Copy

JOHN BLY

Est.   ANTIQUES   1891

Dear Friends,

Welcome to February's Edition of Bly's Bounty 2019 with our latest stock offerings and article.

Most of the pieces are not yet on our website so please clink the email link below each for further details.
As always our sourcing service is in full swing so do let us know if we can help find that special piece.

 We
 look forward to seeing you in our showroom next time you are in the area but in the meantime if you would like further details on any of the items below please drop us a line.
 

Best Wishes,
John and James Bly
 

Item Of The Month

A stunning Perry chandelier with Provenance.
Arranged on two tiers with seven solid lead crystal 'S' arms and seven solid lead crystal scroll arms; dressed with swags of round double pointed buttons and cut crystal pear pendants.
Faithfully restored and wired with elegant 9” tall cream French candles.
Circa 1820

Height: 50.75" / 129cm   Diameter: 35.5" / 90 cm
Please email for further images and price.

A super pair of William IV period wall mirrors; the carved and gilt wood frames in the Rococo Revival manner. Retaining their original plates and gilding. 
Circa 1835

Height: 46" / 117cm   Width: 26" / 66 cm)
Please email for further images and price.

A charming George II period walnut chest of drawers.
The quarter veneered top with stringing and cross banding over two short and three long graduated drawers with original handles and feet.
Circa 1730

Height: 31" / 78 cm   Width: 31" / 79 cm   Depth: 19" / 48cm
Please email for further images and price.
 

A very rare pair of early 18th century French Louis XV period carved and gilt wood chairs with cabriole legs all round. The original gilding slightly rubbed in places otherwise the chairs are in excellent condition.
Circa 1725

Height: 36" / 91cm  Width: 19" / 49cm  Depth: 18" / 46cm
Please email for further images and details.

A length of stunning 19th century brass chandelier chain of heavy guage. 
Nine links, ten rings.

Total length: 36" / 91.5cm
Please email for further images and details.

A very good and useful early 19th century partners desk with drawers all round and tooled red leather inset writing surface, the turned gilt handles replaced. 
Circa 1820

Height: 31.5" / 80 cm  Width: 60" / 152 cm  Depth: 36" / 91.5 cm

Latest Article

What’s Not To Like?

Of all the useful and attractive pieces of antique English furniture belittled by the name it must surely be the What-not. When seeking to find its derivation any dictionary will provide two explanations.:- (1) An indefinite or trivial thing or (2) A stand with shelves for small objects.  The curious thing is the first record of the number (2) version is in Messrs Gillow's Cost Book of 1795. There is no mention of such a piece in Sheraton's Cabinet Dictionary of 1803 and the first published reference is in 1808 within the leers of Sarah, Lady Lyttleton.  So it does beg the question what had previous generations put their little bits and pieces on during the preceding hundred years. Whatever, it is clearly apparent that this sometimes charmingly designed artefact did not appear in the fashionable house until the beginning of the 19th century and by the 1860's it was being mass-produced to the degree that no house was complete without one.  The first examples were elegant and sometimes enriched with gilt metal mounts as in the pair at Southill in Bedfordshire,  the home of Sir Samuel Whitbread, but as the fashion for them caught on, most were plain and their date clearly identifiable from the form. The earliest had square supports, with three shelves sometimes with a drawer below the bottom one.  A variation at this time was of taper shape in pyramid style, but these are rare.  By 1810 the supports were turned,  changing from slender and elegant to wider in common with table and chair legs as the Regency period developed.  In the time of George IV some what-nots had end supports in the form of lyres, but the big change came with the introduction of machine production coinciding with the fashion for barley sugar twist turning.  By the 1860's the Victorians were demanding  multi-purpose pieces and the what-not was combined with a music or magazine stand. No longer restricted to square or rectangular, ovals, rounds and kidney shapes were made to suit all tastes. In whatever style you choose, the what-not will for ever be a most useful and attractive piece of furniture, and surely far from indefinite or trivial.

The perfect gift for the collector, beginner or connoisseur, and the person who has everything!
John Bly's book on English Furniture, an essential and indispensable addition to any library.
This edition published 2010 based on Discovering English Furniture by John Bly first published in 1971.
Height: 10"/25.5cm Width: 7.5"/19cm Depth: .5"/1cm.
Signed copies available exclusively from us, just £14.99!!

John Bly's book Discovering Hallmarks on English Silver.
First published in 1968, this best-selling monograph has useful tips for budding collectors and the correct hallmarks from 1658 to 2006 

Height: 7"/18cm Width: 4.5"/11.5cm Depth: .25"/1cm.
Signed copies available exclusively from us, just £4.99!!

Copyright © 2019 John Bly, All rights reserved.


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