Starting out as merely an errand boy, Luciano learned about all the complementary work that needed to be done by a violin-maker such as shipping instruments and even constructing the wooden boxes to send them in.
Luciano however never took advantage of this opportunity and preferred to learn from his father with whom he worked alongside for the majority of his career.
In 1949 Luciano won an award for being the youngest participant at the Biannual celebration of Antonio Stradivarius' anniversary in Cremona.
[1] Subsequently, in 1952 he won first place in the National Competition of Contemporary Violin-making for violins and violas in Rome.
[2] Today, two of Luciano's instruments, a violin and viola,[3][4] are part of the collection of the Public Music School of Florence, Conservatorio Luigi Cherubini,[5] kept in the nearby museum of the Galleria dell'Accademia.