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Lot 330

Bow front bedside cabinet on cabriole legs

Lot 336

Reproduction demi lune formed two door cabinet with burrwood veneer, 78cm wide

Lot 487

A mahogany display cabinet raised on squat cabriole supports

Lot 497

A 19th Century pier cabinet AF

Lot 891

A side table raised on barley twist supports together with a reproduction side table and a cabinet

Lot 912

An oak and glass display cabinet

Lot 933

A Stag display cabinet

Lot 973

An upright corner cabinet together with another

Lot 1229

A large vintage filing cabinet comprising ten drawers

Lot 1230

A large vintage filing cabinet comprising ten drawers

Lot 1231

A large vintage filing cabinet comprising ten drawers

Lot 1236

A modern three drawer filing cabinet

Lot 1373

A hanging bathroom cabinet

Lot 604

A painted bedside cabinet fitted single drawer together with another fitted single drawer

Lot 1

A vintage Atal industrial hinged top cabinet, width 45cm, depth 68cm, height 78cm

Lot 109

A mid century rosewood extending dining table, length 214cm extended, width 84cm, height 72cm six chairs and wall hanging side cabinet CITES certificate number: 624941/01

Lot 111

A 19th century French marble topped faux bamboo bedside cabinet, width 37cm, depth 37cm, height 81cm

Lot 144

A Japanese Meiji period lacquer table cabinet, width 54cms, depth 32cms, height 48cms.

Lot 43

A Victorian mahogany whatnot / side cabinet, width 60cm, depth 38cm, height 110cm

Lot 5

A Victorian mahogany coal purdonium and similar bedside cabinet, larger width 42cm, depth 35cm, height 97cm

Lot 77

An early 20th century counter top display cabinet, later painted, width 46cm, depth 30cm, height 60cm together with a small pine nest of drawers

Lot 80

A 17th century style oak linenfold moulded standing corner cabinet, width 83cm, depth 45cm, height 180cm

Lot 85

A Victorian painted pine two door kitchen cabinet, width 116cm, depth 36cm, height 202cm

Lot 1203

AN EARLY 20TH CENTURY ASTRAGAL GLAZED TWO DOOR DISPLAY CABINET, with a raised back, the doors enclosing two adjustable shelves, on square legs, width 119cm x depth 35cm x height 140cm (condition - surface marks, scratches, some chips, one key)

Lot 1205

A MAHOGANY TWO DRAWER FILING CABINET, with a green and tooled leather writing surface, width 55cm x depth 60cm x height 78cm (condition - surface marks and scratches, SD)

Lot 1206

AN EARLY 20TH CENTURY MAHOGANY DISPLAY CABINET, with a fixed over hanging cornice, two astragal glazed doors, above two cupboard doors, width 107cm x depth 37cm x height 191cm (condition - no shelves to top section, two keys, some marks and scratches loose parts, minor losses)

Lot 1210

A MODERN PINE BLANKET CHEST, width 80cm x depth 39cm x height 45cm, a single door cabinet, a hanging wall shelf, with two drawers, etc (4)

Lot 1215

AN OAK LEAD GLAZED TWO DOOR BOOKCASE, width 107cm x depth 33cm x height 99cm, a hi-fi cabinet, and an oak side table with two drawers (3)

Lot 1255

A MID CENTURY MCINTOSH TRISTOR TEAK MULTI FUCTIONAL COFFEE TABLE, with a swivel fold out top, lower cabinet and nest of tables, min length 88cm x depth 49cm x height 56cm (condition:-loose bracket to one of tables) and a teak record trolley (2)

Lot 1269

AN EDWARDIAN MAHOGANY MARQUETRY INLAID TWO DOOR DISPLAY CABINET, enclosing two shelves, on square tapered legs, width 90cm x depth 31cm x height 173cm, with one key (condition:-overstained detail around marquetry)

Lot 1279

AN EDWARDIAN MAHOGANY AND INLAID DISPLAY CABINET, with a raised back, a single drawer, above a single cupboard door enclosing three shelves, flanked by astragal glazed doors, with glass shelves, on square tapered legs, and spade feet, width 138cm x depth 44cm x height 149cm (condition - one key, very good condition, only small signs of usage)

Lot 1291

A WALNUT EFFECT DISPLAY CABINET, with two doors, width 107cm x depth 30cm x 102cm, and a fall front bureau (condition - no key, bureau with surface marks and missing caps to feet) (2)

Lot 1294

A MEREDEW TEAK DOUBLE DOOR CUPBOARD, a low Sutcliffe chest of six drawers, a teak glazed corner cupboard, an open single door cabinet, and two oak chairs (condition:-surface scratches and tears to chairs) (6)

Lot 391

A COLLECTION OF WEDGWOOD CERAMICS, comprising a Wedgwood black basalt teapot (chipped rim and restoration work), cream jug and sugar bowl (chipped and restoration work), both the teapot and covered sugar bowl have a Sybil finial, impressed marks Wedgwood 42 on the base, three matt black Wedgwood tea cups (one chipped), a matt black basalt bread and butter plate impressed mark Wedgwood on the base (chipped on rim and base, signs of restoration), seven pieces of Wedgwood Blue Jasperware to include a cup and saucer, two pots, three pin dishes and two jugs, four pieces of Wedgwood 'Ice Rose' pattern giftware, a 'Nautilus Collection' shell pot, an 'Indiana' pattern blue and white bread and butter plate (slight crazing and surface scratches), a 'Lichfield' W4156 pattern dinner plate, three cabinet plates, etc. (28) (Condition Report: obvious damage mentioned in description)

Lot 604

A 19th century oak corner cabinet and oak ladder back chair

Lot 642

A cabinet sign written Gentlemen's Outfitters

Lot 820

A 19th Century desktop stationery cabinet

Lot 851

A 19th Century oak corner display cabinet

Lot 852

An early 20th Century mahogany side cabinet frame

Lot 855

An Edwardian mahogany low display cabinet on cabriole legs

Lot 876

A reproduction Regency style corner cabinet

Lot 886

A late 20th Century reproduction oak side cabinet of small form, in the Old Charm style

Lot 887

A mid 20th Century walnut china display cabinet

Lot 908

An early 20th Century mahogany side cabinet, width 77, depth 50, height 110cm including ledge

Lot 939

A 19th Century oak smokers cabinet

Lot 971

A period oak cabinet having panelled door

Lot 979

A period oak side cabinet in the Jacobean style, in need of restoration but fairly sound

Lot 466

R C Dudley, (19th century), after, a print, Upper Portion Strawberry Hill Cabinet, 25 x 32cm, mounted framed and glazed, 47 x 54cm

Lot 103

This book depicts scenes with Chinese emperors from the sixteenth century, on finely engraved plates by Isidore Stanislas Helman (1743-1809), a copperplate engraver from Lille, France. The title is Faits Mémorables Des Empereurs De La Chine. Tires des Annales Chinoises, Dédiés a Madame, Orne de 24 Estampes in 4.o., Gravees par Helman, d’apres les Dessins Originaux de la Chine, tires du Cabinet de M Bertin, Mtre. et ancien Sre. d’Etat., A Paris. Chez l’Auteur, Graveur de Madame, Rue St. Honore … Et chez M. Ponce, Graveur de Mgr. Comte d’Artois … 1788, and in English, that means Memorable Facts about the Emperors of China from the Chinese Annals, Dedicated to Madame, Adorned with 24 prints [engravings], from the Original Drawings from China, taken from the Cabinet of M Bertin, minister and former Secretary of State, … at Mr. Ponce, engraver of the Count Artois … 1788. The plates were finely engraved by Helman from designs by the Jesuit artist Jean-Denis Attiret, who went to China in 1737 and was given the title “Painter to the Emperor” by the Qianlong Emperor. The original paintings, from which the engravings are reduced, were commissioned by Attiret, by orders of the Emperor Qianlong, to be drawn and engraved in a western style and based on the work ”Dijian tushuo” (The Illustrated Discussion of the Emperor’s Mirror) from 1573, telling of the heroic deeds of the Emperors of China in parables. The book was privately published and it has five raised bands, with gilt titles, giltflowers and gilt tooling on the spine, gilt borders on the original leather covers, blank endpapers, the dedication page to Madame, who was unnamed, but with a space left open for a name to be filled in later on, and we believe the Madame was actually Marie Antoinette. The book was intended for a French audience, and it was published a year before the French Revolution, and possibly a veiled criticism not only of Louis XVI, but of his wife, Marie Antoinette, as well. At the bottom of the dedication page it reads “prix in 4 en feuilles [in sheets] 12 francset broche en carton 13, 10 sur le papier vélin [vellum] en feuilles, 18 sur le papier d’hollande peint a l’aquarel, 48; il y a aura quelques exemplaires sur le grand papierqui feront suite aux batailles de la chine] prix 18; l’ouvrage entier sera divise en quatre livraisons, qui paraitront tous les deux mois a commencer le 15 avril 1788”, which means the publication was available on different types of paper, and you could buy part 1 in unbound sheets at 12 livres, in paper wrappers at 13 livres and 10 francs, unbound on wove paper for 18 livres, on Holland paper painted in watercolors for 48 livres (₶), and the entire work would be divided into four deliveries, which would come out every two months starting April 16, 1788.  ₶ stands for livre tournois, one of several currencies used in medieval France and a unit of value used to show the relative worth of something; according to a law passed in 1262, the livre tournois was established at about 20 sous tournois, or about 81 grams of fine silver. This is a first edition with black and white engravings, published on heavy paper, with wide margins, and all the plates and tissue guards are present. The book is 4to. and measures 10 1/2 x 7 3/4 in. wide, with wear on the boards commensurate with age, faded gilt on the spine and boards, very light browning or foxing, and some offset on the tissue guards from the engravings. A scarce copy ofthis unusual printing designed to appeal to educated Parisians in the 1700’s. 

Lot 33

The Newcomes. Memoirs of a Most Respectable Family. Edited by Arthur Pendennis. ESQre. Illustrated By Richard Doyle/ London: Bradbury And Evans, 11 Bouverie Street, 1853” on the front cover of the first part, in the original yellow wrappers, with 24 parts bound in 23, as issued. The original price was 1 shilling for each part, except the last double issue (Nos. 23 and 24), which cost 2 shillings for the two parts, and it was published in monthly parts that ran from October, 1853 to August, 1855. In a black custom slipcase. William Makepeace Thackeray (1811 - 1863) was an English novelist and illustrator known for his satirical work. He was born in India and travelled the world and became famous for Vanity Fair, and he was hailed as the equal of Dickens. Thackeray wrote The Newcomes on a six month trip he took to the United States from 1852 to 1853 - it was a lecturing tour of America where he spoke about English humorists - and the novel is largely about marrying for money and the role of women in English society. The story was never really edited by Arthur Pendinnis because Pendennis was actually a fictional character invented by Thackeray in The History of Pendennis, which was published three years earlier (1848 - 1850), but Thackeray just designated the fictional Pendennis to narrate the story here. Richard Doyle (1824 - 1883) did all the artwork here; he was a Victorian artist who illustrated many magazines for Punch, as well as novels by Dickens, and he became famous for his fairy illustrations and his early woodcuts for Punch magazine, and he was the uncle of Arthur Conan Doyle, who created the Sherlock Holmes character. All 46 plates by Doyle are present here, and all the Newcomes Advertiser ads are present, except for Nos. 1, 4, and 13, which have no ads in the front or rear. There are a profusion of ads in the front and rear of the other parts: Nos. 2, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20 , 21, 22, and 23 - 24 have eight pages of ads in the front, Nos. 3 and 16 have 12 pages of ads in the front and No. 12 has 4 pages of ads in front, while No. 14 is missing pages 3 - 6 in the eight-page ad in front, and No. 8 has no ads in the rear. An eight-page ad for the Respirator is present at the back of Nos. 2, 3, and 5, and ads for Bradbury and Evans are in the front of No. 5 and at the rear of Nos. 11 and 14; there are Waterlow ads in Nos. 3, 9, 10, 16, and 19, and a four-page ad for Uncle Tom’s Cabin at the rear of No. 3. There are pink ads for T. Madgwick as a cabinet maker and upholsterer at the rear of 5 and 6, and ads for Norton’s Camomile Pills in Nos. 7, 10, 19, and 22 and a Simco ad after the Norton Pill ad in Nos. 7; and 10; there are ads for Virtue & Hall at the rear of Nos. 14 and 15, and ads for Chapman and Hall in Nos. 15 and 16, and a ten-page pamphlet for John Cassell at the rear of No. 10, but it is missing the rare Great Northern Railway slip. There is a blue slip for Dickens’ Household Words in No. 6 and an ad for Dickens’ works on a blue slip in No. 22 and at the rear of 24, an ad for the Illustrated Crystal Palace Gazette on a white slip in No. 9, a slip for Mayall’s Portrait Galleries at the rear of No. 10, a white slip with an ad for Punch’s Pocket Book after the plates in No. 14 and a full-page blue ad for Harry Coverdale’s Courtship and All That Came Of It at the rear of No. 14, ads for the British College of Health in Nos. 15 through 18 and again in No. 20. There’s a Prize Medal ad for Chocolate and Cocoa for Her Majesty at the back of No. 14 and a Prize Medal award for Fry & Sons and a Charles Lever Book at the end of No. 15, and an ad for A Dozen Pair of Wedding Gloves (illustrated by Phiz) on a white slip in No. 16. There’s also an important ad for The Bath House Poisoning Case on blue paper in No. 19 and ads for The National Review in Nos. 21 and 22, and The Newcomes Advertiser is present at the beginning of Nos. 2, 3, 5 through 12, and 14 through 24. So many of the slips and ads are present to make this a first issue, but some ads are lacking, especial the rare Great Northern Railway slip. You need a scorecard to follow all this, folks, but it’s easier to see Van Duzer’s bibliography of Thackeray’s works. (See Henry Van Duzer, A Thackeray Library, First Editions And First Publications, Portraits, Water Colors, Etchings, Drawings, and Manuscripts, Privately Printed 1919.) The black pebbled custom slipcase measures 10 x 7 x 4 3/8 in. across and pulls up at the top to reveal an internal slipcase that wraps around the monthly parts. The spine of the slipcase has five raised bands, the title and author in gilt on the spine, with an eagle and “Magnanimus Esto” on a banner below the eagle and “P.I. London, 1853 - 1855” below that, and there is light wear at the bottom of the slipcase. . The wrappers are 8 Vo. and measure 9 x 5 5/8 in. wide, with some wear on the spines and light soiling, but there are no repairs or restoration at all to the wrappers. No. 1 has a two-inch tear along the spine, No. 4 has a small bookseller’s label at the bottom of the front cover and Nos. 4 through 12 have a small bookseller’s label at the bottom, and No. 16 has some exposed string on the left side of the front wrapper. The double issue at the end also has soiling, some spots, and light creases on the front cover, and there are browning or spots on most of the plates, but the plates are all present.

Lot 108

BREAKFRONT SIDE CABINET, 92cm H x 183cm W x 39cm D, Regency style painted with four fabric lined doors enclosing shelves and drawers.

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