We found 47359 price guide item(s) matching your search
There are 47359 lots that match your search criteria. Subscribe now to get instant access to the full price guide service.
Click here to subscribe- List
- Grid
-
47359 item(s)/page
A group of late 19th/early 20th century English porcelain including a Royal Worcester coffee pot and cover in the Rosemary pattern, an Aynsley fruit-decorated vase and cover, Spode Imari finely painted with central decoration of a heron and further finely painted cartouches of birds to the exterior rim, a pink low pedestal dessert comport painted with roses, Flight Barr and Barr coffee cup and a Victorian part tea service decorated in yellow and grey etc (qty)
A quantity of Royal Doulton 'Royal Gold' H4980 dinnerware to include tea plates, side plates, soup bowls, large oval platter and a quantity of early 20th century Copeland Spode teaware decorated in Chinoiserie style with flora, to include cups, saucers, plates, cake plates, sugar bowl, teapot, milk jug etc (2). CONDITION REPORT Cutlery marks evident faintly to the plates, losses to one of the soup bowl rims. Wear to the rims of the tureens.
A group of English porcelains, 19th century, comprising; a chamber candlestick, painted with flowers on a gilt ground, 14cm high, a Copeland & Garrett breakfast cup and saucer gilt with flowers, a Copeland 'Japan' pattern bowl, a Spode coffee cup, a Coalport green ground tea cup and saucer, a Copeland green ground saucer, a London shaped 'Japan' pattern cup and saucer and a 'Japan' pattern plate (11).
SIR JAMES CLARK ROSS: A RARE PLATE FROM HIS PRIVATE SERVICE COMMEMORATING THE DISCOVERY OF MAGNETIC NORTH, 1ST JUNE, 1831 the rim with cartouche incorporating the family 'fox's head erased' crest next to a dip circle and Union flag inscribed in gilt 1st June 1831 , arsenic green field with gilt pie crust border, the reverse with maker's green transfer for Copeland & Garrett late Spode -- 9¼in. (23.5cm.) diam ~~*~~ Sir James Clark Ross (1800-1862) took part in four Arctic expeditions with Sir William Parry (1790-1855) between 1819 and 1827 and between 1829-1833 served on his uncle, Sir John Ross's (1777-1856) second Arctic expedition. It was during this latter voyage he led a small party that discovered magnetic north on 1st June, 1831. Magnetic dip was discovered towards the end of the 16th century but instruments to record it were developed quite late and it was only in the 1830s that Robert Were Fox (1789-1877) developed one that could be used as an aid to marine and polar navigation and Parry's must have been one of the earliest models used - a fact he recorded by proudly incorporating a depiction of one in his family crest.
SIR JAMES CLARK ROSS: A RARE PLATE FROM HIS PRIVATE SERVICE COMMEMORATING THE DISCOVERY OF MAGNETIC NORTH, 1ST JUNE, 1831 the rim with cartouche incorporating the family 'fox's head erased' crest next to a dip circle and union flag inscribed in gilt 1st June 1831 , arsenic green field with gilt pie crust border, the reverse with maker's green transfer for Copeland & Garrett late Spode -- 9¼in. (23.5cm.) diameter
A Spode small pot pourri basket and cover, c.1815, the oval form decorated in pattern 711 with colourful flowers on a gold ground, the domed cover pierced with small holes, iron red Spode mark and pattern number, one handle restuck, 11cm. (2) Cf. Bonhams, The Contents of Trelissick House, 24th July 2013, lot 580 for a pair of similar baskets.
-
47359 item(s)/page