He then went to Paris, again at government expense, where he worked in the studios of the painter Jean-Baptiste Regnault and the engraver Théodore Richomme. After that, he spent four years in Florence. In 1832, he received an offer of employment at the Academy, but he chose to become part of the Great Emigration and settled in Paris, where he remained until his death.
He also illustrated the Polish history of Lucjan Siemieński and several works by Leonard Chodźko.
Seweryn was an engraver for the first Bank of Poland and Władysław was a noted sculptor.