Great find!
I bought a couple of these rather decent Tiffanyesque table lamps brand new some twenty years ago myself (to think that I was in a hurry to...
There's three options: It was made for hanging, which would be the most likely by the size and general look; as suggested it might have sat on top...
As said above, not early 1900s but 1930s-40s hideously refinished so long ago, it might look original to you. It looks like bleached oak, but...
If it was smaller, I would have said boxwood, but I think maple burl is a good guess.
Nouveau as in practically brand new, not as in Bing's shop. If AJ says Indo-Persian, then Indo-Persian it is. I would have said just indo.
As for the bed, this kind of decoration (turning) is usually called bobbin and makes it most likely Victorian. The missing slats, it seems, were...
looks ad hoc to me
Looks like oak all right, but the hardware is the wrong one, and it would help to see the whole thing.
Very nice! They are Hall chairs, for show, not comfort. The boar head is traditionally Gordon's device, so I would guess Scottish or of such...
I mean by the 'shading' of the surface. Horizontal lines is azure, and gold is small dots.
Tell you one thing though, it's meant to be blue/gold/blue. The escallops are probably more of an association with St James or the crusades (it...
If marked, it would be at the bottom of the figurines, so if you don't feel like taking them apart, it will be hard to tell for certain (and there...
Don't know much about porcelain, but if it doesn't look 1750s to you, probably it's not Meissen (my book says after that there should be other...
Local carpenter OR inspired hobbyist. The bottom made of solid planks, to me, points that way. Could be made to work pretty good within the right...
They were also produced by the millions in Brazil for the South American market, with the aluminum or pressed glass tank. Serviceable, though, and...
Doesn't look overly desirable or valuable, but maybe it's all the rage in Turkey, so value will, as always, depend on where.
Seems you've got the drinks cabinet market cornered!
Two parts Art Deco and one of Quinze revival. Could even be pre-modern postwar. Maker is probably of no consequence, especially at 50 quid.
Those in the know call this type of furniture an "armchair". Very arcane, I know. I would guess 1920s to 50s, with an art deco vibe but revivalist...
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