Drop sided or gateleg table with barley sugar twist legs. Oval shape when fully set up. Probably made 1900 to 1940 in the Jacobean Revival style. Measurements are 87 cm x 42 cm on top (each leaf is 40 cm) and 70 cm high.



Drop sided or gateleg table with barley sugar twist legs. Oval shape when fully set up. Probably made 1900 to 1940 in the Jacobean Revival style. Measurements are 87 cm x 42 cm on top (each leaf is 40 cm) and 70 cm high.
Draw leaf table, compact 90 cm square, extending to a full size table. Made in England around 1920/30 from oak. Some of these tables have a cross brace near the bottom of the legs. Ths is a much more versatile style, particularly when the table is extended. Measurements are 90 cm x 90 cm and standing 78 cm high. Each leaf is 30 cm creating a table when open of 150 x 90 cm.
Four English chairs made in oak and c.1930. Good solid chairs with green vinyl drop in seats. Measurements are, a remarkably uniform 46 cm wide, 46 cm deep and 46 cm high at the seat.
Oak hall cupboard. Antique and English, circa 1930 with fully fitted interior and gadrooned edging and very unusual scalloped front. These photographs do not do this piece justice, as the actual colour is much warmer in appearance. Measurements are 100 cm wide,40 cm deep and standing 180 cm high. Price is $340.
Chest on chest, mahogany veneer on oak frame with handles and slide out dressing tray. This slide is also at desk height and could work effectively as a workstation for tablet or laptop. Measurements are 102 cm wide by 54 cm deep and 175 cm high.
Antique style display cabinet made around 1930 in England with 2 glass shelves. Some small veneer losses, please see photographs. Otherwise good condition with key. Measurements are 120cm by 35 cm and standing 120cm high.
Victorian porcelain plate in the oriental style. $49.00
“Very rare item this is an English knife box made in the late 1700s or early 1800s for the storage of different sized table knives. Since the earliest times the knives were kept separate from the other cutlery lest they fall into the hands of potentially “”hostile”” guests.”