HOMO FABER FELLOWSHIP
Friedrich Fialka
©Kornelia Cieslak
Friedrich Fialka
©Kornelia Cieslak
Friedrich Fialka
©Kornelia Cieslak
Friedrich Fialka
©Kornelia Cieslak
Friedrich Fialka
©Kornelia Cieslak
Friedrich Fialka
©Kornelia Cieslak

Friedrich Fialka

Box making

Vienna, Austria

Recommended by Meisterstrasse Handmade

A business years in the making

  • Friedrich has received many awards for his work
  • His cases are designed to contain the most precious items
  • He was trained by two masters

In the mid-90s, Friedrich Fialka was one of the very last apprentices trained in the craft of making etuis and cases, a trade he had known ever since his childhood. The Fialka family business was founded in 1923 as one of the most exclusive manufacturers of cases and etuis for jewellery, silverware, badges of honour, medals or simply precious gifts. Now, almost 100 years and 950,000 pieces later, the family business is led by Friedrich, who took it over in 2003. He is proud to be one of the most prominent artisans of his kind, despite working in a totally hidden workshop in a Vienna backstreet.

Friedrich Fialka is a master artisan: she began her career in 1980 and she started teaching in 1992.

Discover her work

INTERVIEW

For my clients, it’s always surprising that every single step in the working process is performed by hand. I use different techniques, depending on the material I need: leather, wood, paper, cardboard… so I’m not only an etui producer, I am also a cabinetmaker as well as a French polisher and a paper artist.

I had the privilege of being invited to produce a gift for Pope Benedict XVI, which was presented to him by the governor of Lower Austria: It was a very delicate tabernacle, more than one metre high, made out of aniline-dyed, dark blue leather – the national colour of the federal province of Lower Austria.

My most special moment is related to that particular present: I watched the scene of the solemn presentation of the tabernacle on television and Pope Benedict emphatically thanked me, the craftsman, for his work. Such situations happen only once in a lifetime.

Good things need time. I avoid chemical adhesives and try to use natural materials wherever I can: an adhesion out of potato starch, plus bone or hide glue. Those substances need much more time to dry, but they last as long as the chemical ones and are good for humans and the environment.

1 DESTINATION

Vienna: the remnants of the Empire