There are 118050 lots that match your search criteria. Subscribe now to get instant access to the full price guide service.
Click here to subscribeA late 18thC. 37 piece Royal Worcester Flight & Barr tea set, decorated with bees, bought as wedding present for a family member in 1800, teapot lacks finial, otherwise presents as largely unused with no staining or discolouration, comprises ten tea bowls with ten saucers, ten tea cups, two cake plates, a tea pot with stand, a cream jug, a sugar bowl & a slops bowl
A George V silver three-piece tea set, comprising teapot with wood handle and finial, twin-handled sugar bowl, and milk jug, each of ovoid form, with wavy-edge rim, atop four pad feet, Marson & Jones, Birmingham 1931, height (of teapot) 14.8cm, combined weight 878g/28.22ozt gross all-in approx (3)
A twentieth-century English silver composite four-piece tea set, comprising hot water jug, teapot, sugar bowl, and cream jug, each of ovoid form, decorated with semi-fluting, different dates and makers, including Viners, Sheffield 1921, height (of jug) 19.5cm, combined weight 1,425g/45.81ozt gross all-in approx (4)
A cased Victorian silver three-piece bachelor's tea set, comprising teapot, sugar bowl, and cream jug, each of ovoid form, atop a collet form foot, the body decorated with flowerheads, anthemion, and vignettes of stylised flowers on a stippled ground, with bead edge border, ensuite with an oak fitted presentation case with recessed brass handle, the lined interior affixed with retailer's label, retailed by Hancocks' & Co., of Bruton Street, Bond Street, London, all pieces with matching hallmarks, Robert Hennell, London 1872, also struck with the portcullis, Hennell "house mark", no key, height (of teapot) 13.7cm, combined weight (sans case) 645g/20.73ozt gross approxIvory Declaration Submission Reference Number: VXNZ84MD
A group of items comprising an Edwardian silver tea caddy, William Neale, Birmingham 1907, height 9cm, together with a Victorian silver cream jug, Edward Hutton, London 1891, together with a dressing table set, hallmarked vase with a weighted base, and perfume bottle, weight of weighable silver 166g/5.33ozt approx (9)
A George III silver matched four-piece tea set, of navette form, comprising teapot and sugar bowl, hallmarked Duncan Urquhart & Naphtali Hart, London 1802, a teapot stand by Alexander Gardner, Edinburgh 1794, and cream jug by McHattie & Fenwick, Edinburgh 1802, height (of teapot) 17.5cm, combined weight 1,121g/36.04ozt gross all-in approx (4)Ivory Declaration Submission Reference Number: DJ9QYSV7
Late Victorian pierced silver swing handle bon-bon basket, by George Nathan & Ridley Hayes, Birmingham 1894, two sugar castors, sugar bowl and cream jug, ash tray match striker, two piece condiment set, tea strainer and stand, two cased sets of coffee spoons and six tea spoons, various dates and makers, gross weight, 29ozt 922gm
Cased set of twelve mother of peal handled fruit knives and forks, the silver blades with engraved foliate decoration, by Allen & Darwin, Sheffield 1902, small embossed bowl, London 1895, two sets of coffee spoons, three apostle spoons, two condiment spoons, sugar tongs, and a tea knife with steel blade various dates and makers, weighable silver 10.6ozt 332gmCondition Report: Light wear and tear to the blades, scratches typical of age. The case has wear and scratches.
Half reeded oval sugar bowl. Chester 1907, various shell bowl tea spoons with bright cut decoration, set of six Danish silver coffee spoons, by W & S Soerensen, set of six demi-tasse spoons, cased set of silver handled tea knives and a set of silver handled fruit knives, total weighable silver 15.9ozt 494gm
Cased three piece cruet set by Garrard & Co. Ltd. with two non matching spoons, Birmingham 1958, cased egg cup and spoon, cased knife, fork and spoon, set of six guilloche enamel demitasse spoons,Birmingham 1961, George III toddy ladle inset with a coin, various other small silver items to include continental and other tea spoons, serviette rings, book mark, tongs, and christening set. Gross weight 24.5oz 773gm
Tuscan Fine English Bone China - an early 20th century hand painted & transfer printed porcelain part tea service. The set comprising tea cups, saucers and cake plates, milk jug, sugar bowl and serving squared plate. All decorated in pink & gilt foliate motifs on pink ground. Stamped to underside.Cream jug measures approx. 12cm tall.
A large collection of early 20th century and later English fine bone china part tea sets. The lot to include a set of tea cups and saucers, cake plates and serving plate stamped Allertons Ltd 'Old English' pattern; a Tuscan fine English bone china part tea service; two cups and saucers with extra plate stamped Royal Worcester 'Royal Garden' pattern; together with eight coffee and tea cups, saucers and plates trios stamped Wedgwood 'Whitehall' pattern.
A late 19th century diamond spray brooch, designed as a clover leaf, set throughout with old brilliant and rose-cut diamonds, mounted in silver and gold, (two diamonds deficient), total diamond weight approximately 4.05 carats, length 5.5cm. £3,000-£3,600 --- Provenance: Formerly the property of Sir John Muir, 1st Baronet DL JP, thence by family descent to Susan Sowerby, wife of Captain John Crosthwaite-Eyre (1915 - 2000) and to the present vendor. Sir John Muir (1828-1903) was a highly successful Scottish businessman, founding one of the world’s largest 19th century companies. As a young man, he joined James Finlay & Co., cotton mill owners in Glasgow, becoming a junior partner in 1861 and by 1883 the sole partner. Due to the American Civil War, the company had to relocate its main source of cotton, turning to India in 1871 and opening offices in Calcutta and Bombay, where, with his cousin Hugh Brown Muir, they established the firm of Finlay Muir & Co. The company branched into tea plantations, rubber and jute, acquiring plantations in Sri Lanka. By John Muir’s final years, Finlay Muir & Co. had 90,000 employees with approximately 70,000 employed in India. Finlay Muir had tea trading premises in Glasgow until 2007. John Muir married Margaret Morris Kay in 1860, the eldest daughter of Alexander Kay, then a senior partner of Finlays. They raised ten children, their family home being Deanston House, in Perthshire. In 1889 Muir was elected Lord Provost of Glasgow and created a baronet by Queen Victoria in October 1892. After his death the baronetcy passed to his eldest son Sir Alexander Kay Muir. The diamond brooch offered here for sale was a gift from John to his wife. The brooch passed by descent through the Muir family, and by the 1950s, was in the possession of Susan Elizabeth Sowerby, wife of John Crosthwaite Eyre, a Captain in the Royal Engineers, involved with Special Operation forces behind enemy lines during the Second World War. Condition Report 3 principal diamonds approximately 0.80 carat each. Graded in settings as approximately H-J colour, SI1/SI2 clarity. Remaining diamonds bright - two deficient. Repairs evident to reverse - to include strengthening pins and reattachment / addition of stem. Pin with some side-to-side movement. Safety chain later. Gross weight 9gm.
A Georgian four piece silver tea/coffee set of melon shape, comprising coffee pot, teapot, two handled sugar bowl and a cream jug, the teapot and coffee pot with rosebud and leaf finials, and having acanthus leaf capped handles with ivory insulators, each with applied gadrooned rims and supported on four cast decorative feet, engraved with a crest, hallmarked for London 1830, the sugar bowl 1828, makers mark Robert Hennell II, 2230gms gross weightIVORY CERTIFICATE: TK4GDXRR