
Entranceways & Doors
We have large stocks of internal and external doors, glazed and part-glazed, double doors, grand entranceways, room dividing doors, pocket doors and even revolving doors can often be found in our stock.
266 items found
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Sir William Chambers’ Doorcase
£48,500Sir William Chambers’ Doorcase
the triangular pediment with dentil mouldings above the rusticated cushion moulded frieze centred by a keystone in Coade Stone modelled in relief with a female mask, the jambs constructed with alternating rusticated quoins,
£48,500 -
An extraordinary cut-glass window
£32,000 the two panelsAn extraordinary cut-glass window
the pair of plate glass panels cut with stylised lightning, rain and abstract forms,
£32,000 the two panels -
A Monumental English Bronze Entranceway
£25,000A Monumental English Bronze Entranceway
each of the doors with lambrequin moulded panels and applied with lion-mask door knockers and a letterplate, hung within a bolection moulded frame and a pierced guilloche overdoor grill (previously glazed), panelled teak to the reverse,£25,000 -
A pair of English bronze doors,
£15,500A pair of English bronze doors,
comprising two pairs of folding leaves, each leaf cast with five convex raised roundels each in a square panel linked with a geometric moulding,£15,500 -
A pair of English bronze doors,
£15,500A pair of English bronze doors,
comprising two pairs of folding leaves, each leaf cast with five convex raised roundels each in a square panel linked with a geometric moulding,£15,500 -
An English limestone pedimented doorcase
£14,500An English limestone pedimented doorcase
the moulded door surround surmounted with a recessed triangular pediment supported on a pair of corbels,
£14,500 -
A vast English pine room divider – an eleven-leaf movable panelled wall,
£12,000A vast English pine room divider – an eleven-leaf movable panelled wall,
ten leaves with three raised and fielded panels to each side, one panel blind, most hinged to both edges, four with facility for track suspension with a bogeyed dolly to the top edge, the closing pair with recessed door furniture,£12,000 -
A late Victorian Portland stone cresting
£11,000A late Victorian Portland stone cresting
the arched top with scrollwork carved in deep relief centred by a cartouche with 'J.L.W' monogramme,
£11,000 -
An English Portland stone cresting,
£9,600An English Portland stone cresting,
the moulded cornice incorporating three triangular pediments with dentil mouldings,£9,600 -
A Portland stone doorcase
£8,500A Portland stone doorcase
the cornice on cushion moulded frieze centred by tripartite keystone, above the ogee and step moulded aperture, the jambs on block feet.
£8,500 -
An impressive oak and pine cupola
£7,800An impressive oak and pine cupola
the square section spreading spire, clad in copper above the tower pierced with louvred panels to each side,
£7,800 -
A set of six English pine columns,
£6,500A set of six English pine columns,
each column, turned from the solid with entasis and bearing original paintwork, four as pictured make a colonnade, a further two of less good condition continue the colonnade (not pictured)£6,500
Featured Items
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An English plaster bust of the Emperor Vespasian,
£980 -
Chrome framed lounge chair with nylon straps,
£350Chrome framed lounge chair with nylon straps,
A chrome framed lounge chair with woven nylon strap seat.£350 -
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