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German 1930s metal dolls’ house chattels, a standard lamp with hanging celluloid lampshade —4 1/2in. (11.5cm.) high, three trays with glass surfaces, one with six and another with four metal hock glasses, the third with six metal tumblers, a floor gong, an ink stand, a cutlery tray and mantel clock
Dolls’ house chattels circa 1900, a card trunk sweet box —1 3/4in. (4.5cm.) wide, soft metal - fireplace with caged hearth, cutlery tray with cutlery and fire irons; five pieces of Devres porcelain, a marble mantel clock with paper face, a pair of handled stemmed vases with flowers, a basket with fruit and other items
10 Corgi Classics. 2x Passage Of Time series- Leyland Octopus LAD Platform Lorry With Steel Bar Load & Clock, T. Brady. Plus a Leyland Octopus Platform Lorry With Vats & Clock, Walter Southworth. 3x SHELL-BP series- ERF KV Elliptical Tanker, With Petrol Pump. Leyland Elliptical Tanker, With Petrol Pump. Plus a Bedford TK Elliptical Tanker, With Petrol Pump. Plus a Guinness series Leyland Beaver Platform Lorry With Trailer with tanks. A Leyland Beaver Box Trailer, Michelin Tyres. Bedford TK Low Loader, British Railways. Scammell Highwayman Low Loader, Pickfords. Plus a Scammell Highwayman and Crane, Southdown. All boxed, contents VGC-Mint. £70-90
Two Victorian slate mantel and variegated marble clocks, one of architectural form, cylinder movement striking on a gong, ivorine circular dial with Arabic numerals, 29cm; the second with cylinder movement, ivorine circluar dial with Roman numerals, 20.5cm.Qty: 2Condition report:Tallest clock: width 20cm, height 29.5cm, depth 12cm. Small chipping to the edges of the case. The dial has some hairlines extending through the number 12. With key and pendulum. Appears to tick over but may need a service.Smallest clock: width 20cm, depth 11.5cm, height 20cm. Large chip to the top right hand edge. Other shallow chipping throughout the case. Small chip to the bevelled glass. The dial has a reglued chip to the enamel over the VI numeral. With pendulum and key. Appears to tick over but may need a service. Heavy tranishing to the movement cover/ door.
Silver-mounted cocoa pod, Austrian Oriental bronze figure of a child seated on stool in the style of Bergman, 7.5cm, pair of brass candlesticks, brass cylinder drum clock, and a glass and white metal and enamelled box with matching pin dish.Condition report:Drum clock: diameter is 9.5cm, the depth is 5.5cm. There is a key, as well as the ring that should fit on top of the barrel, but lacking a nut to secure it onto the case. The movement is tightly wound but not working.
Oak longcase clock, swan neck pediment, fluted columns, long door, bracket feet, twelve inch square painted dial with floral spandrels, subsidiary date aperture, 30 hour movement lacking bell, height 215cm.Condition report:Pendulum and weight are present. The movement has some rudimentary repairs and would be surprising if it was "working" (not installed in the saleroom). The dial has a heavy patchy of blistering around the 3 numeral. A chipped loss to the enamel over the signature. Craquelure allover the dial. The case is heavily faded and worn, with old repairs.
Vienna regulator wall clock, signed John Horsfall, Todmorden, eagle finial, glazed door, enamelled circular dial, twin weight movement striking on a gong, approximately 124cm.Condition report:There is a pendulum and weights, the movement seems to be intact but I can not say for certain if it runs. The case is walnut veneered and ebonised and in good condition with minor scuffs/wear to the extremities. The dial has some hairlines, otherwise in good condition and the glass panels are all in good condition too. Split to the door frame. The case appears free of any worm activity, past or present.
A silver boudoir clock, William Comyns & Sons, London 1900, scroll and four winds decoration, French movement, on four bun feet, with swing handle, 7.5cm.Condition report:The movement does wind, but it doesn't tick. The movement is loose in the case as one screw is lacking from the underside. Wear and rubbing to the definition to the case but no significant dings or dents.
Oak longcase clock, swan neck pediment and turned columns, long door, reduced base, twelve inch square painted dial indistinctly signed, thiry hour movement striking on a bell, height 191cm.Condition report:Pendulum and weight are present. Not presently working. The painting to the dial worn. The case generally poor with split panels, and heavily reduced base section.
Collection of twelve musical eggs by House of Faberge, Wade Disney figures, Doulton Bramley Hedge figures, and a decorative porcelain mantel clock.Condition report:Thumper (not backstamped Wade) - broken and reglued right foot.Large Wade 'Lady' dog - firing line under her front right leg with a resulting hairline.Large Wade 'Tramp' dig - broken and reguled, quite crudely, at the neckWhimsies (only the Lady with Wade backstamp) all ok except for Thumper (reglued ear) and Bambi (broken reglued neck and chipped nose end.Brambley Hedge is just two miniature nursery ware trios - Spring and Summer. The summer saucer has crazing lines.
Amendment (19/6) French Parian and marble mantel clock, the case with a cherub emblematic of art, circular enamelled dial, variegated marble plinth, brass mounts, cylinder timepiece movement, height 44cm.Condition report:Please note - this is not alabaster, but a Parian body. The left wing of the cherub is broken off with traces of old glue residue and a network of lines across the detached wing showing it has been in multiple pieces. It appears to have all of the original parts and the current break line appears "complete". Various chipped losses elsewhere such as: ribbon above the clock face, applied flower heads on top of the column, flowers on the scroll by the cherub's feet. Chipped loss to end of the palette. Some chipping to the bevelled glass of the movement door. With pendulum, no key, appears to be ticking over ok.
A WWII German Kriegsmarine brass bulkhead clock, the silvered dial with Arabic numerals, Slow/Fast (V/N) lever by '2' marked with Kriegsmarine device and numbered N11275, black spade hands and sweep seconds, hinged glazed faceplate with locking arbour numbered '13'. case with two fixing lugs (top one missing), the back numbered 10213, dial 16cm diameter, 20.5cm overall, with associated winding key, (needs attention, over-wound).
A Great Western Railway (GWR) brass drum clock, with GWR, Kay & Co, Paris on the 8.5cm enamel dial, (dial damaged by number II, pieces inside glass bezel, cracks to glass), the case, movement and rear cover stamped 5111, (platform replaced), with ring handle, 9.5cm diameter, 14cm high overall.
Halcyon Days Enamels carriage clock, the face and side panels enamelled with exotic birds amongst foliage, H 15cm. Provenance: From Munstead Wood. The contents of the property are being sold by the former owners of the important country house which has now been purchased by the national trust. Munstead Wood is a Grade I listed house and gardens in Godalming Surrey. The garden was created by garden designer Gertrude Jekyll and became very well-known through her designs, and her books and articles in magazines such as Country Life. The Arts and Crafts style house was built for Jekyll and she lived there until 1932, Munstead Wood was designed by the architect Edwin Lutyens to compliment the garden with Jekylls influence on the original design. Munstead Wood was the first, and perhaps therefore the most important, collaboration between Jekyll and Lutyens in garden and house design. These collaborations number around 120, with other well-known examples including Deanery Garden in Berkshire and Hestercombe House in Somerset. Jekyll transformed the site over the years, first meeting Lutyens at Munstead Wood in 1889 when the collaboration began, and she lived there until her death in 1932. Prior to the sale to the National Trust, Munstead Wood was the vendors family home for more than 50 years, the owners over this time were Sir Robert Clark and Lady Clark who were responsible for the house and gardens regeneration to return it to its original concept.
Gilt brass carriage clock with engraved foliate panels by Payne & Co., 163 New Bond St., London, the silvered and engraved dial with subsidiary second dial and up-down indicator, signed to the backplate, H 14cm. Provenance: From Munstead Wood. The contents of the property are being sold by the former owners of the important country house which has now been purchased by the national trust. Munstead Wood is a Grade I listed house and gardens in Godalming Surrey. The garden was created by garden designer Gertrude Jekyll and became very well-known through her designs, and her books and articles in magazines such as Country Life. The Arts and Crafts style house was built for Jekyll and she lived there until 1932, Munstead Wood was designed by the architect Edwin Lutyens to compliment the garden with Jekylls influence on the original design. Munstead Wood was the first, and perhaps therefore the most important, collaboration between Jekyll and Lutyens in garden and house design. These collaborations number around 120, with other well-known examples including Deanery Garden in Berkshire and Hestercombe House in Somerset. Jekyll transformed the site over the years, first meeting Lutyens at Munstead Wood in 1889 when the collaboration began, and she lived there until her death in 1932. Prior to the sale to the National Trust, Munstead Wood was the vendors family home for more than 50 years, the owners over this time were Sir Robert Clark and Lady Clark who were responsible for the house and gardens regeneration to return it to its original concept.
Tiffany & Co. brass desk clock with quartz movement No. 215378, the base inscribed "Alabama Pine Pulp Co. October 27. 1989 H 9cm. Provenance: From Munstead Wood. The contents of the property are being sold by the former owners of the important country house which has now been purchased by the national trust. Munstead Wood is a Grade I listed house and gardens in Godalming Surrey. The garden was created by garden designer Gertrude Jekyll and became very well-known through her designs, and her books and articles in magazines such as Country Life. The Arts and Crafts style house was built for Jekyll and she lived there until 1932, Munstead Wood was designed by the architect Edwin Lutyens to compliment the garden with Jekylls influence on the original design. Munstead Wood was the first, and perhaps therefore the most important, collaboration between Jekyll and Lutyens in garden and house design. These collaborations number around 120, with other well-known examples including Deanery Garden in Berkshire and Hestercombe House in Somerset. Jekyll transformed the site over the years, first meeting Lutyens at Munstead Wood in 1889 when the collaboration began, and she lived there until her death in 1932. Prior to the sale to the National Trust, Munstead Wood was the vendors family home for more than 50 years, the owners over this time were Sir Robert Clark and Lady Clark who were responsible for the house and gardens regeneration to return it to its original concept.
Longcase clock, 20th Century, with an arched hood, the plain case with a door, on plinth base, with three train strike, St Michael/Westminster/Whittington, three brass weights and pendulum, 194cm high. Provenance: From Munstead Wood. The contents of the property are being sold by the former owners of the important country house which has now been purchased by the national trust. Munstead Wood is a Grade I listed house and gardens in Godalming Surrey. The garden was created by garden designer Gertrude Jekyll and became very well-known through her designs, and her books and articles in magazines such as Country Life. The Arts and Crafts style house was built for Jekyll and she lived there until 1932, Munstead Wood was designed by the architect Edwin Lutyens to compliment the garden with Jekylls influence on the original design. Munstead Wood was the first, and perhaps therefore the most important, collaboration between Jekyll and Lutyens in garden and house design. These collaborations number around 120, with other well-known examples including Deanery Garden in Berkshire and Hestercombe House in Somerset. Jekyll transformed the site over the years, first meeting Lutyens at Munstead Wood in 1889 when the collaboration began, and she lived there until her death in 1932. Prior to the sale to the National Trust, Munstead Wood was the vendors family home for more than 50 years, the owners over this time were Sir Robert Clark and Lady Clark who were responsible for the house and gardens regeneration to return it to its original concept.
French rosewood veneered campaign clock with boxwood marquetry inlay, the silvered dial signed C. F. Petit. A. Paris, the movement with silk suspension, striking the hours and half hours on a bell. H 17cm. Provenance: From Munstead Wood. The contents of the property are being sold by the former owners of the important country house which has now been purchased by the national trust. Munstead Wood is a Grade I listed house and gardens in Godalming Surrey. The garden was created by garden designer Gertrude Jekyll and became very well-known through her designs, and her books and articles in magazines such as Country Life. The Arts and Crafts style house was built for Jekyll and she lived there until 1932, Munstead Wood was designed by the architect Edwin Lutyens to compliment the garden with Jekylls influence on the original design. Munstead Wood was the first, and perhaps therefore the most important, collaboration between Jekyll and Lutyens in garden and house design. These collaborations number around 120, with other well-known examples including Deanery Garden in Berkshire and Hestercombe House in Somerset. Jekyll transformed the site over the years, first meeting Lutyens at Munstead Wood in 1889 when the collaboration began, and she lived there until her death in 1932. Prior to the sale to the National Trust, Munstead Wood was the vendors family home for more than 50 years, the owners over this time were Sir Robert Clark and Lady Clark who were responsible for the house and gardens regeneration to return it to its original concept. Condition Report: One handle support lacking
Laquered gilt wood mantle clock the dial signed Christ, H 31cm. Provenance: From Munstead Wood. The contents of the property are being sold by the former owners of the important country house which has now been purchased by the national trust. Munstead Wood is a Grade I listed house and gardens in Godalming Surrey. The garden was created by garden designer Gertrude Jekyll and became very well-known through her designs, and her books and articles in magazines such as Country Life. The Arts and Crafts style house was built for Jekyll and she lived there until 1932, Munstead Wood was designed by the architect Edwin Lutyens to compliment the garden with Jekylls influence on the original design. Munstead Wood was the first, and perhaps therefore the most important, collaboration between Jekyll and Lutyens in garden and house design. These collaborations number around 120, with other well-known examples including Deanery Garden in Berkshire and Hestercombe House in Somerset. Jekyll transformed the site over the years, first meeting Lutyens at Munstead Wood in 1889 when the collaboration began, and she lived there until her death in 1932. Prior to the sale to the National Trust, Munstead Wood was the vendors family home for more than 50 years, the owners over this time were Sir Robert Clark and Lady Clark who were responsible for the house and gardens regeneration to return it to its original concept.
Jaeger LeCoultre Electric mantle clock, asymmetrical brushed gilt metal case, silvered rectangular dial with oversized gilt batons for 12 and 6, model 5051, H 16.5cm. Provenance: From Munstead Wood. The contents of the property are being sold by the former owners of the important country house which has now been purchased by the national trust. Munstead Wood is a Grade I listed house and gardens in Godalming Surrey. The garden was created by garden designer Gertrude Jekyll and became very well-known through her designs, and her books and articles in magazines such as Country Life. The Arts and Crafts style house was built for Jekyll and she lived there until 1932, Munstead Wood was designed by the architect Edwin Lutyens to compliment the garden with Jekylls influence on the original design. Munstead Wood was the first, and perhaps therefore the most important, collaboration between Jekyll and Lutyens in garden and house design. These collaborations number around 120, with other well-known examples including Deanery Garden in Berkshire and Hestercombe House in Somerset. Jekyll transformed the site over the years, first meeting Lutyens at Munstead Wood in 1889 when the collaboration began, and she lived there until her death in 1932. Prior to the sale to the National Trust, Munstead Wood was the vendors family home for more than 50 years, the owners over this time were Sir Robert Clark and Lady Clark who were responsible for the house and gardens regeneration to return it to its original concept. Condition Report: Overall light domestic wear, the battery is flat, so the clock is not working at present.

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460315 item(s)/page