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A silver-mounted enamel snuff box, 18th century, the sides finely painted with landscape scenes of buildings, one with a piper, the hinged lid with flowers and flying insects, the interior cover painted with the portrait of a lady leaning against a plinth, the silver mounts engraved with scrolling leaves, 8.5cm.
A Victorian silver snuff box, by Charles Rawlins & William Sumner, London 1839, rounded rectangular form, the cover with central vacant cartouche flanked by scene of a pointer and game birds on an intensely engraved rocaille ground of shells and scrolls, the sides with similar decoration, the base with a tiger slaying an antelope, the gilt interior engraved with a presentation inscription: "To Dr Cyner as a small acknowledgement of his Professional Skill & extreme kindness & sympathy in time of trouble from his very sincere and obliged friend I. W. Tully August 1857," length 9.4cm, together with an ebonised and silver-inlaid snuff box, with lattice and star decoration, length 8.2cm. (2)
A Victorian silver novelty pencil, by S. Mordan and Co, modelled as a champagne bottle, faded enamel label, 'Zoedone, non-alcoholic aerated iron beverage, brain and nerve tonic, sole manufacturer The Zoedone Co. Wrexham', with a ring attachment, length 4.5cm, approx. weight 0.5oz.
λA late 18th century gilt-metal mounted portrait snuff box, circular form, engraved borders, the pull-off cover with an oval portrait of a lady, with linear white, red and gold ground, tortoiseshell lined, diameter 8cm, plus a silver snuff box, of rectangular form, basket weave decoration, the inside of the hinged cover with a panel of a putto, goblet and urn, length 8.8cm. (2)
A Victorian novelty silver telescopic pencil, unmarked, probably by S. Mordan and Co, modelled as standing Ally Soper, with a ring attachment, length closed 5.3cm, approx. weight 0.8oz. Alexander "Ally" Sloper is the fictional character of the comic strip Ally Sloper. He is one of the earliest comic strip characters and he is regarded as the first recurring character in comics. Red-nosed and blustery, an archetypal lazy schemer often found "sloping" through alleys to avoid his landlord and other creditors, he was created for the British magazine Judy by writer and fledgling artist Charles H. Ross, and inked and later fully illustrated by his French wife Ιmilie de Tessier. The strips, which used text narrative beneath unbordered panels, premiered in the 14 August 1867 issue of Judy, a humour-magazine rival of the famous Punch.
An Edwardian Arts and Crafts silver quaich in the manner of The Guild of Handicraft, by Nathan and Hayes, Chester 1906, after a design by Charles Ashbee, circular form, elongated bifurcated wire-work handle, spot-hammered decoration, the centre set with a coin, length 19cm, approx. weight 5oz.
A George III silver plate, by Frederick Kandler, London 1766, circular form, gadroon border, engraved with two crests below a coronet, the underside with a scratch weight '17=3', diameter 24.5cm, approx. weight 16.4oz. The crest are probably those of De Grey and Robinson ensigned by an earl's coronet for George Frederick Samuel Robinson, Earl de Grey of Wrest and Earl of Ripon.
A George II silver salver, by James Morison, London 1758, circular form, scroll and shell border, the centre with an armorial, the reverse with a later presentation inscription, on three gnarl feet, diameter 29.8cm, approx. weight 24.9oz. The arms are those of Seward impaling Chesterfield.
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2475480 item(s)/page