XTC - Ace pack of 10 x 7" releases from the constantly underrated XTC. Titles are Making Plans For Nigel (VS282 with the free game insert), Are You Receiving Me (and double pack with Life Begins At The Hop), Chain Of Command (promo 7" that came with Drums And Wires), Wait Till Your Boat Goes Down (Dutch 101553), Generals And Majors (double), Towers Of London, Sgt. Rock (Is Going To Help Me) (with poster), Respectable Street, Love On A Farmboy's Wages (VS 613). Also to include the sleeve for the rare clear vinyl issue of Life Begins At The Hop (VS 259). Condition mostly Ex+
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SCOTTISH ARTISTS - Ace collection of 63 x 12" with LPs and 9 x 7" singles. Artists/titles include The Jesus And Mary Chain (x3) - Psychocandy (BYN 7 - Ex+/Ex w/inner), Just Like Honey and Never Understand, Orange Juice (x2), Skids inc. Days In Europa, Scared To Dance, The Absolute Game (double) and Fanfare, Blood Uncles, Simple Minds, The Tourists, The Bluebells inc. Sisters, The Waterboys, Bourgie Bourgie, Lloyd Cole And The Commotions, Zones - Under Influence and Fad Gadget. Condition is generally Ex to Ex+.
THE DIRTBOMBS - Shattering collection of 29 x 7" singles from the ever evolving Detroit band. Titles/pressings include Merit (all five sleeve designs; black, red, purple, blue and green), Brucia I Cavi (brown), Tina Louise (red and black), Rocket USA (limited to 250 copies), Maybe Your Baby, Crash Down Day, High Octane Salvation, Ode To A Black Man, Pray For Pills, Australian Sing A Long, Split/Split/Split, Earthquake Heart, Motor City Baby, Cedar Point 76, Brand New Game, Tanzen Gehn, Need You Tonight and Kelley Stoltz (w/Kelley Stoltz). Condition is Ex+ throughout.
THREE DINNER PLATES WITH RURAL SCENES: a "Game Keeper" dinner plate, 25.3cm, printed mark; a John Meir Fortune Teller dinner plate, 26.0cm, impressed crown mark; and a Fisherman's Hut dinner plate, 25.4cm, unmarked (3) Game keeper - several foot rim chips and one small rim chip Fortune Teller - heavily crazed and stained Fishermans Hut - light crazing with some staining
THE BADMINTON LIBRARY, Walsingham (Lord). Shooting, 2 vols, 1889; Phillips-Woolley (Clive), Game Shooting, 1894; Weir (Robert, Capt). Riding, 1920; Beaufort (Duke of). Driving, 1889; Beaufort (Duke of), Hunting, 1888; Cholmondley-Pennell (H), Fishing (Salmon & Trout), 1888, publisher's patterned boards, 8vo.
Morris (Beverley). British Game Birds and Wildfowl 60 wood-engraved plates printed in colours by Benjamin Fawcett and finished by hand, tissue guards, contemporary fine crushed morocco, slightly rubbed at extremities, gauffered edges, [Anker 345; Fine Bird Books p.125; Nissen IVB 644; Wood p.472], 4to, [1855].
A PAIR OF GREAT IRISH DEER ANTLERS. Approximately 290cm, some damageThe Giant Deer or 'Irish Elk' (Megaloceros giganteus) lived during the Pliocene, Pleistocene and Holocene epochs and survived the Great Ice Age, although the climactic changes following the Ice Age may have hastened its extinction. The latest known remains of the Irish elk have been carbon dated to about 5,700 B.C. The largest concentration of its remains have been found in Ireland, chiefly in the marl underlying bogland. These ancient antlers, many discovered in caves in Counties Waterford, Cork and Clare, have long been a feature of the Irish banqueting hall. An early recorded example of the Irish giant deer or 'Elk' antlers, of the type found around Cos. Waterford, Cork and Clare, was those sent in 1597 to Hatfield House, Hertfordshire. The Giant deer (or `Irish Elk') originated during the Pleistocene Period of the Great Ice Age and is thought to have initially colonised Siberia before migrating towards the west in response to the deteriorating climate. Although the Elk inhabited a vast expanse of central Europe and Asia, the largest concentration of its remains have been found mainly in the marl underlying bogland of Ireland giving rise to the popular nomenclature of this species. The high calcium carbonate content of the marl is conducive to the preservation of bones and examples of these ancient antler specimens have been discovered in Counties Waterford, Clare and Cork, many of them in caves. Many have featured in Irish banqueting halls following a centuries old tradition, particularly during the 19th century when it was fashionable for such antiquarian relics to be displayed in baronial halls. An instance of this is recorded in an 1850's interior drawing of the new manor at Adare, Co. Limerick (see J. Cornforth, English Interiors, 1790-1848, London, 1978, fig.51).A sketch recording one of the most celebrated examples of the extinct Giant Deer displayed at Rathfarnham Castle in the 1580's is preserved in the National Museum of Ireland (see A. Crookshank and the Knight of Glin, Irish Watercolours, London, 1994, pl.30). Records also exist of a pair of Antlers of this genus which were sent to Hatfield house, Hertfordshire in 1597.Related elk antlers include a pair which were presented to Sir Robert Peel by the people of Ireland, sold by The Earl Peel, Christie's London, 6 April 2000, lot 210 (£47,000) and another pair originally belonging to the Cobbe family of Newbridge, Co. Dublin sold anonymously in the same rooms, 10 April 2003, lot 45 (£57,360)John Guille Millais (1865-1831), an animal and bird artist, was the fourth son of Sir J. E. Millais. He travelled extensively in Iceland, Canada, America, Alaska and South Africa and published many natural history books including A Breath from the Veldt 1895, British Deer and their Horns 1897, The Wild Fowler of Scotland 1901 and American Big Game 1915.
A MIXED LOT: A rare Old Sheffield plated dish wedge, crested, a George III mote spoon, a salt spoon, a pair of close-plated sugar tongs and the following plated or plated mounted pieces:- A crumb scoop, a ham bone holder, five various forks, a pair of nips, an egg topper, a toffee/ice hammer and a set of eight small game skewers; the latter 4" (10 cms) long; 0.7 oz weighable silver (lot)
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