Website says "retailer with replica Cartier". In my US jurisdictional spheres, it's called "infringement" and "piracy". Unbelievable on so many...
Add a few more :(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(:( imo.
They seem to sell pretty well on eB... eba...boobay.. eeeeboo... I don't understand, but I can't seem to bring myself to say it. ;)
thx for the tip. Just curious, since I see what appears from your example the center seems sharper than the edges... which might be original to...
@antidiem I thought the very same thing. The "HiFi" from the 50's in the living room (my P's) had the same mesh; the Lane was everywhere......
Nice database! @charlie cheswick if you are handy with a whittling knife, or are so inclined, the pole (with or without the fish) could be...
There you go: [ATTACH]
I think 'fisherman' is on the right track, from Bali... brimmed hat/moustache [ATTACH] wood is right... [ATTACH] initial guess: Bali your...
ah, I see. cut a strip, split two, roll, then solder the third. So the solder joint is in the 1st pic. hm. interesting.
Welcome. I'm partial to "Brooke" since I have a daughter by that name in college. She doesn't collect anything but my tuition money.
those close up photos made me a believer too. The 'splits' that create the bell of the blossom are variously flared (i.e, the amount of curve...
another possibility, Tratufi. a real italian word Turtufi? I'm beginning to think that the 'r' step in front of the first 't' is really the...
not Native American, since you mentioned "southwest". Could of course be art pottery, but I have no input there. The underlying material does...
thats too nice craftsmanship to be a scraper. Looks to me like its a furniture cabinet handle that hasn't been attached. rather long for that,...
not my area, but I know there were a LOT of hummel look alikes, so I think your instinct is right. [edit: i.e.,...that it's not a Hummel, since...
Any idea how old? 1940s or earlier? Agree it's a T, possibly a J but not really hooked. also agree on r, t and t. if Italian, the ending could...
These look really similar: [ATTACH] seems like in the bead world they are 'generic' white clam shell discs....
I am sensing a bit of "blind men and elephant" allegory here... I think we all have a bit of everything, but not all of it. Yet. That means...
I'm stuck on "seashell"... those chipped edges are b/c calcium in seashells is much more of a brittle structure than in bone. Bone is a...
maybe bone. Nah. too irregular on the grooved side. https://www.thebeadchest.com/collections/bone-beads/heishi-shape typical ostrich beads[ATTACH]
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