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2333 items
  • Stock: 15588

    A pair of small antique giltwood wall brackets in the Rococo taste, with a serpentine shelf resting on scrolling acanthus leaves. Perfect as a candle bracket or for small ornaments. Italian, c.1890.

    View our collection of: decorative antiques and furnishings

    Width Height Depth
    External 5 1116"
    14.5 cms
    6 18"
    15.5 cms
    3 14"
    8.5 cms
  • Stock: 15617

    A magnificent Louis XV Rococo gilt wall mirror of asymmetrical cartouche form, carved with a profusion of Rococo details. The mirror is surmounted by a shell and around the frame is craved an abundance of c-scrolls, flowers and scrolling acanthus leaves. This frames the elegantly beveled mirror plate.
    French, c.1890.

    View our collection of: Antique mirrors

    Width Height Width
    32 12"
    82.5 cms
    51 58"
    131 cms
    8 1116"
    22 cms
  • Stock: 15530

    A pair of Regency bronze urn table lamps, with raised gilded decoration, mounted on simple black marble pedestal bases. Early 19th century but converted to table lamps in the early 20th century.

    View our collection of: Antique candelabras, candlesticks and lamps

    Width Height Depth
    5 1116"
    14.5 cms
    14 38"
    36.5 cms
    3 78"
    10 cms
  • Stock: 15568

    A very pretty eight arm chandelier with cut glass faceted drops. The baluster stem issues eight scrolling arms terminating in scalloped drip pans and above, canes of scrolled glass hung with small drops. Of a small but very useful size.
    English, mid 20th century.

    View our collection of: Antique chandeliers.

    Diameter Drop
    25 316"
    64 cms
    21 1116"
    55 cms
    With chain 29 12"
    75 cms
  • Stock: 14325

    An early and ornate 19th century insert cast with bold foliate adornment throughout. English William IV, c.1830.

    View our collection of: Antique Fire grates and Register grates.

    Width Height Depth
    34"
    86.3 cms
    36 316"
    92 cms
    11 38"
    29 cms
  • Stock: 15624

    A very fine Victorian arched fireplace, carved from a delicately veined carrara marble. The moulded shelf rests above two magnificent capitals, finely carved with lily of the valley, ferns and roses, each capital subtly different. These frame the panelled arched frieze, decorated with a foliate moulding which is echoed on the panelled jambs.
    English, c.1860.

    View our collection of: Antique Victorian, William IV and Edwardian fireplaces and chimneypieces.

    Width Height Depth
    External 78 18"
    198.4 cms
    48 38"
    123 cms
    13 1316"
    35 cms
    Internal 41 78"
    106.5 cms
    38 38"
    97.5 cms
  • Stock: 15597

    An Edwardian cut glass three branch chandelier with a faceted baluster stem issuing the three twisted glass arms fitted with cut glass scalloped drip pans and drops. The chandelier is also strung with elegant strings of beads.

    English, c. 1910.

    View our collection of: Antique chandeliers.

    Diameter Drop
    16 12"
    42 cms
    21 1116"
    55 cms
  • Stock: 15469

    An antique Louis XV chimneypiece carved from Arabescato marble. The serpentine moulded shelf rests above a panelled frieze which is centred by a rocaille decoration of a scallop shell bordered by stylised floral and foliate details. This is framed by c scroll shell endblocks which sit above angled panelled jambs. French, c.1880.

    View our collection of: Antique Rococo Chimneypieces inc Louis XV English Scottish Chippendale Rococo fireplace mantels.

    Width Height Depth
    External 59 38"
    151 cms
    47"
    119.3 cms
    13"
    32.9 cms
    Internal 41 18"
    104.3 cms
    37"
    93.9 cms
  • Stock: 15547

    A rare Scottish pine and composition chimneypiece by Richard Foster of Edinburgh.

    The chimneypiece was designed with the coastal landscape of the East Coast of Scotland in mind and is profusely decorated in exquisite detail whilst maintaining the elegant restraint of a neoclassical chimneypiece.

    The breakfront shelf rests above an undershelf studded with acorns and mushrooms which in turn is supported by two eagles on the endblocks. The eagles are modelled after a Roman Imperial Eagle in Horace Walpole’s collection, found in the gardens of Boccapadugli and displayed by Walpole at his Strawberry Hill Home. These details frame the remarkable frieze which is a celebration of the Scottish coast; profusely decorated with seaweed, shells, sea cucumber and crabs, all in high relief.

    Most remarkable of all is the exquisite central tablet, which depicts Lady Emma Hamilton leaning on a ship’s anchor whilst gazing out to sea at the distant HMS Victory, the ship on which he would meet his heroic end. This scene is surrounded by a profusion of seashells and seaweed.

    The underfrieze makes a departure from the coastal theme, and instead entwines thorny roses with the Scottish emblem of the thistle.

    The jambs return to a more restrained neoclassicism, with engaged slender pilasters resting on plain footblocks. The original Kilkenny fossil marble slips are still present, which is a lovely feature.

    Scottish, c.1805.

    Provenance: Removed from an elegant Georgian house on the East Coast of Scotland, near Edinburgh.

    Notes:

    Chimneypieces of this manufacture were a speciality of Richard Foster of Edinburgh and his son and examples survive not only in Scotland but also in the United States and Canada, where he seemed to create a strong market for them in the late 18th century.
    Richard Foster was born in Canonbie, the Scottish Borders, in 1755. At the age of fourteen, he was recorded as having a bank account in London, presumably as he was serving as an apprentice there, perhaps to the Adam Brothers as they too were in London at this time. In 1785 he returned to Edinburgh, working as a "joiner" and married to the daughter of a wealthy leather merchant. His chimneypieces were sold not only in Scotland, but in the USA, a bold move only a few years after American Independence was declared! This is perhaps why he avoided becoming a prominent figure in Scottish social and intellectual circles, as selling to Britain's former colonies would have been regarded as treachery in many cases.
    The pine and composition chimneypiece he perfected made the rational principles and beauty of classicism affordable to the growing mercantile and professional class emerging in the 18th century. These clients wished to express their cultural understanding through objects that conveyed the principles they admired, the chimneypiece was one such highly prized object.
    The Adam brothers (Robert and James) were well known for promoting their designs to the masses, and it is the pine and composition chimneypiece they made for the emerging middle class in Edinburgh that have become synonymous with the "Adam Style". However, Foster was a true master of the technique, and his designs are some of the most delicate and finely manufactured ever made.
    In the 1770s, the technique of applying a cast composition onto pine really took off in Scotland, especially with the construction of many new houses, such as those in Edinburgh's New Town. The process of cast composition can be described as essentially a thermo plastic mix of chalk, glue size, and other additives heated up to a precise temperature then pressed into wood or brimstone moulds. These could then be applied to a simple pine surround and painted if desired. Foster was commissioned to make designs unique to clients, so there may only be a single example of a particular design, but these usually incorporate existing decorative motifs.

    View our section showing full range of neo-classical chimneypieces

    Width Height Depth
    External 78 1316"
    200.1 cms
    62 58"
    159 cms
    7 78"
    20.1 cms
    Internal 52"
    132 cms
    45 14"
    115 cms
  • Stock: 15534

    A large and heavy polished brass chandelier in the Dutch Baroque Style, with six lights set on scrolling branches which are mounted on a bulbous globular stem.
    English, c.1930.

    View our collection of: Antique chandeliers.

    Diameter Drop
    26 1316"
    68 cms
    25 58"
    65 cms
    With chain 37 38"
    95 cms
  • Stock: 15622

    A pair of large and decorative Victorian cast iron seated lions holding polished brass blank armorial shields. These would look fabulous as decorative objects on a surface, or on a hearth to dress the interior of a fireplace. The shields could even be engraved with a monogram.

    English, c.1870

    View our collection of: Antique sculptures, carvings, bronzes, plaques and tablets

    Width Height Depth
    5 316"
    13.2 cms
    13 1316"
    35 cms
    5 1116"
    14.5 cms
  • Stock: 15470

    An antique Louis XV chimneypiece carved from beautifully veined Pavonazzo marble. The curved moulded shelf rest above a panelled serpentine frieze, which is flanked by scrolling endblocks and panelled console jambs.

    French, mid 19th century.

    Link to: Antique Rococo Chimneypieces inc Louis XV English Scottish Chippendale Rococo fireplace mantels.

    Width Height Depth
    External 56 1116"
    144 cms
    51 316"
    130 cms
    11 1316"
    30 cms
    Internal 39"
    99 cms
    37 1316"
    96 cms
  • Stock: 15558

    An exceptionally finely carved and very large alabaster group of the Judgement of Paris, depicting Paris seated and wearing his Phrygian cap, offering the Hesperidean apple to a lightly draped Venus, whilst the jealous figures of Hera and Athena consol each other. The scene is mounted on a rectangular plinth. Italian, mid 19th century.

    Photograph before restoration.

    Provenance: A collection within a fine Wiltshire Townhouse.

    Width Height Depth
    15 38"
    39 cms
    21 1116"
    55 cms
    6 1116"
    17 cms
  • Stock: 15616

    A fine gilt bronze fire screen in the Louis XVI taste, the handle forming part of a ribboned design suspending drapery, and the outer frame cast to take the form of a bound laurel wreath, surmounted by fruiting finials. The lower decoration takes the form of a formalised scrolling acanthus design, with scrolling feet either side. French, c.1890.

    View our collection of: Antique Firescreens.

    Width Height Depth
    20 78"
    53 cms
    28 1116"
    73 cms
    9 18"
    23 cms
  • Stock: 15615

    A fine George III chimneypiece in Statuary and Siena marble. The inverted breakfront shelf sits above a boldly carved egg and dart undershelf, resting over the faux fluted frieze inlaid with fine Siena Marble and studded with two oval paterae.
    The central rectangular tablet depicts three putti, one possibly Cupid as he holds a bow, the others grapple with a quiver of arrows. This scene is situated within ribbon tied drapery. The endblocks are also carved with putti, one holding a set of cymbal like instruments aloft and the other holding an unfurling scroll.
    Supporting the endblocks are the three-quarter columns also inlaid with Siena marble and topped by elegant composite ionic capitals and resting on socle and block plinth bases.

    English, c.1770. With restorations.

    View our section showing full range of neo-classical chimneypieces

    Width Height Depth
    External 74"
    188 cms
    62 58"
    159 cms
    13"
    33 cms
    Internal 46 78"
    119 cms
    39"
    99 cms
  • Stock: 15613

    A large eighteenth century neoclassical painting depicting female worshippers bringing offerings to an altar dedicated to the Goddess Minerva; identified by her shield and the owl at her side.

    Italian, 18th century with some restorations and slight craquelure to the surface. Christie's stencil on the stretcher.

    Notes: The canvas is likely to have been designed within an architectural scheme, and may have been set into the wall to form part of an overmantel. Canvases of this type were first installed in Venetian palazzi, as frescoes were not practical with regular flooding, and such canvases could be removed if necessary.

    Width Height Depth
    Frame 69 1116"
    177 cms
    49 1316"
    126.5 cms
    1 316"
    3 cms
    Canvas only 63 316"
    160.5 cms
    43 14"
    110 cms
  • Stock: 15600

    A set of eleven transfer printed Aesthetic Movement tiles, with a foliate design in sepia and ochre. Embossed factory marks verso.
    English, late 19th century.

    Width Height Depth
    6"
    15.3 cms
    6"
    15.3 cms
    0 58"
    1.5 cms
  • Stock: 15589

    A large pair of French Baroque andirons, cast in bronze and partially gilded. The bronze finials are strung with gilded rings and chains and the bulbous bronze centre of the andirons are supported by three gilded and scrolled legs which are mounted on a serpentine base. French, late 19th century.

    Width Height Depth
    9 38"
    24 cms
    18 18"
    46 cms
    5 78"
    15 cms
  • Stock: 15587

    A pair of antique giltwood wall brackets in the Rococo taste, with a serpentine shelf resting on scrolling acanthus leaves. Perfect as a candle bracket or for small ornaments. Italian, c.1890.

    View our collection of: decorative antiques and furnishings

    Width Height Depth
    8 78"
    22.5 cms
    9 38"
    24 cms
    5 18"
    13 cms
  • Stock: 15586

    An early 19th century pierced steel fender with three rosettes and beaded edges.
    English, c.1820.

    View our collection of: Antique Fenders, Firescreens and Nursery Guards

    Width Height Depth
    52 1316"
    134 cms
    6 14"
    16 cms
    15"
    38 cms
  • Stock: 15582

    A grand French Louis XVI gilded overmantel mirror with a cartouche forming the crest, from which emanate sprigs of loosely ribboned laurel. The rest of the frame is decorated with a tightly bound laurel design, very much in the French tradition. The gilding has been deliberately distressed to partially reveal the warm red ground.
    French, c.1880.

    View our collection of: Antique mirrors

    Width Height
    49 316"
    125 cms
    66 78"
    170 cms
  • Stock: 15575

    A set of three nineteenth-century fire tools with decorative gilt bronze knopped handles and a simply pierced shovel. English, c.1850.

    View our collection of: Antique Firetools.

    Width Height Depth
    6 12"
    16.5 cms
    30 1116"
    78 cms
    2 1316"
    7 cms
  • Stock: 15508

    A good example of an early twentieth century time recorder clock in an oak case, serial number 51947. The glass door panel bears the words, "National Time Recorder Co. (Patentees) Blackfriars London. S.E.". The clock face with Roman numerals is set within a wood frame and bears the name "National Time Recorder Co. Ltd. Aquinas St, Stamford St. London EC1". beneath which is a small metal plaque stating "Local service, The National Time Recorder Co Ltd. Phone: Central 3655 . This Time Recorder is in full working order.
    English, circa 1935.

    Notes: Time Recorders like this one would have been used to record the times workers came in and out of their place of work. The National Time Recorder Co. Ltd (incorporated in 1917, company number 146424, though possibly founded around 10 years earlier in 1907) was one of the two largest UK manufacturers of time recorders. The head office and factory was originally based in Blackfriars London, and moved to the Lagoon Works in St Mary Cray (Orpington) Kent in 1951, on the site of the Blue Lagoon swimming pool which had been damaged during the war. Other branches were established in London, Birmingham, Bristol, Dublin, Glasgow, Leeds, Manchester, Newcastle-upon-Tyne and Sheffield. [Source: World Clocks]

    Width Height Depth
    12 12"
    31.8 cms
    42"
    106.7 cms
    11"
    28 cms
  • Stock: 15553

    A pair of large gilt bronze triple branch candelabra in the Louis XV style, ornately cast with foliate motifs and with elegant tapered stems and scrolled feet mounted on a shaped plinth. French, mid 19th century.

    Width Height
    8 1116"
    22 cms
    23"
    58.3 cms
  • Stock: 15546

    A Victorian giltwood overmantel mirror, with rounded corners and a carved surmount of Rococo form above the simple egg and dart frame. English, c.1880.

    Width Height
    42 18"
    107 cms
    65"
    165 cms
  • Stock: 15544

    A magnificent 19th century Oxblood or "Sang de Boeuf" jardiniere on stand, with a lobed planter supported by a base mounted with three griffin monopodia with paw feet.

    Attributed to Pierre Clément Massier. French, c.1880.

    Notes: Clément Massier was born into a family of ceramicists and took an interest in the business from an early age. His factory-gallery complex in Golfe Juan became a destination for the elite who summered in Monaco, Nice, and Cannes. He was awarded a gold medal at the Paris Exposition Universelle in 1900 and subsequently became an of official supplier to the British crown.

    Sang de boeuf glaze first appeared in Chinese porcelain at the beginning of the 18th century. In Europe, many companies tried to replicate the glaze, and it particularly took off in France.

    View our collection of: decorative antiques and furnishings

    Diameter Height Inside dia.
    13"
    33 cms
    33 18"
    84 cms
    8 78"
    22.5 cms
  • Stock: 15548

    A rare pine and composition chimneypiece by Richard Foster of Edinburgh. The chimneypiece is a celebration of the Scottish coast, and painstaking care has been taken to render the sea life and flora with a great deal of accuracy. The composition decoration has also been carefully wood-grained to make it appear like carved pine; this finish is a great survival.
    The inverted breakfront shelf sits above a band of composition moulded into acorns and mushrooms, and the frieze is decorated with swags of ribboned bellflowers in the neoclassical taste. Between these swags is the unusual detail of a fan of seaweed at their centre, a request of the patron no doubt.
    The central tablet has a floral ribboned swag studded with roses and other small blooms and the centre is filled with a spray of flowers and ferns within a woven basket. The endblocks feature a bound posy of roses and the jambs are decorated with trailing oak leaves and acorns. A very fine thing.

    Scottish, c.1800.

    Notes:
    Richard Foster was born in Canonbie, the Scottish Borders, in 1755. At the age of fourteen, he was recorded as having a bank account in London, presumably as he was serving as an apprentice there, perhaps to the Adam Brothers as they too were in London at this time. In 1785 he returned to Edinburgh, working as a "joiner" and married to the daughter of a wealthy leather merchant. His chimneypieces were sold not only in Scotland, but in the USA, a bold move only a few years after American Independence was declared! This is perhaps why he avoided becoming a prominent figure in Scottish social and intellectual circles, as selling to Britain's former colonies would have been regarded as treachery in many cases. The pine and composition chimneypiece he perfected made the rational principles and beauty of classicism affordable to the growing mercantile and professional class emerging in the 18th century. These clients wished to express their cultural understanding through objects that conveyed the principles they admired, the chimneypiece was one such highly prized object. The Adam brothers (Robert and James) were well known for promoting their designs to the masses, and it is the pine and composition chimneypiece they made for the emerging middle class in Edinburgh that have become synonymous with the "Adam Style". However, Foster was a true master of the technique, and his designs are some of the most delicate and finely manufactured ever made.

    View our section showing full range of neo-classical chimneypieces

    Width Height Depth
    External 66 12"
    169 cms
    58 12"
    148.6 cms
    7 14"
    18.6 cms
    Internal 48 18"
    122.3 cms
    45 1116"
    116 cms
  • Stock: 15502

    A 19th century white marble fireplace with a moulded shelf over a panelled frieze, featuring a central acanthus patera and foliate endblocks. The stop fluted jambs rest on plain footblocks.

    Belgian, c.1880.

    View our collection of: Antique Victorian, William IV and Edwardian fireplaces and chimneypieces.

    Width Height Depth
    External 73 78"
    187.7 cms
    49 78"
    126.7 cms
    13 18"
    33.2 cms
    Internal 40 316"
    102 cms
    38 316"
    97 cms
  • Stock: 15537

    A very elegant Regency pine and gesso chimneypiece decorated in the Adam style. The inverted breakfront shelf is decorated with a beaded cornice and sits above an elegant frieze decorated with opposing gryphons holding ribbons of bellflowers in their beaks, centred by urns on stands. The tablet is more naturalistic, with Venus and attendants depicted in a pastoral landscape. The slender endblocks are decorated with classical urns on stands, and rest above the gently fluted pilaster jambs.

    English, c.1810.

    View our section showing full range of neo-classical chimneypieces

    Width Height Depth
    External 73 316"
    186 cms
    61 18"
    155.1 cms
    7"
    17.7 cms
    Internal 54 1116"
    139 cms
    48"
    122 cms
  • Stock: 15532

    An early 20th century century Chinese blue and white porcelain onion pattern table lamp, profusely decorated with a hand painted decoration of chrysanthemums, insects and scrolling leaves and mounted on a pierced patinated bronze base.
    Chinese, c.1910.

    ( shade not included )

    View our collection of: Antique candelabras, candlesticks and lamps

    Diameter Height
    5 78"
    15 cms
    13"
    33 cms
  • Stock: 15485

    An elegant pedestal, carved from an off-white and grey variegated marble, the circular top over a partially-ribbed cylindrical body, on a stepped circular and octagonal base.

    Early 20th century.

    View our collection of: Antique Columns, Plinths, Pedestals and Towers

    Diameter Height
    Top 10 38"
    26.5 cms
    39 58"
    100.5 cms
    Bottom 13"
    33 cms
  • Stock: 15519

    A very fine English 19th century giltwood mirror in the Florentine manner, with a beautifully carved frame of scrolling acanthus leaves. Original mercury glass.

    English, c.1850.

    View our collection of: Antique mirrors and console tables

    Width Height
    31 78"
    81 cms
    42 78"
    109 cms
  • Stock: 15433

    A superb Victorian walnut and solid ebony Gothic library table. This outstanding table is made especially rare by having solid ebony legs, stretcher and finials. The beautifully carved Solomonic legs and stretcher support a fine burr walnut top.

    This table is incredibly diverse, and can be used as a centre table, or even a desk.
    English, circa 1860.

    Link to: Antique furniture

    Width Height Depth
    54 14"
    138 cms
    29 12"
    75 cms
    33 12"
    85 cms
  • Stock: 15516

    A set of four Victorian cast iron garden chairs, with spoon backs featuring crisply cast decoration above circular seats cast with a radiating circular pattern and resting on elaborate cabriole shaped legs. This is not an identical set, as is formed form 2 very similar pairs. Very much in the Coalbrookdale style, and would work well as a patio set as they are very heavy.

    English, c.1880

    Photographs before restoration.

    View our collection: Antique, old vintage fountains, sculptures, garden furniture and statuary

    Width Height Depth
    16 12"
    42 cms
    32 14"
    82 cms
    20 12"
    52 cms
  • Stock: 15511

    A rare and perfectly detailed live steam scale model of a rotative vertical reciprocating beam engine with James Watt type parallel motion linkage. This hand-built engine has been made from burnished steel, cast iron and bronze, which has developed a good patina from over a century of enjoyment. It also retains its original paint and comes with its original carrying case. The single Mahogany clad double action, low pressure cylinder has a stroke of 2 5/8 inches and a bore of 1 1/8 of an inch, the piston produces power on both the upward and downward strokes. The fly wheel measures 11 inches in diameter and the beam, pivoting on a single bronze column, measures 8 1/4 inches. This engine was built between 1865 and 1870, most probably as an apprentice piece, or for demonstrating the workings of this type of engine. It is mounted on a Mahogany plinth with a brass plate with the inscription “MADE BY ROBERT GILCHRIST OF BERWICK ON TWEED 1865 1870”

    English, circa 1870.

    Scottish engineer, James Watt invented His parallel motion mechanical linkage for the double acting Watt steam engine in 1784. In a letter to his son written in 1808 James Watt wrote “I am more proud of the parallel motion than of any other invention I have ever made”. Watts' new double acting engines were powered by steam on both the upward and downward strokes, along with his parallel motion, these engines were much more efficient than previous engines built by Thomas Newcomen and Watt.

    View our collection of: decorative antiques and furnishings

    Width Height Depth
    19 1116"
    50 cms
    14 58"
    37 cms
    11"
    28 cms
2333 items