We found 400830 price guide item(s) matching your search
There are 400830 lots that match your search criteria. Subscribe now to get instant access to the full price guide service.
Click here to subscribe- List
- Grid
-
400830 item(s)/page
A small collection of costume jewellery to include a gold mounted and pearl necklace, a silver blue stone mounted bracelet, medals and medallions to include various medals to do with St. John's Ambulance, a pair of miniature World War I medals, silver bladed pearl handled penknife, Vesta/match striker in the form of a pig, various pens, coinage etc
A yellow and white metal opal and diamond set dress cluster ring, the central opal surrounded by 16 diamonds, approximately 0.8 total carats, total weight 3.7 g, ring size O CONDITION REPORTS Diamonds all have inclusions and some surface scratching, the odd chip, etc. The opal itself is scratched to the surface and there is a brown flaw / mark to the stone and some small chips. Otherwise in need of a clean and with general wear and tear conducive with age and use. See images for further detail.
J K ROWLING "Harry Potter and The Philosopher's Stone", first edition, paperback, published 1997 by Bloomsbury, bearing spelling error to back cover "Acclaim for Harry Potter and The Philospher's Stone...." and additional line "one wand" on Page 53 CONDITION REPORTS Book is "well loved and read", significant creases, dog eared to the covers, as well as some peeling/missing parts to the laminate colour. There is a spilt running up the lower left hand edge of the front binding and there is another on the very edge of the spine on the bottom back corner. Spine is very faded. No inscriptions, stickers or such like. There is a small tear to page 8. Some discolouration to the edges of the pages and a couple of small dog ears (not through deliberate folding). Wear and tear conducive to being read a number of times by child/ren. See images for more details.
A 19th Century Norwegian carved acanthus decorated cylindrical pot and cover (probably tea caddy), raised on three foliate feet, 11 cm diameter x 18 cm high, together with a rustic single piece dug-out three-section box with swivel lid on iron nail hinge containing a small quantity of various plastic farm animals and a flat stone, 32 cm wide x 9 cm deep x 7 cm high CONDITION REPORTS The lid has a large crack running from the edge to the centre and another running approximately 3 cm in from the exterior. The body itself has some splits, one in particular running up the bottom band. There are losses to the carving throughout, particularly to the bottom band and the feet and there are a couple of small chips to the rim. The interior lead coating has worn away. Wear and tear conducive with age and use - see images for more detail
21 Boxed TV related figures & collectibles to include 4 x Thunderbirds (boxed DVD diecast set, carded Talking Watch, boxed Vivid Imaginations Scott Tracy, Bandai Action Vehicle Set, etc), 1 x The James Bond Car Collection (carded Aston Martin DB5), 5 x The Osborne Family (boxed Fun 4 All Ozzy, 4 x Noveltoy Bobbing Head Pens), boxed Street Life Michael Jackson Figure, 2 x Toybiz The Lord Of The Rings figures, carded Mattel Harry Potter and The Philosophers Stone Voldemort, 2 x boxed Character Doctor Who (Radio Controlled Dalek & Cyberman) (2 boxes)
Seven Hornby OO gauge locomotives to include R3361 Railroad 0-4-0 Hogarth Stone, R2665 BR 0-4-0T Industrial Locomotive No 328, R319 Class 47 Diesel The Queen Mother, LMS Patriot Class 5XP 4-6-0 Duke of Sutherland, BR Class 08 Diesel Shunter, R077 GWR 0-4-0 and Mammoth D1670, boxes vary with a few missing end flaps
CHEMA MADOZ (Madrid, 1958)Untitled. 1996.Photograph. Positive bromide virado, copy 1/15.Presents label on the back of the Madrid gallery Moriarty.Size: 12 x 6 cm; 32 x 26 cm (frame).The way he interprets art through photography and his poetic vision make Chema Madoz one of the most interesting, influential and recognisable creators on the contemporary art scene. Emphasising the irony that underlies the objects and the hidden relationships between them. In a surrealistic search for new meanings, through which to let the imagination wander towards new paths, there is always an undercurrent of play. Playing with the everyday, generating associations, metamorphoses, in a playful background he generates a singular strangeness. His artistic work has been described as "analytical photography or visual trope" and his visual style as "surreal rationality or the logic of the oneiric", to refer to the compositions of objects that are the protagonists of his works - in the words of the philosopher and art historian Luis Arenas. Madoz manipulates, invents and photographs objects. Defined as a visual poet, the associations he develops from objects as commonplace as a key, a stone or a ladder lead to a torrent of creativity. In 1999 the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía presented the exhibition Madoz. Objects 1990-1999, the first solo exhibition that the museum dedicated to a living Spanish photographer. Internationally, he has exhibited at institutions such as the Centre Pompidou in Paris, the Nederlands Fotomuseum in Rotterdam, the Fondazione M. Marangoni in Florence, the Museo de Bellas Artes in Caracas and the Multimedia Art Museum in Moscow. He has received the National Photography Award and the PHotoEspaña Award in 2000, and the Culture Award of the Community of Madrid in the category of Photography in 2012, among others.
ARIEL ELIZONDO LIZARRAGA ( Brussels, Belgium, 1968)."Cubismos & Cuartitas", 2022.Natural quartzite-moscavite stone and corten steel.Signed on the base.Certificate of authenticity of the artist enclosed.Measurements: 33 x 27 x 20 cm.Ariel's life has always been in continuous and intimate contact with natural stone, of which he is a true specialist both in its technical aspects and in its application for various professional uses. For many years he visited quarries all over the world and got to know in depth the natural formations of all types of rocks and stones, as well as the extraction, cutting and finishing processes. This rich working experience also gave him a solid knowledge of steel in a wide variety of forms and applications. During these years, his artistic vocation as a sculptor developed in parallel. In his youth he had the opportunity to study and become well acquainted with the schools of contemporary art in Belgium, but on his return to Navarre, his contact with the rich tradition of the Basque school of sculpture (Chillida, Oteiza, Mendiburu, etc.) spurred a methodical and profound investigation into the integration of both elements in a genuine and original way. Stone serves as a fundamental support, as the essence and base of the whole, whether in live rock or carved, and from it emerges steel in stylised and kinetic forms. Thus a vital dialogue takes place between the two elements: the origin and formation of nature in its primary aspect on the one hand, and on the other hand the personal development which in its lyrical or dramatic variants represents the search for an intensely personal path. The steel, always worked by hand and cold, emerges from the living stone in various forms, whether thin or thick, rusted or polished, natural or laminated in colours, and grows wavy or twisted in aesthetic adventures where stone and steel form a visual and suggestive dance to the point of the dreamlike and ineffable. Everything fits and is freely expressed in this choreography of two complementary materials, without excluding the dramatic sentiment, the heroic cry or the difficult balance of the everyday in human existence. It is an art that is not conceptual but conceptualised in vibrant symbolism and full of expressive tension. It is a modern and current art because it sinks its roots in the primary and ancestral to project itself into that uncertain future that sometimes scares us and always challenges us, an art that with very ethnic elements manages to elevate itself to a universal language.
East India Company, Bombay Presidency, Later Uniform coinages, 1830-5, Bombay dies, copper Proof Half-Anna, 1832/1246h, arms and supporters, east india company above, date below, rev. scales, half anna above, adil [Justice] between pans, date below, edge plain, 10.89g/6h (Prid. 204 [Sale, lot 495]; Stevens 5.15; KM. 250). Extremely fine and toned, extremely rare [certified by NGC as a Pattern, graded PF 61 BN] £2,000-£2,600 --- Provenance: P. Snartt (Bristol, UK) Collection SNC (London) May 1980 (3843), ticket. Owner’s ticket. The building of a new mint at Bombay commenced with the laying of the foundation stone on 1 February 1825. But as far back as 1820 the Company had been engaged with Boulton, Watt & Co for the necessary minting machinery, with its emissary, Capt (later Major) John Hawkins, Bombay Engineers, making several visits to Soho, but work did not start until February 1823 and the presses, along with the sub-contractors to operate them and Hawkins himself, did not leave England until the autumn of the following year. Numerous local setbacks ensured that the first trial pieces, thought to be the ‘lion and palm’ coppers struck at the end of 1828 and described in a letter from Hawkins to Boulton in February 1829 (see Lot 562), met with a mixed reception. The Court of Directors ordered the new machine-struck coinage, of half-, quarter- and twelfth-annas, be made to a lighter weight standard, which caused concern, but manufacture of quarter-annas began on 22 November 1830 and twelfth-annas early in 1831. The old Bombay mint was closed in April 1831 and staff transferred to the new facility, but the increasingly-ill Hawkins had died two months earlier. A small number of half-annas dated 1832 were struck and a few appear to have escaped into circulation; 12 proofs were sent to London for approval by the Court of Directors, but the Bombay die-sinker, a Mr Clarke, had resigned in an apparent fit of pique, causing the mint engineer, Capt Frederick McGillivray (†1838), Royal Engineers, to request a complete set of new matrices from the mint at Calcutta
Scottish Dirk Scottish Dirk, the blade etched with thistles, rootwood grip with paste gem set pommel, fitted with knife and fork set.Buyer must be over the age of 18. Age verification ID will be required if this lot is to be posted out.46cm longThe is a stone missing to the small knife. The large stone to the main dirk has been reattached and currently doe not fit quite as it should. There is a small blemish to the face of the large stone. The sheath once had a leather covering which has been removed completely and the underlying wood painted black. The dirk blade has some light pitting patches. The small knife blade as a chip to the cutting edge. Both the small knife and fork have light pitting.
A late 19th / early 20th century model of a stone pulley system with a triangular mahogany base, brass rods and marble blocks, the base 38cm wide x 38cm deepAt present, there is no condition report prepared for this lot, this in no way indicates a good condition, please contact the saleroom for a full condition report
A pair of 19th century carved alabaster recumbent lions each 15cm in length x 8.5cm high together with an antique carved green hardstone lion, 13cm wide x 11.5cm high NO BLACK SLATE BASES WITH LIONS.Some minor marks/chips to the high spots mainly the manes, would benefit from a wash to remove insect poo. Green stone lion with fracture to base and some small chips. NO BLACK SLATE BASES WITH LIONS.
An 18ct gold, platinum and diamond cluster ring, size P, 2.5gCondition & Info:Diameter of entire diamond cluster: 8mm approxDiameter x depth of central diamond: 5mm approxThere is a hint of yellow in the diamond when viewed against a white background.There's one carbon inclusion on the table of the stone when viewed through a x10 lens.No apparent inclusions when viewed with the naked eye.No apparent condition issues.
-
400830 item(s)/page