James Bond - A large 1/8 scale Eaglemoss made precision diecast model of James Bond's Aston Martin DB5. Superbly detailed, the original spec for the model includes; working rear and front lights, working horn, ejector seat, accelerator sound effects, brake lights, light up map to interior, machine guns in lights, movable bullet proof rear screen, key ignition, rubber tyres etc. This particular model is unfinished, but does appear complete - including the yet fitted components, roof cover, electrics, Aston Martin cover and other unfitted items. Buyers are reminded to satisfy themselves as to completeness / working order prior to bidding. Once finished, these models make superb and impressive display pieces. Measures approx; 57cm long.
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Corgi: A boxed Corgi Toys, James Bond Aston Martin D.B.5, 270, with opened secret instructions and two bandits. Condition Report: one box end flap missing, box cellophane window is missing, ejector seat broken but present, bulletproof screen working, front machine guns partially working, ejector mechanism not working, rear windscreen cracked.
Marshall & Sons: An early 20th century, Marshall & Sons, Oxford St, Ripley, enamel sign, "Now Open, Marshall & Sons, Oxford St., Zoo Gardens, Large Outdoor Aviaries of English & Foreign Birds, Aquarium, Squirrel & Monkey House, Admission 1d Each, Teas Provided", also depicting a transfer print of a bird, snake, fish, and a monkey, by Chromo, Wolverhampton, measuring approx. 61cm x 53cm. Also includes a pair of stamps, "Telegrams: Marshall Zoo, Ripley, Derby" and "J. Marshall, Oxford Street, Ripley".History: The Marshall & Sons, Oxford St, Ripley, Zoo Gardens were opened in 1908 by John Marshall. Marshall and his family had a history of turning Ripley from a small market town into a busy town where they opened shops, businesses, a 1,000 seat cinema and ran a Turkish baths. The zoo stayed open until 1915 but closed due to food shortages for the animals.Condition Report: wear and damage around the edge of the sign, with nibbles, main body of the sign appears in good condition for age.Black and White Photo Credit: www.rdht.org.uk/oxford-street/
HENRY MOULE'S PATENT MECHANICAL DRY EARTH CLOSET In 1859, the Reverend Henry Moule of Fordington invented the first composting toilet after deciding that his family's cesspit had become intolerable. Moule discovered that dry earth, mixed with human waste, produced clean compost in just a few weeks. A religious man, Moule disapproved of the Water Closet. He felt it polluted God's rivers and seas and was a waste of God's nutrients contained in excrement, which should be returned to the soil. In 1873 Moule took out a patent on his design for a mechanical earth closet, which allowed human manure to be saved for return to the soil, without the owner having to endure the stink of the average privy. Dry earth or peat is put into the hopper at the back of the seat and a removable bucket placed below. When the handle is pulled, a small quantity of earth is spread on top of the human waste to reduce the smell and help it to decay. When the bucket is full the contents are dug into the garden.Henry Moule (1801-1880) the sixth son of George Moule, solicitor and banker, was born at Melksham, Wiltshire, on 27 January 1801, and educated at Marlborough Grammar School. He was elected a foundation scholar of St John's College, Cambridge, and graduated B.A. 1821 and M.A. 1826. He was ordained to the curacy of Melksham in 1823, and took sole charge of Gillingham, Dorset, in 1825. He was made vicar of St George's at Fordington in the same county in 1829, and remained there for the remainder of his life. For some years he undertook the duty of chaplain to the troops in Dorchester barracks, for whose use, as well as for a detached district of his own parish, he built in 1846, partly from the proceeds of his published ‘Barrack Sermons,’ 1845 (2nd edit. 1847), a church known as Christ Church, West Fordington. In 1833 his protests brought to an end the evils connected with the race meetings at Dorchester. Moule also wrote an important work, entitled ‘Eight Letters to Prince Albert, as President of the Council of the Duchy of Cornwall,’ in 1855, prompted by the condition of Fordington parish, belonging to the Duchy. In two letters in the Times of 24 February and 2 April 1874 he advocated a plan for extracting gas from Kimmeridge shale. He died at Fordington vicarage on 3 February 1880.
* Needlework. A 19th century French canapé back, hand-worked in polychrome threads in gros point on canvas, with beribboned floral swag, flanked by posies of roses, on a pale beige ground, enclosed by a floral and foliate border on a red ground, some areas of wear, with loss of stitching and canvas ground showing, especially to red stitching of border, some edgewear, and a couple of small holes in canvas towards one end, approximately 71 x 210cm (at widest points), together with a 19th century Aubusson tapestry canapé seat, depicting a floral centrepiece on a burgundy camaïeu ground, lightly faded, some pieces notched out of edges where previously used, aproximately 85 x 203cm (at widest points)Qty: (2)
1969 Investiture Chair, The Earl of Snowden and Carl Toms, a red painted beech and laminate elbow chair produced for the Investiture of the Prince of Wales the back gilt decorated with the Prince of Wales feathers and motto Ich Dien with a padded seat 77cm high, 4000 of these chairs were produced for the 1969 Investiture at Caernarfon Castle North Wales, together with an investiture cushion CONDITION REPORT: Manufactured by disabled workers at the Remploy factory in Bridgend, the chairs have beech wood frames with seats and backs constructed from preformed plywood, veneered in olive ash and stained in a vermillion red. The backs are embossed with the Prince of Wales’s feathers in gold leaf and the seats are upholstered in red Welsh tweed, using a stable dye that would not run onto the guest’s clothes in case of a Welsh downpour. The underside of the seat bears a Prince of Wales feathers stamp, the date and - obscured by the upholstery - individual handwritten numbering. The chairs were offered for sale after the ceremony and sold flat-packed for £12 each via a promotional advertising leaflet that encouraged guests to re-assemble the chairs for themselves The cushion is stained one tassel, some moth holes, seat cushion is stained, the chair is in used condition, scuffs to the paintwork, dents to the timber, no obvious breaks or repairs
A set of four red injected polycarbonate Gyza stacking dining chairs CONDITION REPORT: Front legs are 27.5cm apart at the top, 31.5cm apart at the bottom, measured on the inside edge, seat width is 38cm, outside edge at the bottom of the legs is 38.5 cm, no obvious breaks or repairs, surface scratches conversant with regular use.
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