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A collection of Chinese and other blue and white porcelain, to include a bullet shape teapot, cream jug, sparrow beak jug and others - The tea pot has a crack round the handle where it joins the body. The jug with the wicker handle has a small chip to the foot. The sparrow beak jug is missing a cover. One tea bowl is cracked and the rest of the pieces are fine.
A Goldsmiths & Silversmiths Co., silver four piece tea set comprising spirit stand with kettle, London 1895. The makers mark double struck on the kettle, other marks are rubbed, treen handle inscribed presentation, 30cm tall, 1296g and a teapot, sugar bowl and milk jug all London 1896, presentation inscription to kettle and teapot, 1151g (total weight 2447g)
George V silver three piece round tea service Sheffield 1912, the teapot with wood handle and knob, 34 ozs 1061 grams SILVER COLLECTION OF SIR RAY TINDLE CBE DL 1926-2022 The following obituary (edited) was published by Tindle Newspapers: Sir Ray Tindle was a man who had a life-long commitment to, and passion for, the newspaper industry. He was a newspaper man through and through.After leaving school he enlisted in the 1st Battalion Devonshire Regiment and saw service in the Far East between 1944 and 1947, rising to the rank of captain.He was extremely proud of his association with the now-disbanded regiment and greatly mourned its passing, going so far as to name his previous home in Farnham Devonshire House in its honour.Sir Ray made the Surrey town his home in the 1960s and made such an impact in the following 50 years that he was known by locals as Mr Farnham. If a charity or organisation needed help, Sir Ray was there. He eventually stepped down as Chairman of Tindle Newspapers when he was 90, remaining as president, with son Owen, who runs the Oxon Hoath Retreat and Conference Centre in Kent, taking over as Chairman.After returning to the UK after the War,Sir Ray acquired his first newspaper title, the Tooting & Balham Gazette, with his £300 demob payment. It was to be the first of many and, over the years through a series of launches and acquisitions, the group grew to a considerable force under the collective banner of Tindle Newspapers Ltd. It now owns local papers and radio stations covering large parts of Surrey, Hampshire, Essex, Somerset, Devon and Cornwall, Wales, Ireland, the Channel Isles and the Isle of Man. Many of these papers are very long established, including the Monmouthshire Beacon founded in 1837.Others were launched in Queen Victorias reign, such as the Farnham Herald (1892), Cambrian News (1860), Cornish & Devon Post (1856), Mid-Devon Advertiser (1863) and the Tenby Observer (1853).The Tindle Group became the fourth largest UK local newspaper group by number of titles published.Sir Ray was a man of immense self-belief and iron determination, as characterised by his coat of arms, carried by all his newspapers, with the Latin motto Noli Cedere, which translates as Never Surrender.He retired as Chairman of the Surrey Advertiser in 1977 after 35 years. He was also a director for 18 years on the main board of The Guardian & Manchester Evening News, and Chairman for ten years of the Belfast News Letter, the UKs oldest provincial daily. He was a founder shareholder and, for many years, an alternate director, of Capital Radio.He became Master of the Worshipful Company of Stationers and Newspaper Makers in 1985 after some 20 years of service on several committees and of the Court.Over the years he also donated sizeable sums to various worthy causes and projects, particularly in and around his hometown of Farnham.In 1973 Sir Ray was appointed OBE for services to the newspaper industry and in 1987 he was appointed CBE. In 1989 he became a Deputy Lieutenant for the County of Surrey. He was knighted in 1994 andwas made the Newspaper Personality of the Year at the 2005 Newspaper Awards, in the same year becoming an honorary vice-president of the Veteran Car Club of Great Britain.Sir Ray died as he would have wished, still committed to the media empire he had so painstakingly created over the course of a long and distinguished career.He was an avid collector of silver, and his collection is being sold by the estate in this auction.
Victorian silver good quality three piece tea service decorated with embossed panels of flowers and foliage, the teapot with fruit and vine finial by Charles Reily & George Storer, London 50.4 ozs, 1598 grams, ivory insulators (Ivory exemption number: B1ZG4EJ4) SILVER COLLECTION OF SIR RAY TINDLE CBE DL 1926-2022 The following obituary (edited) was published by Tindle Newspapers:Sir Ray Tindle was a man who had a life-long commitment to, and passion for, the newspaper industry. He was a newspaper man through and through.After leaving school he enlisted in the 1st Battalion Devonshire Regiment and saw service in the Far East between 1944 and 1947, rising to the rank of captain.He was extremely proud of his association with the now-disbanded regiment and greatly mourned its passing, going so far as to name his previous home in Farnham Devonshire House in its honour.Sir Ray made the Surrey town his home in the 1960s and made such an impact in the following 50 years that he was known by locals as Mr Farnham. If a charity or organisation needed help, Sir Ray was there. He eventually stepped down as Chairman of Tindle Newspapers when he was 90, remaining as president, with son Owen, who runs the Oxon Hoath Retreat and Conference Centre in Kent, taking over as Chairman.After returning to the UK after the War,Sir Ray acquired his first newspaper title, the Tooting & Balham Gazette, with his £300 demob payment. It was to be the first of many and, over the years through a series of launches and acquisitions, the group grew to a considerable force under the collective banner of Tindle Newspapers Ltd. It now owns local papers and radio stations covering large parts of Surrey, Hampshire, Essex, Somerset, Devon and Cornwall, Wales, Ireland, the Channel Isles and the Isle of Man. Many of these papers are very long established, including the Monmouthshire Beacon founded in 1837.Others were launched in Queen Victorias reign, such as the Farnham Herald (1892), Cambrian News (1860), Cornish & Devon Post (1856), Mid-Devon Advertiser (1863) and the Tenby Observer (1853).The Tindle Group became the fourth largest UK local newspaper group by number of titles published.Sir Ray was a man of immense self-belief and iron determination, as characterised by his coat of arms, carried by all his newspapers, with the Latin motto Noli Cedere, which translates as Never Surrender.He retired as Chairman of the Surrey Advertiser in 1977 after 35 years. He was also a director for 18 years on the main board of The Guardian & Manchester Evening News, and Chairman for ten years of the Belfast News Letter, the UKs oldest provincial daily. He was a founder shareholder and, for many years, an alternate director, of Capital Radio.He became Master of the Worshipful Company of Stationers and Newspaper Makers in 1985 after some 20 years of service on several committees and of the Court.Over the years he also donated sizeable sums to various worthy causes and projects, particularly in and around his hometown of Farnham.In 1973 Sir Ray was appointed OBE for services to the newspaper industry and in 1987 he was appointed CBE. In 1989 he became a Deputy Lieutenant for the County of Surrey. He was knighted in 1994 andwas made the Newspaper Personality of the Year at the 2005 Newspaper Awards, in the same year becoming an honorary vice-president of the Veteran Car Club of Great Britain.Sir Ray died as he would have wished, still committed to the media empire he had so painstakingly created over the course of a long and distinguished career.He was an avid collector of silver, and his collection is being sold by the estate in this auction.Condition Report: The jug and bowl are a little unstable on a flat hard surface.Handle is loose.There is a dent to the armorial section of the jugBowl has good gilding.Generally in good condition.
Silver items, comprising a small half reeded teapot with ebonised handle and knob. two Christening mugs, and a two handled trophy cup, gross weight 15.4 ozs 481 grams SILVER COLLECTION OF SIR RAY TINDLE CBE DL 1926-2022 The following obituary (edited) was published by Tindle Newspapers: Sir Ray Tindle was a man who had a life-long commitment to, and passion for, the newspaper industry. He was a newspaper man through and through.After leaving school he enlisted in the 1st Battalion Devonshire Regiment and saw service in the Far East between 1944 and 1947, rising to the rank of captain.He was extremely proud of his association with the now-disbanded regiment and greatly mourned its passing, going so far as to name his previous home in Farnham Devonshire House in its honour.Sir Ray made the Surrey town his home in the 1960s and made such an impact in the following 50 years that he was known by locals as Mr Farnham. If a charity or organisation needed help, Sir Ray was there. He eventually stepped down as Chairman of Tindle Newspapers when he was 90, remaining as president, with son Owen, who runs the Oxon Hoath Retreat and Conference Centre in Kent, taking over as Chairman.After returning to the UK after the War,Sir Ray acquired his first newspaper title, the Tooting & Balham Gazette, with his £300 demob payment. It was to be the first of many and, over the years through a series of launches and acquisitions, the group grew to a considerable force under the collective banner of Tindle Newspapers Ltd. It now owns local papers and radio stations covering large parts of Surrey, Hampshire, Essex, Somerset, Devon and Cornwall, Wales, Ireland, the Channel Isles and the Isle of Man. Many of these papers are very long established, including the Monmouthshire Beacon founded in 1837.Others were launched in Queen Victorias reign, such as the Farnham Herald (1892), Cambrian News (1860), Cornish & Devon Post (1856), Mid-Devon Advertiser (1863) and the Tenby Observer (1853).The Tindle Group became the fourth largest UK local newspaper group by number of titles published.Sir Ray was a man of immense self-belief and iron determination, as characterised by his coat of arms, carried by all his newspapers, with the Latin motto Noli Cedere, which translates as Never Surrender.He retired as Chairman of the Surrey Advertiser in 1977 after 35 years. He was also a director for 18 years on the main board of The Guardian & Manchester Evening News, and Chairman for ten years of the Belfast News Letter, the UKs oldest provincial daily. He was a founder shareholder and, for many years, an alternate director, of Capital Radio.He became Master of the Worshipful Company of Stationers and Newspaper Makers in 1985 after some 20 years of service on several committees and of the Court.Over the years he also donated sizeable sums to various worthy causes and projects, particularly in and around his hometown of Farnham.In 1973 Sir Ray was appointed OBE for services to the newspaper industry and in 1987 he was appointed CBE. In 1989 he became a Deputy Lieutenant for the County of Surrey. He was knighted in 1994 andwas made the Newspaper Personality of the Year at the 2005 Newspaper Awards, in the same year becoming an honorary vice-president of the Veteran Car Club of Great Britain.Sir Ray died as he would have wished, still committed to the media empire he had so painstakingly created over the course of a long and distinguished career.He was an avid collector of silver, and his collection is being sold by the estate in this auction.
20th century silver round small teapot, Chester, 8.7 ozs 272 grams SILVER COLLECTION OF SIR RAY TINDLE CBE DL 1926-2022 The following obituary (edited) was published by Tindle Newspapers: Sir Ray Tindle was a man who had a life-long commitment to, and passion for, the newspaper industry. He was a newspaper man through and through. After leaving school he enlisted in the 1st Battalion Devonshire Regiment and saw service in the Far East between 1944 and 1947, rising to the rank of captain. He was extremely proud of his association with the now-disbanded regiment and greatly mourned its passing, going so far as to name his previous home in Farnham Devonshire House in its honour.Sir Ray made the Surrey town his home in the 1960s and made such an impact in the following 50 years that he was known by locals as Mr Farnham. If a charity or organisation needed help, Sir Ray was there. He eventually stepped down as Chairman of Tindle Newspapers when he was 90, remaining as president, with son Owen, who runs the Oxon Hoath Retreat and Conference Centre in Kent, taking over as Chairman.After returning to the UK after the War,Sir Ray acquired his first newspaper title, the Tooting & Balham Gazette, with his £300 demob payment. It was to be the first of many and, over the years through a series of launches and acquisitions, the group grew to a considerable force under the collective banner of Tindle Newspapers Ltd. It now owns local papers and radio stations covering large parts of Surrey, Hampshire, Essex, Somerset, Devon and Cornwall, Wales, Ireland, the Channel Isles and the Isle of Man. Many of these papers are very long established, including the Monmouthshire Beacon founded in 1837.Others were launched in Queen Victorias reign, such as the Farnham Herald (1892), Cambrian News (1860), Cornish & Devon Post (1856), Mid-Devon Advertiser (1863) and the Tenby Observer (1853).The Tindle Group became the fourth largest UK local newspaper group by number of titles published.Sir Ray was a man of immense self-belief and iron determination, as characterised by his coat of arms, carried by all his newspapers, with the Latin motto Noli Cedere, which translates as Never Surrender.He retired as Chairman of the Surrey Advertiser in 1977 after 35 years. He was also a director for 18 years on the main board of The Guardian & Manchester Evening News, and Chairman for ten years of the Belfast News Letter, the UKs oldest provincial daily. He was a founder shareholder and, for many years, an alternate director, of Capital Radio.He became Master of the Worshipful Company of Stationers and Newspaper Makers in 1985 after some 20 years of service on several committees and of the Court.Over the years he also donated sizeable sums to various worthy causes and projects, particularly in and around his hometown of Farnham.In 1973 Sir Ray was appointed OBE for services to the newspaper industry and in 1987 he was appointed CBE. In 1989 he became a Deputy Lieutenant for the County of Surrey. He was knighted in 1994 andwas made the Newspaper Personality of the Year at the 2005 Newspaper Awards, in the same year becoming an honorary vice-president of the Veteran Car Club of Great Britain.Sir Ray died as he would have wished, still committed to the media empire he had so painstakingly created over the course of a long and distinguished career.He was an avid collector of silver, and his collection is being sold by the estate in this auction.
Chinese Export Canton Silver Tea Service,circa 1860-1880 maker's mark MK (active in Canton 1825-1880),decorated overall with Bamboo's pattern chrysanthemums, prunus and peony flowers with bamboo-form handles and finials, comprising of a teapot 14 cm high, a sugar bowl 10 cm high, a cream jug 7 cm high and a tray 52 cm long, two cups 6.5 cm high, two saucers 11.7 cm diameter. Total Weight81 ozs 2534grams.(ivory exemption Certificate MCGCDX2S)
A 19th Century Flight Barr and Barr teapot of silver form, bat printed with cartouche panels of classical figures against a gilt bubble ground, length 24cm, together with a matching sugar basin, a 19th Century Flight Barr and Barr teapot with bat decorated shells and gilt sprigs, length 25cm, a 19th Century sauce dish on stand decorated with a burnt orange rim and a gilt fruit border, length 18cm, and a 19th Century Chamberlain Worcester cream jug decorated with a view of Force Bridge Northumberland with a gilt seaweed ground, painted mark, length 13.5cm, all A/F. (5)
A late Victorian silver tea set comprising teapot, sugar bowl and jug of oval form with embossed decoration, initialled, by Mappin & Webb, Sheffield, 1887 together with a matching coffee pot (handle of lid missing) and creamer, with dedication, hallmarked for Goldsmiths & Silversmiths (William Gibson & John Lawrence Langman), Sheffield, 1904, 1716g, light wear from ordinary use, slight dents (5)
A Sèvres red-ground cup and saucer (gobelet étrusque cannelé et soucoupe), circa 1817Of moulded gadrooned shape, decorated in Etruscan style, each decorated with black lines and a black formal foliate border below the rim, the cup with a gilt foot and loop handle, a gilt pendant border around the interior rim, the cup: 7cm high; the saucer: 14cm diam., interlaced LL monograms enclosing a fleur-de-lys/Sevres stencilled in blue, incised marks, Mc and ds in black to cup (2)Footnotes:A teapot with matching decoration dated 1817 is in the collection of the Wadsworth Atheneum, see object ID 2001.19.1.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
An extensive Royal Copenhagen Flora Danica table service, 20th centuryEach finely painted with botanical specimen, the moulded rims with gilt beaded borders, titled in black on reverse, comprising:A large oval soup tureen, cover and stand (the stand: 40cm across)A circular soup tureen, cover and stand (the stand: 33.5cm diam.)A large oval dish with a domed cover (39cm across)An oval bottle cooler (16.7cm high; 27cm across handles)Two footed bowls (20.5cm diam., 14cm high)An oval pierced basket with branch handles (26cm across handles)A Saucière on a fixed stand (22cm across stand)A round deep saucepan and cover with wooden handle (23.5cm diam.)Two large circular dishes (35.7cm diam.)A circular dish (33.2cm diam.)A large oval dish (40cm across)Two medium oval dishes (35.8cm across)A shaped rectangular dish (29.7cm across)Two shaped square dishes (24cm across)Two triangular shallow dishes (26.5cm across)Four oval dishes with branch handles to one side (three 24cm across and one 22cm across)Two boat-shaped dishes with handles (18cm across)Two medium oval shallow dishes (27.5cm across)Two small oval shallow dishes (24.5cm across)One small flat oval dish (24.7cm across)One large deep circular bowl (24cm diam.; 10cm high)Two shaped square bowls (22.5cm across)Two circular shallow bowls (20.8cm diam.)Forty-one large circular plates (25.7cm diam.)Thirty-two medium plates (22.5cm diam.)Thirty-six small plates (19.5cm diam.)Eight soup plates (22.4cm diam.)Eight large lobed plates with pierced rims (27cm across)Eight lobed and pierced soup plates (24.5cm across)Nine small circular plates (17cm diam.)Eight small circular plates (14.5cm diam.)Eight very small circular salts/plates (7.7cm)Eight small circular shallow dishes (14.5cm diam.)Six oval salts (10.5cm across)Eight egg cups (6cm high)One triangular box, cover and stand (ca. 11cm across)Twenty-two two-handled bowls and saucers (17cm across handles)Eighteen covered cups and saucersOne small round two-handled pot and cover with branch handles (11cm across handles)A teapot and cover (15cm high)An oval sugar bowl and cover (15.5cm high)Eight teacups and saucersEight small cups and saucersEight large cups and saucersEight coffee cans and saucer wave marks in underglaze-blue, factory marks stencilled in green, various numerals and letters in green (some very minor damage) (393)This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ΩΩ VAT on imported items at the prevailing rate on Hammer Price and Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
An early Meissen saucer, circa 1723Painted with a chinoiserie scene of a man seated at a table smoking a pipe in a landscape, within two circular iron-red concentric lines, the rim gilt, 12.6cm diam., incised / inside footrim (three small chips to underside of rim)Footnotes:The style of painting closely resembles that on an early teapot formerly in the collections of the Princes von Thurn und Taxis (published by U. Pietsch/K. Jacobsen, Frühes Meissener Porzellan (1997), no. 2) and may be from the same service. The decoration on the saucer can be traced to a drawing from the Schulz Codex, Plate 3, where the seated man at a table filled with tea wares can be found (transposed) on the right-hand side.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Meissen lobed teapot and cover, circa 1760Moulded with flower sprays and painted with a monkey seated in a tree on one side, and a bird of prey perched on a branch on the other side, scattered insects and flowers to the sides, the animal spout and the handle heightened in puce, the cover similarly decorated and applied with a flower finial, 12.7cm high, crossed swords mark in underglaze-blue and incised R (finial restuck) (2)This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
Stövchen/ Rechaud, Meissen, 2. H. 19. Jh.Porzellan, Zwiebelmusterdekor. Dreiseitige Form auf eingerollten Blattfüßen, in runden Querschnitt übergehend. Reliefiertes Blattwerk und Rocaillenornamente, Wandung durchbrochen in Gitterrocaillen. Haarriss. Schwertermarke, geritzte Formnr. "2871". D. 14,5 cm, H. 13 cm Teapot warmer, porcelain, relief decoration, blue onion pattern. Hairline crack. Meissen. Sword mark, incised model no. "2871". H. 13 cm, d. 14,5 cm
Wilhelm Wagenfeld (1900-1990) for Schott & Genossen, Jena, Tea pot with eight tea cups and saucers, originally designed circa 1931, these examples produced later, Mould and free blown heat resistant glass (boro-silicate), Teapot, five cups and seven saucers with printed manufacturer's marks, Teapot : 14cm high ; Cups: 4.5cm high ; Saucers : 15.5cm diameter All parts with light surface wear commensurate with age and use, teapot spout with minor chip to very end of spout. Teapot with some residual dust build up to interior, would benefit from cleaning, some discoloration to diffuser. One sauce with very minor fleabite chip to one edge.
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