We found 52452 price guide item(s) matching your search
There are 52452 lots that match your search criteria. Subscribe now to get instant access to the full price guide service.
Click here to subscribe- List
- Grid
-
52452 item(s)/page
Edwardian Period Sterling Silver Pocket Flask of Small Proportions and Plain Form, With Screw on Top. Hallmark London 1902, Maker Samuel Morden. Size 3 x 2 Inches - 7.5 x 5 cms + An Edwardian Period Sterling Silver Circular Hinged Patch Box with Interior Mirror. Hallmark Birmingham 1910, Diameter 2 x 2 Inches - 5 x 5 cms. Excellent Condition. Silver Weight 59.7 grams.
A Greek terracotta vase, possibly 7th-6th century BC, with spiral twisted handles and incised concentric bands, the associated conical lid with bird finial, 32.5cm high, together with a Greek terracotta Amphoriskos or flask, possibly Southern Italian Colonies c.350 BC, with painted decoration, 33cm high (a/f) (2)
A VICTORIAN SILVER MINIATURE SCENT FLASK The bottle form flask with all over embossed foliate decoration with hinged domed lid, (note no stopper) Chester hallmark for 1893, maker George Watts 45 mm high, gross weight approx. 23.7 grams Condition Report : Very good, no obvious damage repairs or dents, note lacking interior small glass stopper Condition reports are offered as a guide only and we highly recommend inspecting (where possible) any lot to satisfy yourself as to its condition.
An unusual 19th century silver plated hip flask and coin purse combination, of oblate form with hinged handle to top, the 'CA' monogrammed hinged door opening to reveal a red silk compartmentalised interior, screw top cap engraved with diamond registration mark reading 7th May 1880, approx. 10.5cm high to top of handle
A Victorian novelty silver-mounted double-ended glass scent flask, by John Harris, hallmarks London 1857, length 13cmNo major damage, 1 cap appears to have been repaired with a few splits on the bulbous edge, 1 glass screw-thread has a chip on the rim, general small nibbles on glass edges, gilding slightly rubbed, both caps have engraved monograms, hallmarks clear
A small George V silver pocket hip flask, with fitted leather sleeve, by J C Vickery, hallmarks Chester 1923, height 8cm, 2ozCorners and edges have a few dents, 1 bottom corner dent has a small split and opening along with a small patch of solder, light abrasions all over, screw cap and hinge working, hallmarks clear
A large Victorian silver and crocodile mounted clear glass hip flask, with screw-lock cap and removable beaker, by Andrew Barrett & Sons, hallmarks Birmingham 1892, height 18cmNo damage to glass, cap has a large dent, both silver-mounts have engraved initials, crocodile slightly cracked on edges, gilding in beaker is faded, hallmarks are quite rubbed
A Victorian silver-mounted clear glass hunting flask, tapered cylindrical form with screw-lock cap and removable flask with gilt interior, by William Summers, hallmarks London 1886, in fitted leather case, flask height 26cmNo damage or repair, cap and beaker foot have a few dents, both have engraved monogram, gilding still bright, hallmarks clear
A Victorian silver-mounted horn hunting flask, tapered cylindrical form, with silver screw-lock cap and foot, indistinct maker's marks, hallmarks London 1873, height 25cmCap has a dent to the side which has opened a small hole, several other small dents on cap and base, otherwise no damage, hallmarks are slightly rubbed
A quantity of cut and pressed glass ware, to include two decanters and stoppers, a large hip flask shaped decanter and stopper, pineapple shaped vase, jugs, bowl, approximately 28 matching champagne glasses, wine glasses, brandy glasses, three moulded glass ashtrays, a lilac glass horse head ornament, another ornament modelled as a stylised bird, etc
A Victorian silver cornucopia Scent Bottle, Chester 1895, a similar Scent Bottle in glass with brass mounts, a ceramic willow pattern Scent Flask with silver lid, a ruby flashed glass Scent Bottle and two others, a Walnut Necessaire containing thimble and a travel Inkwell formed as suitcase with umbrella
A Roman amber glass flask Circa 3rd-4th Century A.D.The elongated mould blown body with slender vertical ribs and rounded indented base, with dark blue trail handles, an encircling band of trail beneath the flaring mouth, 27.3cm highFootnotes:Provenance:Giorgio Sangiorgi (1886-1965), Rome, acquired and brought to Switzerland; and thence by continuous descent.Ancient Glass formerly in the G. Sangiorgi Collection; Christie's, New York, 3 June 1999, lot 193. Private collection, USA, acquired from the above sale.Such vessels may have contained caroenum, a wine sauce frequently used to sweeten Roman dishes.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Late Roman pale green glass wheel-engraved flask Probably Egypt, circa 4th-5th Century A.D.With cut-off rim on a funnel neck, the elongated ovoid body with wheel-abraded decoration of two birds, probably Chukar partridges, flanked by a flowering shrub and a tree, set on a conical foot with a hollow-tubular base-ring, 23cm highFootnotes:Provenance:Herbert James Powell Bomford (1896-1979) collection, London.The Property of H. J. P. Bomford, Esq.; Sotheby's, London, 3-4 July 1978, lot 57. with Sheppard and Cooper Ltd, London (An Exhibition of Roman and Pre-Roman Glass, 9-25 November 1978, no. 57).Anonymous sale; Sotheby's, London, 12 December 1988, lot 34.with Asprey Antiques Ltd., London. Private collection, USA, acquired from the above 7 Mary 1997.For a flask of similar form with simple bands of wheel-cut decoration, dated to the 4th-5th Century, cf. D. Whitehouse, Roman Glass in the Corning Museum of Glass, vol. 3, New York, p.157, fig. 1167. The above lot and the Corning flask belong to a group of wheel-abraded footed flasks from the Eastern Mediterranean which include the 'Highdown Goblet'. This finely decorated glass goblet showing a hunting scene, with a Greek inscription, originated from Egypt but was discovered in a 5th Century Anglo-Saxon grave at Highdown Hill in Sussex, indicating distant trade and Roman contact. Partridge motifs are also seen on Coptic textiles, such as a similar woven representation of a partridge on a 4th-5th Century Coptic panel in the Victoria and Albert Museum, acc. no. 1265-1888. The stylised plants depicted on the flask are also reminiscent of Coptic textile designs.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman amber glass date flask Circa 1st-early 2nd Century A.D.The body blown into a two-part mould to resemble the wrinkly skin of the fruit, with opaque white glass on the interior of the mouth, with short cylindrical neck and a partially flared rim, 6.5cm highFootnotes:Provenance:with Merrin Gallery, New York. Private collection, USA, acquired from the above 18 February 1992.It is suggested that such bottles may have held scented oils or medicines. Apicius II and Pliny mention the date fruit being used both in cooking and as a medicinal ingredient. Its form symbolises sweetness and these bottles may also have served as funerary offerings as they have been found in tombs of women and girls. For a full discussion on the technique, date, distribution, function and interpretation of date-flasks, see E. Marianne Stern, The Toledo Museum of Art, Roman Mold-blown Glass, the First through the Sixth Centuries, Toledo, 1995, pp. 91-4, 172-80, nos. 84-107.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman pale blue-green glass feeder flask Circa 2nd-3rd Century A.D.With folded rim, cylindrical neck and bird-shaped body drawn to a perforated point, with a pinched crest along the top of the body, 8cm highFootnotes:Provenance:Anonymous sale; Christie's, London, 11 June 1997, lot 212. Private collection, USA, acquired from the above sale.Although often described as feeder flasks, these vessels are likely to have been used as lamp-fillers. There is another example of a flask of similar proportions in the Metropolitan Museum, New York, acc. no.74.51.80. This example is more unusual due to the pinched crest on the back of the body.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
Two Roman green glass flasks Circa 2nd-4th Century A.D. Comprising a glass conical flask, with rounded shoulders and funnel mouth, 18.5cm high; and a glass flattened spherical flask, with folded rounded rim, the short cylindrical neck slightly constricted where it joins the body, 11.5cm high (2)Footnotes:Provenance:Conical flask: with Fortuna Fine Arts Ltd, New York, 4 September 1991. Flattened spherical flask: with Antiquarium Ltd, New York, 6 December 1990.Private collection, USA, acquired from the above.For a flask of similar conical form in the Louvre see V. Arveiller-Dulong & M.-D. Nenna, Les Verres Antiques du Musée du Louvre, Paris, 2005, p. 416, fig. 1151.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

-
52452 item(s)/page