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Blue tinted press-moulded glass goblet, 14cm high and a modern glass footed bowl of blue tint, 26cm diameter and a small copper coloured Carnival glass jug (3) Condition ReportBlue goblet: some wear to the rim and small green stain/mark inside the goblet. Small jug: small chip to base and small chip/scuff to the handle.Large bowl: some small scratches to base, otherwise in good condition.
Various items of 20th century glassware to include a frosted bowl of shaped oval form with smokey blue inclusions, 36cm diameter, a flared trumpet-shaped vase of orange tint, on a spreading foot and a clear glass vase of tear-shape, engraved with leaf ornament (3)Condition ReportSmall vase: some small scratches to main body, some scratches/wear to the rim.Orange trumpet vase: scratches and several small chips to base. 3cm cut/chip at bottom of vase near base and a few scratches to main body. 1cm mark/discolouration inside rim. Blue frosted bowl: some scratches to base and under side. Some general wear and scratches inside bowl.
A silver-topped ebony cane, Birmingham 1926, to/w a silver photograph frame, Victorian cut glass bowl with electroplated domed cover and base, various silver flatware, etc.Ebony cane - 91.5 cm long. Silver pommel significantly dented.Wine bottle coaster - silver plate. No crestPhotograph frame - 21.5 cm x 16.3 cm. London 1993, small dents and a few scratches to the frame.Ivory handle to the trowel - silver plated and splits in ivory.
A partial suite of drinking glasses, each having diamond cut round funnel bowl, faceted baluster stem with air bubble, conical star cut foot, comprising: Five goblets 17.5 cm high, six tumblers 11.5 cm high, six sherry 14.2 cm high, three port 13.5 cm high and five liqueur to/w two heavy cut glass decanters and six finger bowls (33)No chips or cracks to the drinking glasses and bowlsChip to the end of one decanter stopper and small chips to both rims and bodies
A Three-Piece Elizabeth II Silver-Mounted Black Glass Table Garniture, The Silver Mounts by Broadway and Co., Birmingham, the bowl 2006, the vases 2010, each with plain silver mounts, the vases in cardboard boxes and filling, the bowl 23cm diam., the vases 27.5cm high (3). Each marked on silver mounts. The marks are clear. In 'as new' condition. The boxes with some scuffing.
A George V Silver Dressing Table-Service, by George Betjemann and Sons, London, 1920, with design registration number Rd. No. 541493, comprising: a set of four silver-mounted fluted glass bottles, a pair of circular small pot, two silver-mounted cut-glass bowls; two nail buffers; a quantity of silver-mounted or steel implements, some lacking or replaced, and a cut-glass bowl, all contained in a satinwood dressing-table, the table 84.5cm high The firm of George Betjemann and Sons can be traced back to 1851 when the business was established in Clerkenwell making dressing cases (see J. Culme, The Directory of Gold and Silversmiths, Woodbridge, 1996, vol. 1, pp. 43-44). By the beginning of the 20th century one of the firms specialities was dressing-tables such as the present example, indeed they were described as '... one of the few firms possessing the necessary machinery for putting a log of wood in at one end of the factory and turning out a highly finished dressing case at the other.' (Stationery Trades Journal, 31 January 1894, as quoted op cit. p. 44). Examples similar to the present example include one marked for 1925 sold Christie's, South Kensington, 1 April 2014, lot 184 and another of the same date sold Bonhams, 21 November 2012.
Liberty & Wilkes; a Georgian engraved opaque twist political wine glass, the ogee bowl engraved with a bird flying out of a cage and inscribed "Liberty & Wilkes", on a double series stem and conical foot, 5½in (14cm) high. Note: In 1757, John Wilkes was elected as MP for Aylesbury. In 1762, George III arranged for his friend the Earl of Bute to become Prime Minister. Bute was widely held to be incompetent and Wilkes emerged as his leading critic in the House of Commons. In June of 1762, Wilkes published The North Briton, a newspaper attacking the King and his Prime Minister. After one article which appeared in April 1763, the King and his ministers decided to prosecute Wilkes for libel. He was arrested but the Lord Chief Justice ruled that as an MP he was protected by privilege from arrest. His discharge was greeted with popular acclaim and Wilkes left the court as a champion of liberty.
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87309 item(s)/page