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Two late Victorian brass oil lamps comprising a foliate lamp with spiral column and pierced base, height including shade 81.5cm, and a fluted Corinthian column lamp with associated ruby glass shade, height 73cm. Additional InformationBoth shades in good condition, perhaps some minor wear to the edges. Lamps with general age wear, light marks odd scuff, minor scratch and polishing, but essentially fair.
MOORE BROS; a large ceramic oil lamp with applied floral decoration on an ivory ground with gilt highlights, printed marks to the underside, converted to electricity, over height 61cm.Additional InformationThere are vertical and horizontal cracks running through the piece, losses to the applied decoration, as stated the piece has been converted to electricity.
A VICTORIAN EBONISED POLICE TRUNCHEON AND A MINER’S LAMP (2)The truncheon with ‘VR’ cypher for Queen Victoria and gilt lettering reading ‘St Giles’s Hundd.’, 41 cm long; the miner’s polished brass and painted lamp incised to base ‘Newstead Colliery’, 24 cm high (excluding loop)St. Giles or (St. Giles’s) is an area east of Tottenham Court Road station, notorious prior to the mid-19th Century as a ‘rookery’ - a maze of slums, home to villains and misfits. After the police defeated a criminal gang in 1840 the area started to change, combined with the slum clearance bought by the development of New Oxford St. seven years later.
A PAIR OF GLASS AND GILT-METAL MOUNTED BALUSTER TABLE LAMPS (2)20th CenturyWith hobnail and faceted decoration, the bases with acanthus corner mounts and paw feet, 71 cm high.Condition Report:Lamp 1 - Small nibbles to the upper rim of the glass where it meets the fitting; two knocks to the glass base below the socle; wear to the gilding; two small holes to the base as seen in photograph.Lamp 2 - wear to gilding; gilt metal band loose; minor nibbles to the top of the glass.Both with very minor chips to the hobnail glass.
A rare group of Westacre Chinoiserie black lacquered dolls’ house furniture, wood and papier-mâché comprising a desk —2½in. (6.5cm.) high, a bureau bookcase with seventeen books (missing fold down desk), a desk top book stand with five books, a circular occasional table, a wall mirror, a wire standard lamp with paper shade (shade torn), a blotter, a bundle of envelopes and inkwell with quill - Westacre Village furniture was made in Castleacre near Kings Lynn in Norfolk after the World War One; it was started by Ysabel Birkbeck who lived at Westacre High House in Castleacre; simple materials were used: card, wire, beads, string, paper, fine Liberty fabrics, wool and paint.

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