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A large Tri-ang wooden dolls’ house No.93, mock Tudor design, half-timbered and cream painted, tinplate windows, green front and garage door, green cardboard shutters, large chimney up right side with porch, seat and sundial, red painted roof, front opening in four places to reveal five rooms, hall, stairs and landing, Pedigree Prams label to rear - 47¼in. (120cm.) wide (interior redecorated, white exterior repainted and window frames rusty)
Boxes and Objects - an octagonal brass sundial, marked ONLY NE COUNT N YOUR NW SUNNY W HOURS SW, 19cm diam.; a 19th century square dial clock face, 23cm diam.; a Boston Garter painted wall clock case; another clock face; a brass sundial; scales and bell weights; chrome oak cased canteen; others, quantity
A brass lacquered folding sundial compass, with silvered dial and compass, unsigned, diameter 2.5in; together with a turned wood box with label 'H. Dickson, Turner, No.9 Ball Alley, Lombard Street, London ' This box is formed out of wood taken from the ruins of the Royal Exchange which was built in 1669 - destroyed by fire January 10 1838', the diameter 3.25in (2)
Seventeen Royal Doulton Bunnykins figuresComprising 218 'Fortune Teller', 213 'Sundial', 197 'Mystic' x2, 64 'Policeman', 132 'Halloween', 214 'Lawyer', 188 'Judge', 50 'Uncle Sam', 746 'Nurse', 156 'Gardener', 170 'Fisherman', 166 'Sailor' x2, 75 'Fireman', 223 'Choir Singer' and 239 'Little Boy Blue'.
19th century Irish sundial, by Mason, Dublin. An early 19th century brass octagonal sundial, the scrolled gnomon centred on a finely engraved compass rose within a chapter ring with Roman numerals, signed 'Mason, Dublin'. Set on a polished black limestone columnar plinth. 42 by 13in. (106.7 by 33cm) In 1787 Seacome Mason established an optician business at 7 Arran Quay selling 'telescopes, glasses, microscopes, concave and opera glasses, celestial and terrestrial globes of all sizes, electrical machines with apparatus . . . goggles for protecting the eyes from dust or wind, ditto for children with the squint . . .' In the early 19th century the firm branched into scientific instruments, including sundials but most successfully the Mason's Hygrometer, the old name for the Wet & Dry Bulb Thermometer invented by Apjohn, one time professor of anatomy at the Royal College of Surgeons. The firm still thrives today, rebranded Masons Technology, they sell scientific and diagnostic equipment.

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5735 item(s)/page