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Three Victorian glass oil lamp shades, a pressed glass bowl, selection of wine glasses, a coloured glass bowl with gilded flower decoration and a china chamber stick, etc CONDITION REPORTS All three have a roughness to the top edge as expected, the yellow has some small chips to the interior of the edge as well. All three have various air bubbles/firing faults and are in need of a clean otherwise general wear and tear conducive with age and use - see images. The pair of Staffordshire plates have crazing, knife marks etc. The small yellow bowl has various chips to the inside and outside rim as well as flaking to the paintwork and knife marks. The cut glass fruit bowl has some chips to the exterior - all other items have general wear and tear, surface scratching etc all conducive with age and use. For clarity the roughness etc. mention is on the fitter rims of the shades.
A Good Collection of Gold and Silver Items ( 5 ) All Fully Marked. Comprises 1/ 9ct Gold Charm Containing a 10 Shilling Note, Marked 9ct. 2/ 9ct Gold Stick Pin ( Antique ) In The Form of Stirrup Whip, Marked 9ct, 3 Inches In Length. 3/ 9ct Gold Heart Shaped Locked, Marked 9ct. 4/ Miniature Silver Trumpet, 1 Inches In length. 5/ Small Silver Pendant In The Form of a Surfer with Surf Board, Marked Hawaii, 1.25 Inches High - Please See Photos.
THREE GOLD STICK PINS, CIRCA 1900 comprising one with a seated monkey, one with fox head and one set with a green stone mounted as a fruit; together with a gold stock pin with a tri-coloured gold pheasant with enamel decoration; together with a photograph of Mr & Mrs Gaines, a photocopy of Mr Gaines' diary entries for 1901 and a postcard sent to Mr Gaines at Windsor Castle total weight 9gr (4) Provenance: Mr Frank Gaines, a coachman in the Royal Household, who became head coachman to Queen Mary (Mary of Teck). According to his diary entry, the stick pins were given to him in January to April 1901 by Princess Henery of Battenburg [sic] (Princess Beatrice), by the Duke and Duchess of York (later George V and Queen Mary) and by Prince Edward of York (later Edward VIII). Francis 'Frank' Gaines, one of a large family headed by his father, Thomas Gaines, was born in Pickering, Yorkshire, in 1865. By the age of 15 he was an indoor servant in Gillamoor, Yorkshire, to a farmer by the name of John Cossins. He subsequently moved to the London area where he was married in Bromley in 1892 to Selina Caroline Johnson (b. 1873). Their daughter, Selina 'Lena' Lillian Annie Gaines was born in Orpington in 1893. By 1901 Gaines and his family had moved to Windsor, where he was a coachman, living in the Royal Mews. His promotion to coachman to Her Majesty, Queen Mary is recorded by 1911. He died at Eton on 1 January 1939.
A 9ct yellow gold Record mid size wristwatch, the circular dial with Arabic numerals, batons and a seconds subsidiary dial together with assorted watches, costume jewellery including marcasite, brooches, cufflinks, stick pins, coins, bracelets, necklaces, silver jewellery, seiko wristwatch, faux pearls, Danish amber beads, hinged bangles, silver napkin rings, dressing table pots etc
A large 19th century Chinese lacquered 'dragon boat' incense timekeeper, the elongated body with elaborate carved giltwood terminals modelled as a dragon head opposing conforming tail plume, the sides decorated in various shades of gilt with shaped panels containing figural scenes within an elaborate scrolling foliate painted field on a deep brown ground and incorporating carved giltwood paw supports, the metal-lined interior applied with evenly spaced U-shaped cross-members to cradle an incense stick (some wear, minor losses), 75cms long. The current lot is a large example of the classic 'dragon-boat' form which were made for domestic use. Such timekeepers were often provided with a simple alarm mechanism formed from a length of string with a metal weight tied to each end. The string would be placed over the centre of the boat with the weights hanging over each side, when the incense stick (cradled within the U shaped depressions to the internal cross-members) burnt down to the position immediately beneath the string it would break causing the weights to drop -often onto a hard metal pan placed beneath the timekeeper. Otherwise is in good condition. CONDITION REPORT: Both the neck and tail sections have breaks through the lacquer with small surfaces losses where the carcass is joined, the head has two open sockets at the rear suggesting that it may have been fitted with horns at sometime. Otherwise finish is generally intact but with noticeable wear to areas of gilt decoration and a few small areas of flaking.
An early 19th century French forty-three stick fan, printed and then overpainted in colourful tones of gouache with a musical soirée in a pastoral setting, the aristocrats and musicians in typical dress, the flanking black sticks ornately gilded with lyres within scrolling cartouches, foliage and trellis, mother-of-pearl guards boldly carved and centred by a flowering urn with female supporters, the sides with cornucopia and foliage, 55cm wide, framed
An 18th century style mahogany cased stick barometer, the scrolled pediment with central brass finial, silvered back plate to the barometer/thermometer. Makers name J Dancer Liverpool above a bow front lower section with ebonised urn form base. Retailers plate to the back for Garner & Marney. 39½ins. Est £70-100

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