We found 77111 price guide item(s) matching your search
There are 77111 lots that match your search criteria. Subscribe now to get instant access to the full price guide service.
Click here to subscribe- List
- Grid
-
77111 item(s)/page
Stereoscopic Cards, genre and historical, Elliott and others (12), hold to light including genre (6), services pensioners, possibly Chelsea or Greenwich, or Waterloo (1), still life including carte de visite album and stereoscopic daguerreotype (1), Crystal Palace statue (1), topographical including Hampton Court, Kingston and drilling soldiers (26), 1860s, P-G (47)
A 1973 Jaguar E-Type Series III V12 2+2 automatic coupé, registration number HVG 889L, chassis number 1S51837BW, engine number 7S8308 SA, Azure blue. The Series III was the last of the line of Jaguar's illustrious E-Type family. The new car featured the mighty V12 engine producing 272 bhp, which in turn enabled the Jaguar to have a top speed in excess of 135 mph, and a 0-100 mph time of around 16 seconds which made the V12 the fastest accelerating production E-Type. This example, a matching numbers 2+2 automatic coupé has had what can only be described as a very subdued life. The Jaguar was originally supplied by Lex Motors, Chelmsford, Essex, to its first owner, D L Iszatt and carried the registration number BHK 13L. Doctor Iszatt would retain ownership until 1976, whereupon the Jaguar would pass into the ownership of the Kidney Family. The Jaguar went into storage in 1978 and would remain there until 1999. During 1999 the E-Type was re-sprayed in its original colour of Azure blue and the car was MOT'd (recorded by odometer mileage of 6,839 miles). The Jaguar was then used for 90 miles before going back into storage until 2017. It is assumed that the original number plate was changed in 1999 to its current HVG 889L. In 2017 the E-Type was re-commissioned by Qprep, a Jaguar specialist to obtain an MOT at a cost of nearly £2,000. There is a letter on file stating that they felt that the E-Type had covered a genuine low mileage due to its still retaining all of its original components including the original tyres! Further re-commissioning has been carried out by our vendor this year, including a brake overhaul, with new discs, all hoses have been replaced, new suspension bushes throughout, new ball joints and numerous other components, at a cost of nearly £4,000. Since then the Jaguar past its MOT in June this year without any advisories. The E-type is very original with a beautifully patinated dark blue leather interior. There is a Webasto full length sunroof fitted for those sunny days and the car sits on period correct steel wheels. On our inspection for the catalogue photographs, the odometer read 6,920 miles (which will increase slightly) and the Jaguar started instantly showing excellent oil pressure and sounded in fine fettle. The history file only contains one previous MOT from 1999 (mileage - 6,839). The two recent MOTs, parts invoices from S N G Barratt, the aforementioned letter from Qprep, their invoice for the re-commissioning work, further re-commissioning invoices, HPI certificates, an owner's handbook and maintenance chart. V5C, MOT to June 2019, tax exempt See illustrations
Stuart Armfield (1916-2000) Still life of artichokes, gourds, corn cobs, black grapes and red peppers on a wooden table, Signed, tempera on board, 59.5cm by 121cm Born in Sanderstead, Surrey, Armfield studied at the West of England College of Art, Bristol. From 1935-40 he was on the art staff of Ealing Studios. His career started in the film industry in Paris and it was here from his cousin Maxwell Armfield that he learned the tempera technique for which he was renowned. He later wrote the manual ''Tempera Painting''. Following his move to Cornwall in 1942, Armfield became a professional artist exhibiting at the Royal Academy and with the St Ives Society of Artists. Armfield lived in Polperro, Looe and eventually Plymouth. Armfield was a Quaker pacifist and a conscientious objector in World War II. After the war his work took on a significant symbolist theme. James Coleman Fine Art held an eightieth-birthday retrospective in 1996 and a memorial show following his death in 2000.
Gordon at Khartoum.- Gordon (Charles George, army officer, killed at the siege of Khartoum, 1833-85) Autograph Postcard signed to the Rev. Horace Waller, 1 side, 120 x 85mm., Khartoum, 11th March 1884, "My dear Waller, Thanks your note 8.2. received today. Thanks for your united prayers. I am learning or trying to learn to submit my will to His, with the thought that He never promised us comfort or success in the things of this life. He promised us great tribulation here, and peace in Him, therefore He is still faithful, if things do not work out on this earth as we in our foolishness would have them. May He be glorified & may His will be ours", stamped from Egypt; and another, a composite "Union Flag" invented and constructed by Gordon at Khartoum for the enjoyment of Horace Waller's children, with Autograph Note by Gordon explaining how to turn down parts of the flag to make other flags, "Turn down on blue field... you have flag of England...", framed and glazed, [1884] (2 pieces).⁂ Rev Horace Waller (1833-96), missionary and slavery abolitionist; friend of Gordon and David Livingstone.
A good collection of long play LP vinyl record albums by The Rolling Stones to include Stoned Alive, Some Girls, The Rolling Stones No 2, Between The Buttons, Got Live If You Want It ( German ), Flowers, The Stone Unturned, Emotional Rescue, Tattoo You, Under Cover, Black And Blue, Beggars Banquet, Rolled Gold, Sucking In The Seventies, Stone Age, Love You Live, Still Life and Goats Head Soup.
![Loading...](/content/bs/images/ajax-loader.gif)
-
77111 item(s)/page