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William and Mary walnut and upholstered three seater wingback settee, circa 1920's, later covered in red fabric with a coat of arms, the padded arms with scrolled facings enclosing three loose seat cushions, legs with S scroll stretchers, H118 x W182 x D76cms, together with a William and Mary style oak stool, the circular upholstered drop-in seat on column turned legs joined by stretchers, H52 x Diam 48cmsCondition Report: Joints loose
From The Estate Of Bill Owen (1914-1999) - Last Of The Summer Wine - Bill Owen's production made Cast / 'Director's' chair, as used daily on-set by Owen during filming of the classic BBC sitcom during the late 1990s. Wooden construction, with blue fabric seat and backrest with white 'Bill Owen' text to the rear. It is well documented in on-set photographs and videos that the main cast were issued with chairs of this type, with this one being the final made for Owen before his death in 1999. The chair was then passed to his son Tom Owen (who would appear in the series after Bill's death as his fictional son Tom Simmonite). Tom Owen used this chair in honour of his father during many theatre productions, and there are photographs documenting it's use in many of Tom's personal scrap books (also included within this auction). The chair exists in used but generally very good condition. A unique and special piece of Last Of The Summer Wine history.
PAUL DE LAMERIE (1688-1751): A GEORGE I SILVER SHAVING MIRROR makers mark of Paul de Lamerie, London 1727, of shaped oval form retaining the original mirror plate, in a moulded border, on simple scroll feet, the top of the frame engraved with the crest of James Medlycott (died 1731) the back in walnut with a simple silhouette baluster strut secured by the original shaped silver hinges, 33cm high Provenance: James Medlycott (1658-1731) of Ven House, Milborne Port, SomersetThomas Medlycott, son of the aboveThomas Hutchings, nephew of the aboveSir William Coles Medlycott (1767-1835), son of the aboveSir William Medlycott (1806-1882)Sir William Medlycott (1831-1887)Sir Edward Medlycott (1832-1902)Sir Mervyn Medlycott (1837-1908)Sir Hubert Medlycott (1841-1920)Sir Christopher Medlycott (1907-1986)Sir Mervyn Medlycott (1947-2021)and thence by descent.Note: It is fitting that Medlycott employed the leading silversmith of his generation for his personal shaving mirror. Having made a fortune as a lawyer and Master in Chancery, Medlycott purchased a seat in Parliament and set about building one of the most beautiful late Baroque houses in the kingdom, Ven House at Milborne Port. The house remained in the Medlycott family until the mid-20th century when many of the contents were transferred to the Medlycott's other seat at Sandford Orcas Manor.Paul de LameriePaul de Lamerie's parents were Huguenots, who probably left France for religious reasons in the early 1680's. After serving as an apprentice to a London goldsmith, Pierre Platel, de Lamerie registered his mark and established his own workshop in 1712. The wide range of styles represented during de Lamerie's 40 year career could not have been made, or even designed, by one individual, but there are some consistent features in quality and "trademarks", such as the fact that his workshop continued to use the higher Britannia standard of silver alloy for some 12 years after it ceased to be compulsory. He supplied clients as far afield as Russia and America, but for the most part his clients at home were not members of the aristocratic elite. Although he was appointed Royal Goldsmith in 1716, his mark does not appear on any Royal plate. Indeed, most of his clients were prosperous landowners and members of the Whig ascendency, much like James Medlycott. After his death in 1751, the obituary which appeared in the "London Evening Post" spoke of de Lamerie as "particularly famous in making fine ornamental Plate, and .... very instrumental in bringing that Branch of the Trade to the Perfection it is now in".
A PRIMITIVE WELSH ELM AND ASH COMB BACK ARMCHAIR late 18th century, the shaped cresting rail over a 'lobster-pot' spindle back, to a slab seat retaining residual iron-red paint, on splayed block legs joined by an "H" stretcher, 107cm high x 54cm wide x 48cm deepProvenance: Acquired in Wales in the 1960'sA private collection of Folk Art, Bath.
A Mid XX Century Swedish Lounge Chair, in the manner of Yngve Ekstrom, with black leather seat, back and headrest.Black button missing to seat, chair frame needs tightening up, been strengthened with new round head screws, and brackets, impressed name SWEDES? letter hidden by bracket, number 8 underside of arms.
A XVII Century Joined Oak Stool, the top with moulded edge and lunette carving to frieze, on turned and block supports united by stretchers, 53cm high.Repair just under the seat, to block support, the legs have old worm to supports and stretchers and are badly worn. The joints aren't solid, stand evenly.
Pride mobility scooter 4MPH. A good scooter and was used sparingly for only one year. From a local deceased estate. Folds down and fits in the boot of most cars. Has a detachable battery box so it is easy to charge it comes with a crutch holder and all the hand books. the seat comes of and the tiller folds down for easy storage and transport. Sold without reserve. Please note that buyers premium is the standard 25% plus VAT (total 30% inc VAT) on this lot. To satisfy your knowledge of the vehicles condition please come down to our viewing days as follows before the auction on day on 8th December. Saturday 2nd December: 10am - 2pm, Monday 4th December: 9am - 5pm, Tuesday 5th December: 9am-7pm, Wednesday 6th December: 9am-5pm, and Thursday 7th December: 9am-5pm.
2009Audi S5 S-Line Special Edition 2.7 TDi Coupe. Black coachwork. Full S-Line Special Edition specification with black leather upholstery, CVT automatic gearbox, air-conditioning, leather multi-function steering wheel, Iso-Fix child-seat anchor pointsand electric adjustment front seats. Local keeper for the last 11 years. 114,000 miles from new. Comes with service history (Audi main dealer until 80,000 miles), V6 and 3 x remote locking key fobs. Smart executive comfort. MOT expires 1st February 2024. Please note that buyers premium is 10% plus VAT (total 12% inc VAT) on all cars and motorbikes, subject to a minimum of £100 plus VAT. To satisfy your knowledge of the vehicles condition please come down to our viewing days as follows before the auction on day on 29th September. Saturday 16th September: 10am - 2pm, Monday 18th September: 9am - 5pm, Tuesday 19th September: 9am-7pm. And the week of 25th September 9am to 5pm.
A unique piece of furniture that has been hand made from old tree roots. It has been beautifully sculpted and highly polished with a lacquer finish. There is a marble insert in the seat. Due to the content and density of the wood used in this chair it is extremely heavy.. H: 108cm W: 110cm D: 87cm
MR. SMITH GOES TO WASHINGTONInsert (14" x 36")Fine+ on Paper Columbia, 1939Offered in this lot is the scarce insert poster for this film, printed on the glossy paper stock Columbia Studio used in those days. Restoration has corrected fold wear with extra creasing, plus border wear with chipping and some pinholes in the upper center. Now on paper, the poster presents beautifully.Frank Capra directs James Stewart in one of his most beloved roles as Jefferson Smith, a naive young man appointed to fill a vacant Senate seat. He quickly learns the realities of Washington politics when he befriends a cynical reporter, played by Jean Arthur, and goes up against a political machine led by his personal hero, another senator, played by Claude Rains. An honest man in a sea of corruption, Smith's simple goodness and integrity ultimately win the day.This lot will be auctioned on Thursday, December 7th. The auction will begin at 9:30am PST and lots are sold sequentially via live auctioneer; tune in to the live streaming broadcast on auction day to follow the pace. Note other lots in the auction may close on December 8th.
SPIRITED AWAYJapanese B2 (20.25" x 28.75")Mint Rolled Toho, 2001Destined to be an enduring classic, paper from this film is always in high demand, especially country-of-origin paper like the stunning rare advance rolled Japanese B2 offered here, known as the "back seat style," which pictures Chihiro from the very beginning of the film, before her adventures in the world of the kami. This poster is in mint condition showing no signs of being used or displayed. It shows only the most minimal signs of handling.One of the greatest films to emerge from the mind of creator Hayao Miyazaki, Spirited Away (2001) is a true masterwork. About a ten-year-old girl who enters the world of the kami (Japanese spirits from Shinto folklore) when her parents are transformed into pigs by the witch Yubaba, the story touches on themes of environmentalism (a significant theme in Miyazaki's work, the need to reconnect with traditional Japanese culture, and the perils of greed and Western consumerism. The movie made 1.6 billion yen in its first three days of release. It topped the Japanese box office for eleven weeks, eventually grossing over 32 billion yen, making it the highest-grossing film in Japanese history. This lot will be auctioned on Friday, December 8th. The auction will begin at 9:30am PST and lots are sold sequentially via live auctioneer; tune in to the live streaming broadcast on auction day to follow the pace. Note other lots in the auction may close on December 7th.
A matched set of ten George III mahogany dining chairs, last quarter 18th century, in the manner of Gillows, including two carvers, each with a pierced rectangular trellis and rosette back surmounted by a tablet carved with harebells, above a padded seat embroidered with later needlework, on turned tapering legs with toupie feet, the carvers stamped F.T, the side chairs stamped A.F (10)Footnotes: Note: These chairs correspond to Gillows’ 'Garforth pattern', which first appeared in 1795 and was probably an adaptation of Georges Jacob's design of circa 1792 for Marie-Antoinette's dairy at Rambouillet. They appear to have been particularly popular among the genteel, professional and merchant classes in the north of England and Gillows' produced versions of this design in mahogany and also with japanned decoration. In 1796 the Earl of Strafford purchased six white and green japanned chairs for Wentworth Woodhouse, and Sir William Gerard ordered thirty-six mahogany chairs for Garswood New Hall, Lancashire. While the design featured a round or 'compass-fronted' seat (see the set of twelve sold anonymously, Christie’s, London, 29 April 2010, lot 86, £46,850 including premium) they were also made with a more conventional square seat. The design was adopted by the influential architect/designer Sir John Soane (d. 1837). He commissioned the set of twenty 'mahogany trellis chairs' for the Governor’s Room at The Bank, supplied in 1809 by the cabinet-maker David Bruce (d. 1823) of Aldersgate Street, London (see M. Jourdain, 'Early 19th-Century Furniture at the Bank of England’, Country Life, 3 October 1947, p. 676, fig. 2). Soane owned a pair of armchairs of the Bank design at his own home at Lincoln’s Inn Fields, now the Soane Museum, and adapted the design for a set of dining-chairs supplied by John Robins in 1821. Robins' invoice described these as 'trellis back chairs moulded & Paneled [sic] seats French stuffed covered with black Spanish Morocco red welts [and] stout turned feet to pattern’.
A Regency simulated walnut stool, first quarter 19th century, parcel gilt, with blue silk upholstered seat above carved giltwood frieze, on ring turned column to three splayed legs and brass paw feet, 48cm high, 33cm wide, 33cm deepCondition Report: scratches and knocks throughout, some loss of paint, structurally sound, overall good condition
A Victorian armchair by Howard and Sons, third quarter 19th century, on turned walnut feet to castors, stamped Howard and Sons, London, to each castor and stamped 18073, 7839, to back left footCondition Report: scratches and knocks to feet, black ink stain to seat and a few marks here and there otherwise upholstery is good, structurally sound, overall very good condition
An American walnut armchair, 19th century, the splat back to needlework upholstered drop in seat, the arms carved with eagle head terminals, on carved cabriole legs to ball and claw feet Condition Report: split to top of back, heavily polished, some repairs and replacements where the seat sits, structurally sound
A pair of north Italian walnut 'Sgabello' chairs, 19th century, in the 17th century style, each with carved shield shape backs above moulded seat, on bifurcated legs carved with acanthus leaves and dolphin heads, 96cm high (2)Condition Report: both with scratches, stains and old gouges throughout, one with large splits to seat and repair to side of back, the other with similar repair to back, structurally sound, overall good condition
DIAMOND TIARA, KNOWN AS 'THE ROCKINGHAM TIARA', CIRCA 1900The openwork scrolls with knifewire detail, graduating in size towards the centre, millegrain-set with old-brilliant, rose-cut and cushion-shaped diamonds, surmounted by a graduating series of articulating links of openwork quatrefoil motifs, similarly-set with old-brilliant, rose and single-cut diamonds with collet-set cushion-shaped and old brilliant-cut diamond spacers between, converting to a bracelet, mounted in gold and platinum, later rhodium plating, diamonds approximately 12.05 carats total, one diamond deficient, tiara inner circumference 30.5cm, bracelet length 17.5cm, accompanied by a screwdriver, cased by HennellFootnotes:Provenance:Sir Cecil William Francis Stafford-King-Harman, 2nd Baronet (1895–1987), thence by descent;Woolley & Wallis, 30th October 2008, lot 1957Sir Cecil William Francis Stafford-King-Harman was an Anglo-Irish landowner and soldier. He was born Cecil Stafford, the second son of Sir Thomas Stafford, 1st Baronet and his wife, Frances Agnes, daughter of Edward King-Harman. In 1933, Cecil added his mother's surname to his father's. His elder brother, Edward Charles Stafford-King-Harman, was killed in the First World War.Cecil graduated from Oxford, receiving an M.A. in agriculture in 1922. He married Sarah Beatrice Acland, daughter of Alfred Dyke Acland. Their son, Thomas Edward Stafford-King-Harman (1921–1944) was killed in the Normandy Campaign. Their daughters were MI6 agent, Joan Stafford-King-Harman (1918–2018) and artist Ann Stafford-King-Harman (1919–1969).The Rockingham Estate in the north of County Roscommon, was the seat of the King family, Earls of Kingston and latterly, the Stafford-King-Harmans. Designed by John Nash, Rockingham was sadly devastated by fire in 1957, while Sir Cecil was at Doncaster Racecourse. Lacking the funds to rebuild the house, Sir Cecil sold the remaining estate of 2,400 acres at auction in 1959. It was bought by the Land Commission and much of it is now Lough Key Forest Park.Please note, this lot has VAT at a preferential rate of 5% on the Hammer Price and VAT at the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.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
English School, early 19th century - Oil on canvas - Portrait of James Fussell of Bristol, Linen Merchant, depicted full-length with seated spaniel beside a garden seat in a landscape, with printed and handwritten City of Bristol document verso 'The Oath of Burgess' naming James Fussell Linen Merchant and pledging allegiance to George III on 3rd May 1809, 31cm x 19.5cm, in swept gilt frame See https://willsdb.gukutils.org.uk/GLS/WillsF.htmlFUSSELL, James - of the City of Bristol, linen merchant, 30 Aug 1821. wife Susanna [1]; dwelling house in Somerset Street in the parish of St James in the county of Gloucester, in the suburbs of Bristol; partner in the firm of Messrs. PARSONS, HURLE and Company. Trustees: William PLUMMER and John HURLE the younger, both linen merchants of Bristol; children Mary Flower FUSSELL, Susan Flower FUSSELL, James Flower FUSSELL[2], and Thomas Flower FUSSELL; deceased brothers: Thomas and Robert FUSSELL; wife and trustees to be execs. Witnesses: William CLARKE, n.p., William CLARKE (his son), Richard BAYLIS, all of Bristol. Probate granted at London 7 Jun 1825 to the executors. TNA Ref: PROB 11/#1700, Image 103. Notes: [1] Testator married Susanna FLOWER at Westbury-on-Trym, Gloucestershire on 14 Dec 1809; she was a granddaughter of the famous Bristol potter Joseph FLOWER, and died in 1840. [2] James Flower FUSSELL (1819-1840) became a solicitor in Bristol, married and had children
Set of twelve (10 + 2 arm) 'Country Chippendale' style mahogany dining chairs, principally early 19th century, each with humped top rail and pierced vase splat over tan hide drop-in seat on square tapered front supports and H-stretcher, (12)Purchased from Andwells Antiques Ltd., 30 October 2003, sales invoice no. 16637, “Set of 12 (10 + 2) Geo. “Chippendale Dining Chairs with pierced splat backs (including 2 later copies), mahogany c. 1770 £10,000
Late 17th century and later walnut cane-seated high back side chair, with foliate scroll cresting and cane back between foliate carved panels and barley twist uprights, over further foliate carving to the seat enclosing caned panel, raised on blocked and barley twist supports united by foliate carved front stretcher and conforming barley twist stretchers, 50cm x 53cm x 112cm high
Late 17th century and later walnut cane-seated high back open armchair, with foliate scroll cresting and cane back between barley twist uprights, the caned seat between leaf-capped slightly outscolled arms, on blocked and barley twist supports with conforming H-stretcher, 62cm x 55cm x 112cm high
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