We found 2466194 price guide item(s) matching your search
There are 2466194 lots that match your search criteria. Subscribe now to get instant access to the full price guide service.
Click here to subscribe- List
- Grid
-
2466194 item(s)/page
Continental porcelain cutlery handles, possibly including Meissen, Berlin and French factories, a set of six knives with pistol grip handles, three knife and fork pairs, including one pair of silver, by Aaron Hadfield, Sheffield 1824, and four further (16)Provenance: The Bill Brown Collection of Antique Cutlery.
Porcelain-handled cutlery, comprising: six pairs of silver knives and forks, by Aaron Hadfield, Sheffield 1825, the Continental porcelain handles painted with coloured flowers, together with six knives, the porcelain handles painted with birds, insects and flowers, the blades inscribed 'Beach, Salisbury' (12)Provenance: The Bill Brown Collection of Antique Cutlery.
A Georgian silver and mother-of-pearl handled folding fruit knife and fork set, each with initials 'EH', 8cm long in a red leather slip case, a folding combination fruit knife and fork, the blade stamped 'T Gray', 9cm, four further folding forks, largest 9.5cm, and two further travelling knife and fork sets (8)Provenance: The Bill Brown Collection of Antique Cutlery.
A pair of painted tin urns and covers,19th century, each with a pair of gilt handles and japanned chinoiserie decoration of white birds in foliage on a brown 'wood grained' background, 30cm high (4)Termed 'Japanning', 'Japanware' or 'Tole', the industry grew up in Birmingham, Wolverhampton, Pontypool and Usk in the 18th century, with Pontypool and Usk specialising in imitating Japanese lacquer. The fashion lasted until the mid-19th century, when it was superseded by silver-plated wares.
A Russian silver box,marked K Fabergé with imperial warrant, Moscow, plain rectangular with columnar corners, a frieze of imperial eagles and anthemion leaves, and a Greek key border, the hinged cover repeated with Greek key border and classical leaf rim, gilt interior, 16.8cm long, 27oz
Violet, Duchess of Rutland (1856-1937)'THE PRINCE OF WALES 2 MONTHS OLD'Signed and inscribed with title and 'White Lodge' l.r., pencil and blue wash95 x 80mmViolet, Duchess of Rutland, was a bright star. Born to the daughter of the Earl of Crawford and Balcarres, Violet Rutland was one of the first exhibitors of both drawings in silver-point or pencil and sculptures at Sir Coutts Lindsay's new Grosvenor Gallery (opened by him in 1877), and she continued to exhibit throughout her life at all the major British galleries (including the Fine Art Society, the Royal Academy, and the New Gallery) as well as in France and the United States. She also published a selection of her portraits, in 1900, as 'Portraits of Men and Women'. A reviewer of an exhibition of her drawings at the Brook Street Art Galleries, London, in 1925, wrote: 'her style is particularly suited to the interpretation of feminine beauty and elegance'.
A fine presentation Scottish dirk,with decorative repoussé silver-plated mounts to leather sheath, basket weave bog oak hilt, topped with the City of Glasgow Crest and motto, to the back of the sheath stamped 'R. G. Lawrie, Glasgow, Edin.b and London', blade 27.5cmoverall 45cm,with companion knife and fork (3)
-
2466194 item(s)/page