I cannot find any issues listed for sale.
Hazi, when posting your photos there is an option to select "full size" after you upload them, instead of "thumbnail". That will make them appear...
The trim plates do appear to be different - [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
Comparing the photos, the handles on the bank doors appear quite worn, consistent with regular use. Hazi's retain the ridges on the bodies of the...
Interesting. The handles appear to be Sphinxes - [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
It may be a type of "lunellum", a tool used for scraping skins for making parchment. Some lunellums are single handled, but some have cross bars...
Short answer is, no. According to my partner, an experienced used bookseller - "[c.6.43] is the publisher's code indicating the third printing,...
The baskets are Chinese.
Well, you've started something now. Here is our Siberian Husky / Weimaraner mix (confirmed by a DNA test) - [ATTACH] And this one (waiting at...
This is from an article by Zsuzsa Szarvas: Fragments of Rural Hungarian Jewish Culture - [ATTACH] [ATTACH]...
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/amazon-peruvian-artists-home-inspiration-palette-world-gallery-180987459/
This is getting weird, and a little annoying. I came to this party a little late, and when I did a google image search the AI response seemed to...
It is not a Native tradition that I immediately recognize. My first impression is that it was made by someone still learning/experimenting with...
Shipibo ceramics are low fired, and usually very thin walled. Your bowl is a typical Shipibo shape, flaring up from a small footed base. Anasazi...
Sorry, I forgot that links to ebay don't work anymore. It does seem to work to copy the web address and paste it into a new window. At any rate,...
Not Mimbres. It may be Shipibo, from Peru, similar to this one which also has a rattle in its base - https://www.ebay.com/itm/385653280219
According to a personal communication by someone familiar with professional bindery practices, there is a common tradition among professional...
This would be consistent with some Crow moccasins. Here is a quote from an article by J. Alden Mason, published in 1926 in The Museum Journal -...
They may be decorative chinoiserie. The styles seem to be a bit of a mash-up. The shoes look Chinese, the stands Indian or Middle Eastern, the...
The one @komokwa found is at the Denver Art Museum. They date them to mid-20th century. I would not be surprised if yours were more recent than...
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