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Robin Day - Hille Furniture - Form Group - A rare 20th Century retro vintage modular two seater sofa settee bench with teak panel coffee table to centre. Raised on a ebonised metal base with two single seat and backrest flanking a central coffee table. Complete with original lilac cushions. Measures 69cm x 218cm x 72cm
Robin Day - Hille Furniture - Form Group - A 20th Century retro vintage modular teak framed two seater sofa settee bench. Raised on a ebonised metal base with single seat and backrest adjacent a backless seat. Complete with original lilac cushions. Measures 69cm x 144cm x 72cm Note: Would of originally had a second backrest which is not present.
A George III mahogany concertina action folding card table, circa 1760, attributed to Paul Saunders, the hinged serpentine shaped top with moulded edge opening to inset baize playing surface, above a plain frieze, on acanthus and scroll carved reeded cabriole legs, terminating in scroll feet, 73cm high, 95cm wide, 47cm deep Provenance: A notable Private Collection, Channel Islands Previously sold Sothebys, London, Fine English Furniture, 10th February 1989, Lot 68.For a further near identical table see Christie's, South Kensington, 27th May 2010, Lot 74 (£7,500). The provenance of the table offered was Richard, 2nd Marquess of Westminster (d.1869) Fonthill, Wiltshire.The same distinctive leg design incorporating Roman acanthus wrapped cabochons and flutes, features on a number of pieces attributed to the Soho firm of cabinet makers and upholsterers established around 1751 by Paul Saunders in partnership with George Smith Bradshaw. Among these is a set of chairs delivered in 1757 to the 1st Earl of Leicester for Holkham Hall, Norfolk, illustrated in A. Coleridge, Chippendale Furniture, London 1968, pl.369, and a suite of furniture almost certainly supplied to Thomas, 3rd Viscount Weymouth, later 1st Marquess of Bath (1734-96), between 1757 and 1759 for Longleat, Wiltshire. The latter included eight armchairs and two sofas, of which two armchairs were sold by The Trustees of the Longleat Chattels Settlement: Christie's, London, 13th June 2002, lot 338. A serpentine sofa attributed to Paul Saunders was sold by the late Mr & Mrs Patrick Radford, Christie's, London, 22nd January 2009, lot 32. Several fine pieces of 18th century furniture are known incorporating concertina action hinges bearing the stamp 'H. TIBATS' including a related table in the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum. The stamp is almost certainly that of Hugh Tibats who is recorded in 1781 as a 'hinge and sash fastening maker, Bell St'. Hinges bearing this stamp from the same period include a pair of card tables supplied by Thomas Chippendale for the 5th Earl of Dumfries at Dumfries House, Scotland in 1759.
Ï’A Regency rosewood, coromandel banded and gilt metal mounted sofa table, circa 1815, the rectangular top with twin hinged leaves, above two frieze drawers and opposing frieze drawers, above tapering supports at each end, on outswept square tapering legs, terminating in acanthus cast feet and castors, 73cm high, 152cm wide (when open), 67cm deep Ï’ Indicates that this lot may be subject to CITES regulations when exported. Please see our Terms & Conditions for more information.
Ï’A Regency rosewood and satinwood crossbanded library table, circa 1815, in the manner of Gillows, the top with D-shaped ends, above two frieze drawers and two opposing frieze drawers, on tapering supports at each end, with moulded scroll feet terminating in brass castors, 74cm high, 153cm wide, 77cm deep Provenance: Court Lodge, Lamberhurst, Kent This table is conceived in the French antique manner promoted by Thomas Hope and illustrated in his London mansion museum guide, Household Furniture and Interior Decoration (1807). With its ‘Apollo’ Grecian-lyre trestles, the current table relates to sofa, writing and games tables popularised by Gillows in the first quarter of the 19th century. The solid tapering ‘Grecian’ trestle supports of the current table represent a departure from the more commonly seen ‘lyre’ or ‘spindle’ end supports. For a related rosewood writing table attributed to Gillows, see Christie’s, Important English Furniture, 29th November 2001, Lot 260 (£14,100). Ï’ Indicates that this lot may be subject to CITES regulations when exported. Please see our Terms & Conditions for more information.
A George II walnut and tapestry upholstered sofa, circa 1735, the arch shaped back above a pair of shaped scroll arms, the padded seat above a shaped frieze, fronted by tapering cabriole shaped legs surmounted by stylised foliate carved terminals and terminating in shaped pad feet, 109cm high, 165cm wide, 61cm deep Provenance: Property from a Private Collection, Wales

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