The huge and ongoing task of cataloguing thousands of cigarette cards and other ephemera from a deceased collector’s […]
Author: Learn Antiques Team
Before there were portable music players and apps, there was the music box. This carefully crafted contraption made of wood or other material plays a certain melody whenever one winds the key or opens the box. Music boxes in the 21st century have become novelty items. They often make lovely presents, especially for young girls and ladies. They also come in many forms: from the usual box to clocks, snow globes, figurines, and the most common variety as jewellery boxes. They evoke a feeling of nostalgia, and as the box is opened or the key turned, memories seem to rise with the melody. Despite all the modern musical inventions, there’s nothing quite like a music box.
A rare early 17th century bronze bust of a French statesman discovered in a French country house has […]
In the resilient Beswick market, collectors paid high prices for some rarities – even modern prototypes – at […]
The practice of placing a metal mark on a building to indicate insurance against a fire started in […]
Robert Hillingford (1826-1904) was a Victorian painter of historical scenes, whose subjects included the Duke of Wellington and […]
Bringing the highest price yet at one of Richard Edmonds’ (20% buyer’s premium) specialist Petroliana and Automobilia sales […]
While the binding, with Charles Ricketts’ familiar gilt design on the front cover, is not in the best […]
One of the biggest surprises at Nagel’s (33% buyer’s premium) sale in Stuttgart on October 16-17 came right […]
This rare late-17th century 4in (9.5cm) devotional pendant displays the craft of ‘scherenschnitte’ (scissor cuts). Extracted from Antiques […]
Hornby Dublo collectors fought spirited battles for clockwork rarities at Duggleby Stephenson’s (18.75% buyer’s premium) York sale. Extracted […]
The Starrs collection at Sotheby’s featured 25 reticulated vases or decorative objects produced by George Owen for Royal […]
Cigarette cards were originally blank card inserts that were used to stiffen soft and flimsy cigarette packets and protect its contents. It wasn’t long until someone decided that these stiffeners could serve another purpose: advertisement material. Eventually, these cards began to come with pictures of a particular theme, compelling customers to buy more of the product to complete the set of a certain theme. No matter the reason one has for indulging in cartophily, it cannot be denied that cigarette cards not only served as a hobby. The information printed on them helped people to see places they would never see, learn things they wouldn’t have known, and reflected the sentiments of the people of their era.
Thirty pieces of antiquarian jewellery discovered next to a joint of meat in an old freezer were sold […]
A good-quality violin linked to the German maker Jacobus Stainer (1619-83) led a group of previously overlooked musical […]
During the late 18th century, schools of netsuke carving were established throughout Japan. Extracted from Antiques Trade Gazette […]
Paul Storr is revered as one of the finest and legendary English silversmiths. He built a reputation for perfecting the works, styles and designs of the grandiose Neo-Classical style developed in the Regency period in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Most of his works can be easily found in European royal palaces, museums and throughout the world. But contrary to the notion in people that his works were commissioned only by the royalties, the truth is that he embraced a higher level of craftsmanship and superior quality into his products. Up to date, his legacy lives on, and his works command very high prices in many global auctions.
The Little collection of early English silver is coming to Christie’s London on December 3. The auction comprises […]