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A pair of George III pierced oval silver salts, each raised on four legs with claw feet, London 1781 by Robert Hennell, engraved with a crest of a dog, with light blue glass liners, 8.25cm x 6.25cm x 5cm high, combined weight 3.16ozt, 98.3g CONDITION REPORT: See also lot 263 for spoons with matching crest. Salt One - Please see images of the soldered joins of the legs to the body of the salt. In each instance where the legs have been attached to the body the bottom rim has been effected. Above one leg the pierced decoration has come away from the rim. Minor salt erosion to the interior of the salt. Glass liner with several very small chips to the rim and two larger ones. Salt Two - As with salt one please see images of the soldered joins of the legs to the body. There is a small hole to the lower rim on the join of the body of the salt. There is greater salt erosion to the interior of the salt than on the first salt effecting the exterior of one of the pierced urn panels. Liner with a few minor chips.
A large and ornate Victorian silver plated hot water urn and stand by Mappin Brothers, both urn and stand each raised on three lion paw feet, the urn bearing inscription; 'The Gift of Friends, Members of the General Purposes Committee of the Corporation of London, to their Chairman Thomas Henry Fry Esq, Deputy, Presented April 16th 1879', urn and stand 49cm high
A large coppered metal water urn and cover, both sections with twin handles, monogrammed, numbered and stamped T, dia. 36cm; and one other similar smaller example with fitted tap (2) Rushbrooke Hall lots will continue from lot 154 Condition Report / Extra Information Both unpolished. Light age wear and surface scuffs only.
EIGHT 18th/19th CENTURY DRAWINGS & WATERCOLOURS to include a lady with an urn, style of Richard Cosway, 16.5 x 11cm.; a rural landscape subject by the portrait painter Mason Chamberlin, 1787, 14.5 x 19.5cm.; a farmyard scene by a follower of Paul Sandby, 19.5 x 25.5cm.; `Jesrusalem Liberated` from Tasso, by John Thurston, 14.5 x 12.5cm.; two subjects by Thomas Stothard, 11 x 10.5cm and 9 x 7cm.; a coastal subject attributed to John Thomas Serres, 21 x 30cm.; and a view of Carisbrooke Castle by Henry W. Burgess, 1823, 22 x 32cm.; various media, only the last framed (8) ++ Mixed condition; generally fair
Garden Urn: A pair of unusually large Compton Pottery Floreat or Heart pattern plantersearly 20th century49cm.; 19½ins high by 60cm.; 24ins diameterThis pattern planter is illustrated in Archibald Knox and Mary Seton Watts, Modern Celtic Art Garden Pottery, by Veronica Franklin Gould on pages 20 and 38 where it is variously described as the Floreat pot, on account of the inscription around the rim, largely obscured by weathering on these examples, and the Heart pot.
Garden Urn: A pair of Liberty’s terracotta Penda pattern planters, designed by Archibald Knoxearly 20th centurystamped designed and manufactured by Liberty and Co 50cm.; 20ins high by 56cm.; 22ins wideLiberty and Co., the famous Regent Street retailers offered a range of terracotta garden ornament from the early years of the 20th Century to shortly after the First World War. Archibald Knox, their most famous designer was born in the Isle of Man of Scottish parenthood. His designs were synonymous with British Art Nouveau and he is regarded as being a prominent influence in the Arts and Crafts movement. In addition to metalwork, jewellery, carpets, wallpaper and fabrics for Liberty & Co, Knox designed also terracotta garden ornament. Liberty and Co’s Yuletide Gifts catalogue of 1903-4 also included pieces by Mary Seton Watts Compton pottery. See previous lot. The Penda pattern planter designed in 1905 is illustrated in Archibald Knox and Mary Seton Watts, Modern Celtic Art Garden Pottery, by Veronica Franklin Gould on page 35.
Garden Urn: A pair of rare Walter Macfarlane & Co. cast iron planterscirca 1870fully stamped Walter Macfarlane & Co. Glasgow No. 1092 9½ x 11½ with zinc liners59cm.; 23ins high by 105cm.; 41½ins longWalter Macfarlane and Co, also known as the Saracen Foundry, was the most important manufacturer of ornamental ironwork in Scotland. Founded in Glasgow by Walter Macfarlane I (1817-85), the firm opened its first premises in 1850, in Saracen Lane, behind the Saracen Head Inn, in the Gallowgate. They specialized in the production of drinking fountains, bandstands, lamp standards, pre-fabricated buildings and architectural crestings and ornament.
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68875 item(s)/page