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Prameta (Germany) Opel 555 Kapitan clockwork car - two-tone metallic red/cream, pale blue painted windows, bumpers, headlights, number plate are all cast separately from the body , silver painted base, the model has 3 forward gears, neutral and reverse and other adjustments - excellent+ (not currently working) in poor box missing 1 inner flap with original instructions, traffic conductor shaped key and adjustment tool (rare to find a colour variation of this model)
Post Office Telephone Directory London S-Z - London Postal Area July 1960. 8¼" x 11". An interesting item in fine condition in publisher's thick paper covers. An excellent research tool. From single vendor Book and Magazine collection. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
Telephone Directory 1967 - Greater London Business. 672 pages. 8¼" x 11". Excellent copy in fine condition. In publisher's thick paper covers. An excellent research tool. From single vendor Book and Magazine collection. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
A super 911 SC, recently serviced and ready to be enjoyed.Introduced in 1978, the 911 SC was powered by a 180bhp, 3-litre six with Bosch K-Jetronic fuel injection and a 5-speed (915) transmissionBy 1982, the power output was up to 204bhp, just six less than the legendary RS from 1973This superb 1982 SC is a late production, UK-supplied, right-hand drive car finished in Zinc Metallic with a black leather interior and optioned from new with a sunroof, air conditioning, cruise control and a passenger door mirrorIt sits on a set of very smart 15" ATS 'Cookie-Cutter' alloys with polished rims, has been fitted with a Cat 1 Alarm system and benefits from a recent service, new clutch and fresh tyresThe history file contains the original book pack including the maintenance manual and the tool kit is complete. The indicated mileage is a tad under 80,000In production for only a couple of years, 204bhp SC 911s are rare and well-specified cars in this lovely condition are becoming increasingly hard to find SpecificationMake: PORSCHEModel: 911Year: 1982Chassis Number: WP0ZZZ91ZCS103230Registration Number: ERU 874YTransmission: ManualEngine Number: 63C4905 Drive Side: Right-hand DriveOdometer Reading: 79520 MilesMake: RHDInterior Colour: LeatherClick here for more details, condition report and images
The Warwickshire Collection - This car has formed part of an extensive collection of British and European Classics and your inspection is encouraged.Finished in what looks to have been Honeysuckle over Ivory originally with a Brown leather interiorShowing 89,623 miles on the odometerThis super Jaguar has remained within a private collection for the last 8 years and is now ripe for a full restorationSupplied with what appears to be an almost complete tool kit in the bootSpecificationMake: JAGUARModel: MK IVYear: 1946Chassis Number: TBARegistration Number: HC 8538Transmission: ManualEngine Number: TBADrive Side: Right-hand DriveOdometer Reading: 89623 MilesMake: RHDInterior Colour: Brown LeatherClick here for more details, condition report and images
A 1960s Omega De Ville Seamaster automatic wristwatch, A 1960s Omega De Ville Seamaster automatic wristwatch, the signed dial with baton markers, outer minutes track and date aperture to 3, automatic movement within a gold plated and stainless steel case, to the later fancy link bracelet with folding clasp, case diameter 34mm.Overall condition good to fairWatch working at time of cataloguing, Wilson 55 does not guarantee the working accuracy of any timepiece offeredScratches in keeping with age and wearTool 106 required to access movementLater bracelet - stretched, clasp in working order
A Regency steel fender with cast acanthus leaf decoration, each end fitted with a removable fire tool stand, width 111cm, together with a set of three steel fire tools (fault to shovel head). Provenance: from the principal contents of Stone House, Bolney, West Sussex.Buyer’s Premium 29.4% (including VAT @ 20%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 6% (including VAT @ 20%) of the hammer price.
A Paleolithic flint hand axe of flaked ovate form, detailed 'Keswick' and indistinctly dated '1969', length 11cm, together with another flaked hand tool, detailed 'Ringland Norfolk', length 11cm.Buyer’s Premium 29.4% (including VAT @ 20%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 6% (including VAT @ 20%) of the hammer price.
A set of British 1914 pattern leather equipment comprising of a waist belt, support braces, two ammunition pouches, a bayonet with entrenching tool holder attachment, entrenching tool cover, water bottle cradle with period water bottle, plus a modern canvas knapsack by Kay Canvas of Wales, all of the 1914 pattern, leather parts are marked C & M (Civil & Military) 1915 with a broad arrow, the attached canvas knapsack is marked 1914 with a broad arrow markThe condition is generally good with some wear and patination to the leather, the felt covering to the water bottle has a few moth holes
A scarce set of 5 WW2 era ‘ABCA’ (Army Bureau Of Current Affairs) educational map review posters.Numbered from 1 through to 5, and published by Fosh & Cross for H.M. Stationery Office from November 1942 through to January 1943.Each poster is double sided, with a map to one side, and further information related to the war effort on the other.Posters such as these were used by the Army Educational Corps as a tool for educating soldiers about current affairs, and later the rebuilding of the country in the post war era.Many of the posters appear to have little or no use, and each is still folded as originally supplied.Any browning to the crease lines has occurred during storage.No.3 poster has pin holes to the corner where it has been wall mounted - there is also a small inked name of ‘Sjt Williams A.E.C.’Each is approximately 101.5cm x 76cm.5 items.
Sedgley (Thomas, binder). The Holy Bible containing the Old Testament and the New, Newly Translated out of the original Tongues and with the Former Translations diligently Compared and Revised. By His Majesties special Command. Appointed to be read in Churches. London: Printed by Charles Bill and the Executrix of Thomas Newcomb deceas'd Printers to the Kings most Excellent Majestie, 1701, engraved general title by Sturt, letterpress New Testament title, Apocrypha present, some woodcut decorative initials, occasional minor spotting and marks, titles and borders ruled in red throughout the volume, Dutch gilt pink endpapers with foliate design, all edges gilt, fine contemporary mosaic binding of scarlet morocco by Thomas Sedgley, extremities rubbed with some wear in places, with joints split and loss to head and foot of spine, some surface losses to spine and covers (particularly to the former), gilt roll decorated raised bands, compartments of spine and both covers densely decorated with a plethora of gilt decorated coloured onlays, forming strapwork designs filled with a profusion of gilt tools and rolls, including leaf sprays, fleurons, seedheads, grotesque face tool, tulip, carnation, and sunflower tools, Tudor roses, etc, edges with seedhead roll, turn-ins with pelmet roll and triple fillets, thick folio (52.5 x 34 cm)QTY: (1)NOTE:Herbert 868.This edition of the Bible is understood to have been supervised by William Lloyd, Bishop of Worcester. The text, printed in large type, fills 1456 pages. Besides the revised marginal dates and chronological Index, the book contains a long note on Jewish Weights and Measures, etc., compiled by Richard Cumberland (1631-1718), Bishop of Peterborough, whose essay on this subject, dedicated to his friend Samuel Pepys (as President of the Royal Society), appeared in 1686. This matter is sometimes appended, with other tables, to subsequent editions of the Bible. In this edition the date of the Nativity is taken as the central event in history, and apparently for the first time in an English Bible the years are reckoned as either 'Before Christ' or 'Anno Domini.' It should be noted that this chronology of the 1701 London folio (since reproduced in most editions of the King James' version) and inserted without any authority in English Bibles for the last two centuries, was based on the Annales Veteris et Novi Testamenti (1650-54), compiled by the James Ussher (1581-1656), Archbishop of Armagh. John Lewis (A complete history of the several translations of the Holy Bible and New Testament into English, 3rd edition, 1818, p. 350) states that this Bible was included among those condemned by the Lower House of Convocation in 1703 for their gross errors (Herbert).Unmistakably the work of Thomas Sedgley (1684-1761), this magnificent mosaic binding - which stylistically bears all the hallmarks of Sedgley's best work - incorporates a number of tools found on other bindings known to be by his hand, such as a wheel of five leaves revolving around its centre and a tulip tool (see number 138 in Maggs, Bookbinding in the British Isles, Catalogue 1075, Part I). It also utilises a highly distinctive grotesque face tool, illustrated in John P. Chalmers's article 'Thomas Sedgley Oxford Binder' in The Book Collector, Autumn 1977, pp.353-370 (number 45). This tiny tool, very like a gargoyle head, is easily overlooked, and its inclusion on this sacred tome is likely to be a kind of private jest on the part of the binder. Chalmers illustrates a mosaic binding by Sedgley similar to ours, on a 1715 Book of Common Prayer, belonging to All Souls College, Oxford. Another such is number 59 in Howard Nixon's Five Centuries of English Bookbinding, covering the dedication copy of John Theobald's Albion, printed in Oxford in 1720 (British Library C.27.f.10). Nixon notes that the Theobald "forms one of a small group of mosaic bindings, sharing the same coloured interlacing strapwork and the same unusual leaf tools, which seem to have been executed in Oxford", mentioning the All Souls prayer book as one of this select group, as well as a three-volume Xenophon, published in Oxford, 1727-35, and a Greek New Testament, printed at Cambridge in 1632, both in the Broxbourne Library.Proceeds from the sale of this lot in aid of All Saints Church, Preston, Gloucestershire and St. Michael & All Angels, Moccas, Herefordshire.

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34077 item(s)/page