We found 41680 price guide item(s) matching your search
There are 41680 lots that match your search criteria. Subscribe now to get instant access to the full price guide service.
Click here to subscribe- List
- Grid
-
41680 item(s)/page
A Chinese Antique Ivory Lantern Shaped Inro. Inro type case with detachable chambers with attached seals / chops, carved to the body with a Luohan with a studant and the celesteral city amongst floating clouds with an incised fish scale ocean sea, bordered by a Greek key fret motifs, the seal stopper carved as a crouching eagle bird, circa 1760 / 80s, height 7 1/4 cm, please see accompanying image.
Metalware - a Victorian lantern with shade; three piece tea service;gallery tray; English School 19th century, Children and Companion at the Cave Mouth, oil on card, 14cm x 9.5cm, ornate gilt frame; a planished copper coal scuttle,circa 1900; an oak letter rack; a contemporary cuckoo clock; English School 19th century, Looking down the Lakeland Valley, oil on canvas40cm x 65cm;others still lives, fruit; Ceramics - a 19th century oriental bowl (af); other oriental blue and white bowls and vases; a Victorian jelly mould, etc
An original WWII Second World War ' Ministry Of Supply ' made Blackout lantern. Complete with burner to interior, and carry handle to top. Green enamel construction, with ' X ' shaped lenses to all sides. Largely used on Railways and Airfields by the ARP during the period. Measures approx; 44cm tall.
An Exceptionally Rare & Fine Powell & Lealand No.2 Binocular Microscope, English, dated 1869, signed in script to the top of the bar-limb ‘POWELL & LEALAND, 170 Euston Road, London’, of standard No.2 construction, standing on a large lacquered tripod base with rectangular feet each with cork pads, trunnions to the top supporting the body, with large plano-concave mirror to the base as typically supported on one side at the end of an articulated arm on a sliding collar, above which is the fully mechanical sub-stage with X & Y control via screw and rotation controlled through a crown and gear, with focusing via rack and pinion to the rear, with large Turrel-type mechanical stage with X-Y control, main course focus to rear of body, bar-limb incorporating fine focus lever mechanism, nose piece with prism blanking plate, limb with threaded boss to accept binocular or monocular tubes, the microscope comes with the following accessories in a fitted mahogany case: A 4in objective & can. A 2in objective & can. A 1in objective signed ‘POWELL & LEALAND’ & can. A 1/2in objective signed ‘POWELL & LEALAND’ & can. A 1/4in objective signed ‘POWELL & LEALAND’ & can. A 1/12in objective signed ‘POWELL & LEALAND’ & can A 2in Leiberkuhn. A 1/2in Leiberkuhn. An objective iris. A pair of low power eyepieces A pair of medium power eyepieces. A high power eyepiece with slot for micrometer. A high power eyepiece. A pair of eyepiece extension collars. A monocular bodytube. An eyepiece lucida. A substage spot lens. A substage Wenham-type parabolic condenser. An achromatic substage condenser signed ‘Powell & Lealand’. A substage darkwell holder and 3 darkwells. A substage polariser. An analyser. A substage set of 3 selenites in rotating frames. A brass frame holding Calcspar, Topaz & Aragonite. A brass frame holding Nitre, Quartz & Borax. A micrometer slide A Livebox. Stage forceps. A set of brass forceps. A leather case with a binocular prism engraved ‘Powell & Lealand N.44 PATENT’ A leather case with a binocular prism engraved ‘For Low Powers & Opaque Objects’ All in the original French polished mahogany cabinet with keys. Note: A handwritten note detailing many of the contents of the case with the owners(?) name to the other side ‘S. A. Pumphrey, 21 Paradise Street, Birmingham, Optician (My Magic Lantern). Pumphrey is recorded as supplying vulcanite cells to many microscope slide prepares including Frederick Enock who stated that he used only those cells.
Three early nineteenth century blue and white transfer printed large bowls, circa 1800-10. Included are: A Swansea Lantern Carrier bowl, a Turner Stag Hunt bowl and a Turner Man on a Bridge bowl. Bowls are 28 cm, 27 cm and 26 cm wide respectively. (3). Ex-Trevor Kentish collection. Condition: Swansea bowl: Cracked and rivetted, Stag Hunt cracked and chip to rim, Bridge bowl: chip to rim.
A gilt metal and glazed hexagonal hall lantern, late 19th/early 20th century, probably English or French, the scrolled ceiling supports with outswept acanthus descending to a tapering frame cast with wreaths and openwork circlets, on foliate cast feet; the interior with tubular stem suspending six light fitments, 105cm high, 60cm diameter
A gilt metal and glazed hall lantern in George III style, circa 1900, of serpentine outline, double scrolled ceiling supports descending to a rocaille and foliate cast frame inset with bowed panes, a single electrical light fitment within, 82cm high, 40cm diameter This lantern may have been inspired by the design popularised by Thomas Chippendale in The Gentleman and Cabinet-Maker's Director (1762 ed.), pl. 152.
Dennis Lyall (American, B. 1946) "30 Mile Point - Lake Ontario" Signed lower right. Oil on Illustration Board painting. Provenance: Collection of James A. Helzer (1946-2008), Founder of Unicover Corporation. This painting was originally published on the Fleetwood First Day Cover for the U.S. 32c Thirty Mile Point Lighthouse issued June 17, 1995. For more than 75 years, 30-Mile Point Lighthouse warned vessels on Lake Ontario of nearby shoals and sandbars with a beacon that could be seen 18 miles offshore. Built in 1875, this impressive gray stone structure stands within the confines of Gold Hill State Park -- 30 miles east of the mouth of New York's Niagara River. The most commanding feature of this lighthouse is its four-story tower which houses a 10-sided lantern room glazed with long, rectangular panes and topped with a reddish-orange metal roof. The quaint residence features 12-paned windows and peaked gables supported by decorative arches. In 1984 -- more than 25 years after 30-Mile Point Lighthouse was taken out of service -- the Niagara Frontier State Parks Commission signed a long-term lease for the property. Today, the keeper's dwelling holds a museum and the tower affords those who make the climb up its twisting staircase a breathtaking view of Lake Ontario and the lovely grounds of Gold Hill State Park. Even the room that once housed a foghorn has been converted for recreational use, as well as the lighthouse's surrounding land which has been turned into campsites. 30-Mile Point Lighthouse represents one of the many beacons on Lake Ontario. Image Size: 13.25 x 11.5 in. Overall Size: 16.25 x 14 in. Unframed. (B15036)

-
41680 item(s)/page