89 items found
Page 1 of 8
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Edwardian brass and mahogany shop-display hat stand,
£1,850Edwardian brass and mahogany shop-display hat stand,
the twelve arms each with bead decorated disc-shaped hat support£1,850 -
Early Victorian brass door knocker,
£550Early Victorian brass door knocker,
formed of three mythical beasts with bearded man at the base.£550 -
Nineteenth century brass door stop,
£380 -
Victorian cast iron door knocker,
£325 -
Nineteenth century cast iron door stop,
£300Nineteenth century cast iron door stop,
cast in the form of an eagle on a rocky outcrop with a snake in its talons£300 -
Substantial eary-nineteenth century cast iron door knocker,
£300Substantial eary-nineteenth century cast iron door knocker,
with traces of old black paintwork.£300 -
A large English rose brass door knocker
£295A large English rose brass door knocker
the quatrefoil back-plate with ring knocker on spherical pommel,£295 -
Late nineteenth century cast iron door stop,
£280 -
A pair of late Victorian brass door pulls,
£240 per pairA pair of late Victorian brass door pulls,
each handle with a reeded grip, knopped to the terminii, with a back-plate ornamented with incised concentric rings,£240 per pair -
Victorian cast iron door knocker,
£225 -
Nickel plated door pulls,
£220 a pair -
Fine Victorian brass Gothic door knobs,
£200 each pairFine Victorian brass Gothic door knobs,
with pointed octagonal handles and pierced backplates.£200 each pair
Featured Items
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Mid-twentieth century French aluminium baker’s rack,
£975£450Mid-twentieth century French aluminium baker’s rack,
of typical form, with three tiers of shelving, on castors.£975£450 -
Brunswick lace panel
£336 per panelBrunswick lace panel
Handloom weaving was brought to the Irvine Valley, Scotland, in the late 16th century. The craft of lace making was later introduced to the area in 1876 followed shortly by the invention of the power loom in 1877. Lace and Madras weaving continued to flourish there until the late 1970s. The struggle for companies to compete with the distribution of emerging European and Asian economies had a profound effect on the Scottish textile industry. Fortunately these patterned lace panels continue to be woven in Scotland on some of the last remaining Nottingham lace looms in the world. The manufacturing process is extremely labour intensive; the looms run at a very slow, controlled pace so as to give a high level of quality control. LASSCO has been working closely with the weavers to develop a unique collection of lace panels. These patterns were selected for use in, and especially woven for, the Saloon at Brunswick House, the 1758 Georgian Vauxhall home of the Duke of Brunswick that is now the LASSCO 'flagship'. With authentic Gainsborough patterns appropriately reminiscent of the Vauxhall Gardens style, the lower edges are worked in embroidered scallops. Currently two in stock.£336 per panel -
George III style white marble and inlaid chimneypiece,
£7,500George III style white marble and inlaid chimneypiece,
the plain rectangular shelf above Greek-key pattern frieze of verde marble, flanked by classical ewer endblocks, the tapered pilaster jambs with further verde marble inlay, raised on square foot-blocks.£7,500 -
Pair of chrome and brass table lamps,
£850Pair of chrome and brass table lamps,
formed as columns on pedestal bases, sold without shades, re-wired and PAT tested.£850