tris

Game Ready Model
Formats: .FBX; .OBJ; .blend.
PBR materials (JPG/PNG)
Texture maps: Base Color, Normal Map, Metallic, Roughness, AO, Height.
Texture resolution: 1K, 2K and 4K.

Rigged: No
Animated: No
Mask for color alternatives: No

Author:
Pablo Aparicio Resco

MOLS, S. (2008): "Ancient roman household furniture and its use: from Herculaneum to the Rhine", AnMurcia, 23-24, pp. 145-160.

CONNOLLY, P. (1979): Pompeii.

References used can be enjoyed from here: Atrium of the Prince's House in Naples, Pompeii in Pictures, 3D model of a plaster replica of one of the table supports in the House of Cornelius Rufus, by Scan the World.

Roman marble table

From 4.90€
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