Erroneously marked as 'Emperor Knoshi' 1672, – value £150 – L. S. Lowry drawing, #12 in series, 1967, £9,000 – Gilt Ormolu clock with two horizontal 'chapter rings' instead of a dial, Sold by W Davis and Sons, of Birmingham, made by Japy Frères of France.
£800 – bronze head of Romilly John (son of Augustus John) by Sir Jacob Epstein, made in 1907, £15,000 – Tig jug (with three handles), decorated for Ann Barrett 1678, Staffordshire Potteries slipware made by trailing brown clay over yellow clay and combing for effect, £50,000[3] – small 1870s 'Albion press' Printing press – manufactured under licence by Frederick Ullmer Ltd, £2000 – Needlework picture of Bolton Abbey by Ruth Whiteside.
Penn, grandson of William Penn, £10,000 – blue Japanese pot, decorated with silver sparrows, £4,000[3] – Big Pit National Coal Museum – Royal Doulton jug, 1935, depicting King George V and Queen Mary, designed by Charles Noake, £700 – cabinet, art furniture, 1870s, ebonised, emulating lacquer furniture, oriental origin, inlaid with free painted tiles, by Walter Crane, or Mintons an Hollins or Wedgwood, plantstand/Jardiniere, £800 – Swiss singing bird box.
(Sons Robert and Alexander), c.1830, £4,000 – oil painting by George Bernard O'Neill, of a Victorian girl on Mayday, £7,000 – Georgian Tallboy (furniture) – Indian fakes of 19th century Swiss pocket watches £30 – Scrimshaw 'love token' with whaling scenes, £2,000 – necklace made in Ceylon or India, with mixture of gems including heania garnet, Amethyst, Sapphire, Garnet, Turquoise, £8,000 – serving-table, 1770s, £4,000 – Teddybear by Margarete Steiff GmbH, 1910, £1,500 – Art Nouveau biscuit barrel, in English Tudric pewter, 1900s.
Gift from George, Prince of Wales between 1905–1910, £3,500 – Rudolf Gustave Mueller painting on wood panel (1836) of middle east street market, mounted in ornate in arabesque frame, £15,000 – Royal Doulton 'Lambeth pot' decorated by Eliza Simmonds, mounted as an umbrella stand, 1883, £1,000 – Royal Doulton pot by Hanna Barlow, decorated by incising wet clay and 'Scrafito drawing, 1884, £1,000 – 1884 miniature Royal Doulton pot £70 – Longcase clock by Richard Lear Pinhay (also spelled 'Pinhey') of Plymouth dock, 1775–1789 £6,500 – collection of 900 dolls including Simon and Halbig and Betty Oxo – 1830s writing desk in Biedermeier style, courtly style of Paris, Vienna and Berlin, £4,500 – American Art glass by Lewis Comfort Tiffany, decorated Iridescence gold, 1900s, marked Fabriole.
– Georgian silver owl drinking cup, hallmarked London 1818, £10,000 – 17th century desk, in the Bargueño/Vargueño style (prototype of an English Escritoire), stand decorated with ironwork, walnut and red velvet and .
£4,500 – decorated plate, 1870s, a painting on pottery by William Stephen Coleman (WS Coleman) of Mintons pottery London, (an associate of James Abbott McNeill Whistler and the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, £4,000 – ring with Columbian emerald set in diamonds, 1910–1915, (in the contemporaneous style of Cartier & Tiffany), 3.5 carats, £10,000 – collection of Margarete Steiff GmbH bears and stuffed animals, including 1905 Peter Rabbit £10,000 – memorabilia of Quentin Crisp, letters and drawings plus inscribed copy of The Naked Civil Servant, – £2,000 – Arts and Crafts movement Jewellery by Charles Sargeant Jagger, (sculptor): ring £500; ring £800; pendant £1,500 – Chinese porcelain bowl repaired with rivets, £200 – collection of early 19th century Scrimshaw, .... £2,000 – 'Pearlware' 'char dish' made in Lancashire, 1790s, £300 – Chinese monkey statue made for export to Europe, 1760s, £3,000 for pair – 16th century Limoges porcelain plate, enamel on copper.
Harvest scene labelled Aoust (old form of Août, August), £3,000 – 1780s 'mock pendulum' clock by William Allam of London, anchor escapement, £6,000 – French side cabinet, (meuble d'acquis), one of a pair made for the Exposition Universelle (1855) (aka Great Paris Exhibition), the other is at the Prince's Palace of Monaco.