How Does The Antique Trade Work ?

The most common rout that an antique items takes from a private seller to an investor is as follows.

An object that we describe as “Item A” is sent off to auction where is guaranteed to be sold on a set day .. The object is “Knocked down ” to a buyer at the hammer price of £100

after about one month the vendor with receive a payment of £75 .. Back on auction day the buyer pays the Hammer price of £100 plus an additional fee of £30 .

“Item A” is much more likely to have been acquired by a dealer than an end user . “Item A ” will now probably be re offered on Ebay or a specialist website .

The dealer’s asking price for “Item A ” is likely to be £300-£400 and if they a patient they will find a collector or even another dealer who believes a greater price can be asked . How could the original seller achieved a better return than the £75?.

We live in an age where information is at everybody’s fingertips . Had the original seller taken time to research just what specialist websites were asking for items similar to “Item A ” then an email sent to a specialist would have resulted in on offer to buy directly.

Selling in a general auction is a democratic, transparent option favoured when dealing with diseased estates . Traditionally in less enlightened times the auction provided pleasant surprises. Given that generally people were not enlightened achieving a return of £75 for “Item A ” would have been welcome news .

Today it is better to first approach then sell to dedicated professionals. At Arundel Antique Buyers we rely entirely from buying directly . The chances are that we have customers who have travelled from abroad on any given day. In areas such as militaria we are well known in the collecting community. Please call if you wish to learn more about our services .

01903-884602

Highly Valuable WW2 Militaria

Highly Valuable WW2 Militaria


WW2 items are highly valuable !

Financial Rewards Waiting In Exchange For Historic WW2 Memorabilia

This is the pioneering specialist website tasked with acquiring and thus preserving WW2 Memorabilia. We buy historical items of every description , from all countries around the world We provide free valuations and identification for any number of pre 1946 Militaria

Fast, Accurate , Free Appraisals

If you’re simpy curious how much your WWII items are worth yet you are not ready to sell We provide free appraisals. No commitment on your part is expected we are conscious of those within the industry pressurise those who contact them. Our believe is simply this. If we provide the most winning offers/valuations we will get our fare share of business .. Emails are responded to quickly and professionally. Many emails will be responded to within one hour.Please make sure when emailing, that you take clear pictures of the WWII item. A brief history of where it came from would be nice, but usually not necessary. Shipping and Payment InformationNEVER SEND GOODS WITHOUT PRIOR PAYMENT EVEN TO CANADA !Be smart, be safe on internet transactions. Google my name / website to see that I am legit with only positive transactions. References upon Request.Payment can be made in advance though: PayPal (recommended),Or Money Order, Cashiers Check or Western Union for goods received .

We make the selling process of your WW2 memorabilia fast and easy. David Mattey of WW2 Buyer has turned his lifelong love of Militaria into a career . David Says he is comforted to know that he plays a part in locating and preserving historic items for generations to come.

Top Prices paid in advance (Paypal) Individual pieces and large lots welcomed. Sell WWII German helmets here. for your World War 2 Militaria, to Include heccccc The memory of service provided by your family member is of great importance to us . Details of the late owners will be rewarded by additional payments. All WWII items happily accepted for a free appraisal

If you are simply curious as to what your World War Two item is worth, WW2buyer.com are happy to take a look at images received and provide you the correct market valuation . We appreciate all messages received regardless of weather you are ready to sell or a simply curious..

Do not be taken in by advertisers who claim to be collectors or teaches this type of website is very expensive to run and to maintain it’s position. Think carefully before taking the first offer gain several opinions then you will now who to deal with and who to forge a trading relationship with.

Art Dealers In The South Of England Call 01903-884602

carl jutz

The Amy M Gallery is in the centre of Arundel High Street . Arundel castle and the picturesque town attracts thousands of international visitors each year. At the Amy M Gallery we are interested in acquiring original oil paintings from all periods . On display is a volume oil paintings by contemporary artists with prices ranging from £300 up to £7000. If you are considering selling or investing in art we welcome contact from you by telephone or Email Message.. David Mattey will answer all enquiries promptly and provides offers free of charge .. Telephone 01903-884602 Or message davidmatteybuyer@gmail.com .

Chinese art buyers Sussex

We now require good examples of Chinese art. 

We travel to Mainland China supplying enthusiastic buyers . Our interest ranges from Porcelain ,Carved Jade , Lacquer work , and jewellery ..  If you would like to discuss items you are intending to sell please feel free to contact me via email davidmatteybuyer@gmail.com.

Antiquities Arundel

Or telephone to arrange a meeting .

  01903-884602  David and Amy Mattey provide a free valuation service for those choosing to visit our High Street Store..

Arundel Antiques Buyers operate from their high street store”Antiques and Militaria ” which is located in the centre of Arundel. No 18 High Street . Arundel BN189AB .

With auction mhouses reporting a decline in bidding from mainland China, the market is poised to anoint Taipei, the biggest city on the semi-independent island of Taiwan, as a new global art-selling capital. On January 18 Taipei Dangdai, the first fair in the city devoted entirely to contemporary art, will open under the tutelage of former Art Basel in Hong Kong director Magnus Renfrew, and mega-galleries such as David Zwirner, Hauser & Wirth, Gagosian, Thaddaeus Ropac, Pace, and Lisson all signed on for the inaugural edition.Taipei Dangdai’s swift embrace by the world’s top galleries shows how collectors in Taiwan—which is officially called the Republic of China and is not an independent nation, but has little interaction with the mainland—have made the island an essential piece of any serious gallery’s Asia strategy. Sean Kelly Gallery, long a single-gallery operation in New York, chose to open its first overseas location in Taipei, and will have a project space that’s run by newly hired director of Sean Kelly Asia, Gladys Lin. And when Lévy Gorvy announced in November that it would be opening a gallery in Hong Kong, it also announced that it had hired a staffer to work in an office in Taipei. The coronation of a new Asian art market hub comes at a time when collectors in mainland China have been buying less at auctions and fairs. The main reason for the downtick appears to be a government crackdown on spending money outside of the country, which is happening amidst a trade war with the United States that is cutting into profits. The first quarter of the year ends with Art Basel in Hong Kong, and by then, we should have a better sense of which parts of Asia are fueling the continent’s art buying.

The effect of Saudi Arabia’s investments

Political uncertainty may indirectly affect the overall mood of the market; just as often, auction houses and fairs are hit directly by the decisions of foreign powers. Case in point: In April, Hollywood super-agent Ari Emanuel threw a dinner for the crown prince of Saudi Arabia, Mohammad Bin Salman (MBS for short), at the Santa Monica home of producer Brian Grazer and his wife. They dined while surrounded by works by Richard Prince, Gerhard Richter, and Ed Ruscha to celebrate MBS’s 5- to 10-percent stake in Emanuel’s entertainment company, Endeavor—which is the majority owner of Frieze, the art fair and media giant—that the Saudi sovereign wealth fund had purchased to the tune of $400 million.Such a deal was already somewhat controversial given Saudi Arabia’s checkered human rights record, bombing campaign in Yemen, and MBS’s power consolidation that involved imprisoning his enemies in the Riyadh Ritz-Carlton. But it was not until the journalist Jamal Khashoggi was assassinated at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul that Emanuel began the process of pulling out of the deal, telling the Hollywood Reporter that he was “personally…really concerned.” That’s a large chunk of change to have to return, and it remains to be seen how it will affect the launch of a new Frieze fair on Endeavor’s home turf: Frieze Los Angeles, which will hold its inaugural edition in February.Frieze’s parent company is out nearly half a billion dollars, but other art world entities are still figuring out how involved to be with a wealthy Saudi government intent on investing in cultural infrastructure. In December, it was revealed that Sotheby’s has been in talks with MBS to build an art city in an archaeologically rich part of Saudi Arabia’s deserts. The auction house is still in an “exploratory phase,” according to a spokesperson for the country’s cultural commission. And in November, the magazines ARTnews and Art in America were sold to Penske Media Corp., which in February accepted a $200 million cash infusion from the sovereign nation’s Public Investment Fu

Antique Jewellery (Pre 1900) Specialist buyer

   

Before Selling Antique Jewellery Please Consider The Following .

Arundel Antiques

Arundel based specialist David Mattey is a highly experienced buyer of 19th-20th century jewellery and silver.

David and his high street store are frequently featured on television .

If you visit a high street jewellers to sell items which you have inherited please be warned! .

You will be lucky to receive just the “break value”. This equates to the component value of stones & precious metals at the current scrap price.

Selling at auction is NO better an option ?

Why ? 

Firstly because the vast majority of jewellery sold at auction is acquired by the trade, who generally wish to buy at break price!

Secondly adding insult to injury almost 50% of the total paid by the buyer will be lost to the auction in deductions because of the questionable  practice of charging both buyer and seller.?.

If a an online bidder pays his bill from the auction house of say £200 , you the buyer will only see around £100.

In defence of the auctioneers VAT is included in the 50% that you will loose.

Is there a discrete alternative way to sell?

Yes!

I for one believe there is.

By visiting our Arundel store

“Antiques & militaria”

At 18 High Street Arundel

West Sussex BN18-9AB.

Sellers will receive an entirely different reception .

We buy items with the intention of re selling them to receptive buyers from around the world .

Arundel Antiques

Only buyers with a specific objective would enter a jewellers shop as most are not geared up for the casual browser.

At our high street store we enjoy the cross over sales denied by the dedicated jewellers shop. 

In the summer season couples are together rather than at their respective places of work, typically this is when we sell many chains, pendants, rings and watches .

On the run up to the festive season Arundel hosts it’s candle lit event which attracts thousands of shoppers who become acquainted with our totally diverse stock.

Most importantly we offer to purchase directly with immediate online bank transfer or for goods below £500 in value we pay cash by arrangement. , All vendors are required to supply proof of their identity and sign for the transfer of property. so please be sure to bring some current form of identification..

David Mattey

David Mattey is a highly experienced buyer of 19th-20th century jewellery and silver, together with medals and coins ..

If you visit a high street jewellers to sell items which you have inherited please be warned that .

You will be lucky to receive only the break value. This equates to the  component value of stones & precious metals at their scrap price.

Selling at auction is NO better an option ?

Why ? 

Firstly because the vast majority of jewellery sold at auction is acquired by the trade, who generally wish to buy at break price!

Secondly adding insult to injury almost 50% of the total paid by the buyer will be lost to the auction in deductions because of the questionable  practice of charging both buyer and seller..

Yes if a an online bidder pays his bill from the auction house of say £200 you the buyer will only see half .

In defence of the auctioneers VAT is included in the 50% you will loose.

Is there an alternative place to sell?

Yes!

I for one believe there is.

By visiting our Arundel store

“Antiques & militaria”

At 18 High Street Arundel

West Sussex BN18-9AB.

Sellers will receive an entirely different reception .

We buy items with the intention of re selling them to receptive buyers from around the world . Only buyers with a specific objective would enter a jewellers shop as most are not geared up for the casual browser.

At our high street store we enjoy the cross over sales denied by the dedicated jewellers shop.

In the summer season couples are together rather than at their respective places of work, typically this is when we sell many chains and rings .

On the run up to the festive season Arundel hosts it’s candle lit event which attracts thousands of shoppers who become acquainted with our totally diverse stock.

Most importantly we offer to purchase directly with immediate online bank transfer or for goods below £500 in value we pay cash by arrangement , Vendors are required to supply proof of their identity and sign for the transfer of property so please be sure to bring some current form of identification..

 


Call David today for an

appointment or some free advice.

Telephone 01903-884602 

Call David today for an

appointment or some free advice.

Telephone 01903-884602 

Why Not To Sell Jewellery at auction ??

David Mattey

David Mattey is a highly experienced buyer of 19th-20th century jewellery and silver, together with medals and coins ..

If you visit a high street jewellers to sell items which you have inherited please be warned that .

You will be lucky to receive only the break value. This equates to the  component value of stones & precious metals at their scrap price.

Selling at auction is NO better an option ?

Why ? 

Firstly because the vast majority of jewellery sold at auction is acquired by the trade, who generally wish to buy at break price!

Secondly adding insult to injury almost 50% of the total paid by the buyer will be lost to the auction in deductions because of the questionable  practice of charging both buyer and seller..

Yes if a an online bidder pays his bill from the auction house of say £200 you the buyer will only see half .

In defence of the auctioneers VAT is included in the 50% you will loose.

Is there an alternative place to sell?

Yes!

I for one believe there is.

By visiting our Arundel store

“Antiques & militaria”

At 18 High Street Arundel

West Sussex BN18-9AB.

Sellers will receive an entirely different reception .

We buy items with the intention of re selling them to receptive buyers from around the world . Only buyers with a specific objective would enter a jewellers shop as most are not geared up for the casual browser.

At our high street store we enjoy the cross over sales denied by the dedicated jewellers shop.

In the summer season couples are together rather than at their respective places of work, typically this is when we sell many chains and rings .

On the run up to the festive season Arundel hosts it’s candle lit event which attracts thousands of shoppers who become acquainted with our totally diverse stock.

Most importantly we offer to purchase directly with immediate online bank transfer or for goods below £500 in value we pay cash by arrangement , Vendors are required to supply proof of their identity and sign for the transfer of property so please be sure to bring some current form of identification..

Call David today for an

appointment or some free advice.

Telephone 01903-884602 

Antique Jewellery Buyers Arundel

Antique Jewellery Buyers Arundel

David Mattey of “Antiques & Militaria” Is A Highly Experienced Buyer Of Antique And Modern Jewellery  ..

The Prime Position Of Or High Street Shop Attracts Thousands Of Wealthy Buyers From Around The World.

Don’t Sell To A Middleman Sell Directly To The Store In The Centre  Of Arundel High Street..

When We Buy Antique Jewellery ,Sellers Will Be Pleased To Know That They Will Achieve Up To 50% More Than They Would Achieve At Auction.

Why? Well That Is Easy. Auctioneers Charge The Buyer 25% “Buyers Premium”On Top Of The Hammer Price ..Yes I Know It Sounds Hard To Believe But It Is Entirely True .

Customers Are Cleverly Duped Into Believing That Auctions Are Fare And Democratic Institutions. Today It Is Far Better To Conduct A Little Homework Before Selling Directly To Dedicated Professionals … Those In A Prime Position To Sell To End Users Rather Than To Middlemen

..Next Time You Visit Arundel Why Not Call In A Speak  Directly to Me David Mattey About Gold Diamond, Sovereigns,Half Sovereigns, Rings, Bangles, Jewellery ,Watches,Emeralds,Topaz,Garnets ,Ruby,Wrist Watches ,Pocket Watches,15 ct ,9ct, 18ct  Or Call Us Now On

01903-884602 .

Is It legal To Send Knives And Swords?

As collectors reach a certain time in their lives the question of disposing of their treasures must be considered . Leaving the task of obtaining the correct prices to relatives, or the potentially disastrous lottery of selling at auction are far to common options. Those who put collections together will be aware of the subtleties of each item . To obtain a collection’s full potential it is probably better for the collector to engage in a little market research and set about pricing what they have marketing it while they are in good health .. Antiques and Militaria is the name of our High Street store David Mattey has made his career in Antiques over a 40 Year period . David has eighteen active internet websites covering various areas from Oil Paintings to Clocks ,Jewellery and Militaria . David invites you to make contact and formulate the best strategy for marketing your treasured possessions . Telephone 01903-884602 today and learn more about commission free selling at 100% recorded prices

Is It legal To Send Knives And Swords?

Illegal To Send Knives And Swords?

It Is About To Become Illegal To Send Knives And Sword Through The Post In The U.K. To Private Addresses .

 

.. Knives Bayonets And Swords Can However Be Sold Directly To Our Specialist High Street Militaria Store And Other Such Specialists.

Auctioneers Will No Longer Post Swords Or Knives To ON-Line Bidders So Auction Prices Are Set To Slump..

 

 

. If You Have A Collection To Sell Of Swords, Bayonets And Knives Don’t Panic . Antiques & Militaria Is The Name Of Our High Street Store..

 

We Buy Collections And Can Arrange Collection For Those Who Are Based Outside Of The Area…

 

  Swords,Antique  Guns, Daggers And Bayonets Are Something We Treat With Great Respect.

 

  We Buy Directly From You And We Are Happy To Pay Your Researched Prices In Virtually Every Case. 

enamel signs wanted

 

As Sellers We Take A Responsible Approach Supplying Mature Collectors,Museums and Investment Groups..

 

Never Will We Supply Juveniles Or People Who Appear Agitated ..

 

  To Sell From A Single Item To A Substantial Collection . Visit Our High Street Store.

“Antiques & Militaria” 

18 High Street 

Arundel

West Sussex 

BN18-9AB

England

EMAIL davidmatteybuyer@gmail.com

Or Call Now —01903-884602

Is It legal To Send Knives And Swords?Benin bronze, Dion Pears, Dogon female figure, Enamel sign dealers, Fine Art Buyers Sussex, hampshire antiques, How To Sell Antiques In West Sussex, JUKEBOX MUSEUM AND SHOWROOM, JUKEBOX SHOWROOM SUSSEX U.K., Keris / Kris, medal buyers, Militaria appraisal days, Military Badges, Paintings required by many of the following artists, R.L.B.Daggers, South Africa Medals, Sussex Antiques Auctioneers, Sussex coin and medal dealers, testimonials for antiques dealers, The Commando Dagger, TOOVY’S AUCTIONEERS, Tribal Art Prices, Uncategorized, wessex coins, zero commission auctions

Benin bronzeDion PearsDogon female figureEnamel sign dealersFine Art Buyers Sussexhampshire antiquesHow To Sell Antiques In West SussexJUKEBOX MUSEUM AND SHOWROOMJUKEBOX SHOWROOM SUSSEX U.K.Keris / Krismedal buyersMilitaria appraisal daysMilitary BadgesPaintings required by many of the following artistsR.L.B.DaggersSouth Africa MedalsSussex Antiques AuctioneersSussex coin and medal dealerstestimonials for antiques dealersThe Commando DaggerTOOVY’S AUCTIONEERSTribal Art PricesUncategorizedwessex coinszero commission auctions

Commando dagger prices

The Commando Dagger or fighting knife has a double edged blade.

The FS Knife was developed by William Fairbairn and Eric Sykes based on concepts which the two men conceived  prior to World War II whilst  serving in the Shanghai Police.

The fighting knife was made famous during World War II when it was issued to the British Commandos, Airborne Forces, the SAS, Home guard,  and many other units the issuing was most widespread in anticipation of the  Normandy landings .

A weapon with a tapering blade optimised for thrusting.

The F-S knife is capable of being used to inflict slash cuts  when its cutting edges are sharpened . The Wilkinson Sword Company produced the knife with minor pommel and grip variations.

The F-S dagger is largely associated with the British commandos and the US Office of Strategic Services (OSS) and Marine Raiders they based their issued knife on the Fairbairn-Sykes), among other special forces / clandestine / raiding units. It features in the insignia of the British Royal Marines, the Belgian Commandos, the Dutch Commando Corps, founded in the UK during World War II, the Australian 1st Commando Regiment and 2nd Commando Regiment, and the United States Army Rangers, both founded with the help of the British Commandos.

The 3rd Canadian Infantry Division who landed on Juno Beach on “D” Day and  the 1st Canadian Parachute Battalion who jumped and fought there carried FS daggers .

The first batch of fifty F-S fighting knives were produced in January 1941 by Wilkinson Sword Ltd after Fairbairn and Sykes had travelled to their factory from the Special Training Centre at Lochailort in November 1940 to discuss their ideas for a fighting knife.The F-S fighting knife remains in production because of continued use in hand-to-hand combat situations around the world. The F-S fighting knife was designed exclusively for surprise attack and fighting, with a slender blade that can easily penetrate a rib cage. The vase handle grants precise grip, and the blade’s design is especially suited to its use as a fighting knife. Fairbairn’s rationale is in his book Get Tough! (1942).  “There is no more deadly weapon than the knife” in close quarter combat . In choosing a knife there are two important factors to bear in mind: balance and enthusiasm. The Fairbairn-Sykes was produced in several patterns. First pattern knives have a 6.5 in (17 cm) blade with a flat area, or ricasso, at the top of the blade which was not present on the original design and the presence of which has not been explained by the manufacturers, under the S-shaped cross guard. Second-pattern knives have a slightly longer blade (just less than 7 in (18 cm)), 2 in (5.1 cm)-wide oval cross guard, knurled pattern grip, and rounded ball, and may be stamped “ENGLAND” (a US legal requirement when importing the surplus knives after WWII, as they had to show the country of origin) on the handle side of the cross guard. Some may also be stamped with a “Broad Arrow” /|\ British issue mark and a number (e.g., 21) on the opposite handle side of the cross guard. Third-pattern knives also have a similarly sized seven-inch blade, but the handle was redesigned to be a ringed grip. This ringed grip is reputed to have distressed one of the original designers as it unbalanced the weapon and made harder to hold when wet, but it was used by the manufacturers as it was simple to produce and could be cast from a cheaper and more plentiful alloy instead of using up scarce quantities of brass stock which were, of course, required for ammunition casings and other such vital applications. William Rodgers, as part of the Egginton Group, now also produce an all-black “sterile” version of the knife, which is devoid of any markings showing maker for NATO use. The length of the blade was chosen to give several inches of blade to penetrate the body after passing through the 3 in (7.6 cm) of the thickest clothing that was anticipated to be worn in the war, namely that of Soviet greatcoats. Later production runs of the F-S fighting knife have a blade length that is about 7.5 in (19 cm). In all cases the handle had a distinctive foil-like grip to enable a number of handling options. Many variations on the F-S fighting knife exist in regards to size of blade and particularly of handle. The design has influenced the design of knives throughout the many decades since its introduction. Copies[edit] Because of the success of the Fairbairn-Sykes Knife in World War II and in the wars in Korea and Vietnam, many companies made their own versions of the F-S fighting knife, such as the 1966 Gerber Mark II. Almost two million of the British knives were made. Early production runs were extremely limited and demand was high, with many British troops attempting to buy their own. OSS version[edit] Representation of the knife used by the OSS with its distinctive scabbard. Collection of the CIA Museum. The OSS Stiletto was a double-edged knife based on the Fairbairn–Sykes fighting knife. It was so admired that the US military created several other fighting knives based on it. The US Office of Strategic Services’s knife manufacturing bid was approximately one-fifteenth of the British equivalent, but the US version of the knife, manufactured by Landers, Frary & Clark, of New Britain, Connecticut was improperly tempered and inferior to the British F-S Fighting Knife in materials and workmanship. Its reputation suffered accordingly.[3] A total of 20,000 units of the OSS version were produced. The OSS dagger was officially replaced in service in 1944 by the US M3 Fighting Knife.[6] The scabbard for the OSS Stiletto looks like a pancake spatula but this is because of the design so that can be worn high or low on the belt, or angled either left or right. In theory this gave a very adaptable mounting system, but the sheet metal was like a knife itself, especially to a parachutist. Other knives by Fairbairn[edit] General Robert T. Frederick of the Devil’s Brigade (First Special Service Force) is credited with a similar weapon, the “V-42 Commando Knife” V-42 Stiletto, itself a derivation of the F-S design. The V-42 was manufactured by W. R. Case & Sons Cutlery Co. in the US circa 1942-43 and is distinguished mainly by its markings and the presence of a small, scored indentation for the wielder’s thumb, to aid in orienting the knife for thrusting. Fairbairn has been given full or partial credit for the Smatchet and several other fighting knives.

Paintings required by many of the following artists

ARUNDEL ANTIQUE BUYERS ARE BASED IN ARUNDEL WEST SUSSEX.

Visit Our Store In Arundel We are Buying Antiques Daily .

clocks required

It is no wild boast to say we offer A competitive, reliable service for locals wishing to sell.

South Africa Medals

House contents valued from £10,000-£50,000 required

Traditionally Antiques Dealers have been viewed with enthusiastic distrust by British Society long before the internet arrived.

Many quick thinking “Entrepreneurs”  therefore have joined the supposedly respectable ranks of  the auctioneer.

Sussex Auctioneers

The opportunities for sharp practice however were greater for the career criminal  who adopted the socially respected

“Profession”of Auctioneer ?.

Sussex Antique Dealers

Antique Shops vanished from the high street while television programs perpetuated the Auction myth by screening the sale of items selling to the supposed surprise of both vendor and Auctioneer.

Great television ! but a less than balanced message is conveyed .

ARUNDEL ANTIQUE BUYERS offer a service .

If you have fine antiques which you are planning to sell contact us.

We will research the recorded price of similar of identical pieces and bring your attention to our findings.

We Will Then House And Attempt To Sell On Your Behalf  At Higher Than The Recorded Value In A High Street Retail Situation.

You No Longer Have To Lose 40% To Your Local Auctioneer!

WE RETURN YOU YOUR TOTAL EXPECTED PRICE ADDING A VARIABLE RETAIL MARGIN ON TOP FOR OURSELVES.

 

Works by the following Artists

Always Required:

signed painting by Abbey E. A. ,
signed painting by Adam, Robert ,
signed painting by Adams, George Gammon ,

signed painting by Adams-Acton John ,
signed painting by Allen C. J. ,
signed painting by Allingham, Helen ,
signed painting by Alma Tadema ,
signed painting by Lady Alma Tadema ,
signed painting by Anderson Sophie ,
signed painting by Anning Bell Robert ,
signed painting by Armstead H. H. ,
signed painting by Ashbee, C. R., signed painting by Bacon, J. H. F.,
signed painting by Bacon John (Jun.) ,
signed painting by Bacon, John (Sr.),
signed painting by Baily E. H.,
signed painting by Barber C. Burton ,
signed painting by Barker Benjamin,
signed painting by Barker Benjamin (the Younger),
signed painting by Barker Thomas (Barker of Bath),
signed painting by Barker Thomas Jones,
signed painting by Barlow  Thomas,
signed painting by Barry  Charles,
signed painting by Basevi  George,
Bates, Hsigned painting by arry
signed painting by Bateman, Robert
signed painting by Bayes, Gilbert
signed painting by Beardsley, Aubrey
signed painting by Behnes, William
signed painting by Bell, John
signed painting by Bell, Robert Anning
signed painting by Bewick, Thomas
signed painting by Binney, H. C.
signed painting by Birch, C. B.
signed painting by Birket Foster, Myles
signed painting by Birnie Philip
signed painting by Blair Leighton, E
signed painting by Blake, William
signed painting by Blundstone, F. V.
signed painting by Bocklin, Arnold
signed painting by Bodley, G. F.
signed painting by Boehm, J. E.
signed painting by Boughton, G. H.
signed painting by Bouguereau, William
signed painting by Bonheur, Rosa
signed painting by Bowerley, Amelia
signed painting by Brett, John
signed painting by Brickdale, Eleanor Fortescue
signed painting by Brock, Thomas
signed painting by Brown, Ford Madox
signed painting by Bruce-Joy, A.
signed painting by Bubb, J. H.
signed painting by Bunce, Kate
signed painting by Bunny, Rupert C. W.
signed painting by Burges, William
signed painting by Burne-Jones, Edward Coley
Burnsigned painting by e-Jones, Philip
signed painting by Bursill, Henry
signed painting by Burton, Decimus
signed painting by Burton, William Shakespeare
signed painting by Butler, Lady
signed painting by Butterfield, William
signed painting by Byam Shaw signed painting by Caldecott, Randolph
signed painting by Calder Marshall, William
signed painting by Calderon, P. H.
signed painting by Calvert, Edward
signed painting by Cameron, Julia Margaret
signed painting by Carew, J. E.
signed painting by Chambers, William
signed painting by Chantrey, Francis
signed painting by Clausen, George
signed painting by Cockerell, C. R.
signed painting by Cole, George Vicat
signed painting by Collcutt, T. E.
signed painting by Collier, Hon. John
signed painting by Cooper, T. Sidney
signed painting by Corbould, Richard
signed painting by Cotman, John Sell
signed painting by Crane, Walter
signed painting by Crome, John (Old Crome)
signed painting byCruikshank, George
signed painting by Cubitt, Thomas signed painting by Dadd, Richard
signed painting by Dalziel Brothers
signed painting by nce, George (The Younger)
signed painting by de Morgan, Evelyn
signed painting by de Morgan, William
signed painting by Derwent Wood, F.
signed painting by Deverell, Walter H.
signed painting by Dicksee, Sir Frank PRA
signed painting by Dicksee, Herbert
signed painting by Dicksee, John Robert
signed painting by Dicksee, Miss Margaret
signed painting by Dicksee, Thomas Francis
signed painting by Dollman, J. C.
signed painting by Draper, H. J.
signed painting by Drury, Alfred
signed painting by Duckett, Thomas, of Preston
signed painting by Durham, Joseph
signed painting by Duncan, John signed painting by Earl, Maud
signed painting by East, Alfred
signed painting by Eastlake, Sir Charles PRA
signed painting by Edwards, Mary Ellen (M.E.E.)
signed painting by Egg, Augustus
signed painting by Etty, William signed painting by Faed, Thomas
Painting Signed by Falero, Luis
Painting Signed Fehr, H. C.
Painting Signed Ferrey, Benjamin
Painting Signed Fildes, Luke
Painting Signed Fisher, Alexander
Painting Signed , John
Painting Signed Foley, John Henry
Painting Signed Ford, Edward Onslow
Painting Signed Ford, Henry Justice
Painting Signed Foster, Myles Birket
Painting Signed Fowler, Robert
Painting Signed Frampton, George
Painting Signed Frith, William Powell
Painting Signed Frith, W. S.
Painting Signed Frost, W. E.
Painting Signed Furniss, Harry Painting Signed Gahagan brothers
Painting Signed Gainsborough, Thomas
Painting Signed Garbe, Richard
Painting Signed Gaskin, Arthur J.
Painting Signed Gaskin, Georgiana Cave
Painting Signed Gere, C. M.
Gibson, John
Gilbert, Alfred Painting Signed
Painting Signed Gilbert, John
Painting Signed Gleichen, Feodora von
Painting Signed Gloag, I. L.
Joseph Goddard of Leicester Painting Signed
Painting Signed Goodman, Maude
Painting Signed Godward, J. W.
Painting Signed Goodall, Frederick
Painting Signed Goscombe John, William
Painting Signed Gotch, T. C.
Painting Signed Gott, Joseph
Painting Signed Goulden, Richard Reginald
Painting Signed Grant, Sir Francis PRA
Painting Signed Grant, Mary
Painting Signed Greenaway, Kate
Greiffenhagen, Maurice
Painting Signed Grey, Paul Painting Signed Hacker, Arthur
Painting Signed Hale, E. M.
Painting Signed Hansom, Joseph
Painting Signed Harcourt, George
Painting Signed Hardy, Paul
Painting Signed Hatton, Helen
Painting Signed Havers, Alice
Painting Signed Haynes King
Painting Signed Heath Robinson, W.
Painting Signed Hemy, C. Napier
Painting Signed Henning, John, Sr and Jr
Painting Signed Herkomer, Hubert von
Painting Signed Herring, J. F. Sr
Painting Signed Hiles, Bartram
Hill, Arthur
Hinchcliffe, J. E., ‘of Hampstead’
Hodge, Albert’
Hodgson, J. E.
Hogarth, William
Holiday, Henry
Holl, Frank
Hood, G. P. Jacomb
Houghton, Arthur Boyd
Housman, Lawrence
Hughes, Arthur
Hughes, E. R.
Hunt, William Holman
Hunt, William Henry
Hunter, Colin Image, Selwyn
Inchbold, J. W. Jacomb-Hood, G. P.
Jekyll, Gertrude
John, W. Goscombe
Jones, Adrian
Jones, George
Jopling, Joseph M.
Jopling, Louise
Joseph, Samuel
Joy, A. Bruce
Joy, G. W. Kauffman, Angelica
Kemp-Welch, Lucy
Keyworth, William
Kilburne, G. G.
King, Jessie M.
King, Haynes Landelle, Charles
Landseer, Edwin
Landseer, Thomas
Langley, Walter
Lanteri, Edouard
Lavery, John
Lawson, G. A.
Leader, B. W.
Leighton, E. Blair
Leighton, Lord (Frederick Leighton) PRA
Leighton, John (Luke Limner)
Lemon, Arthur
Leslie, C. R.
Leslie, G. D.
Levetus, Celia
Lewis, J. F.
Leyland, J. B.
Linton, W. J.
Long, Edwin
Lough, J. G.
Lucas, Seymour
Lucchesi, Andrea Macbeth, Ann
Macbeth, Robert Walker
Macdowell, Patrick
Macgregor, Jessie
Mackennal, Bertram
Maclise, Daniel
Mackmurdo, A. H.
Madox Brown, Ford
Margetson, Helen
Margetson, W. H.
Marks, H. S.
Marochetti, Baron Carlo
Marshall, William Calder
Martin Brothers
Martineau, Robert Braithwaite
Mason, George Heming
Matcham, Frank
Melville, Arthur
Merritt, Anna Lea
Meteyard, Sidney
Millais, J. E.
Millar, H. R.
Milnes, Thomas
Moira, Gerald
Montalba, Clara, Ellen, Hilda and Henrietta
Montford, Paul Raphael
Moore, Albert
Moore, Henry
Morgan, Evelyn de
Morgan, Fred
Morgan, Mrs Fred
Morgan, William de
Morris, William
Morrow, A.
Mostyn, Thomas
Muckley, Fairfax
Muller, W. J.
Mullins, Edwin Roscoe
Munro, Alexander Napier Hemy, C.
Nash, John
Neatby, W. J.
Newill, Mary
Nicholl, W.G.
Nicol, Erskine
Ninham, Henry
Nixon, Samuel
Noble, Matthew
Normand, Ernest
North, Marianne Oakes, J. W.
Onslow Ford, Edward
Orchardson, W. Q. Paget brothers
Palliser, H. W.
Papworth family
Parker, Harold
Paul, Evelyn
Peacock, Ralph
Pearson, J. L.
Pegram, Henry
Pennethorne, James
Perugini, Charles
Perugini, Kate
Pettie, John
Philip, Birnie
Phillip, John
Philpot, Glyn
Pickersgill, F. R.
Pinwell, G. J.
Pomeroy, F. W.
Poole, Henry
Poynter, E. J.
Priest, Alfred
Prinsep, Val
Pugin, Augustus Rae, Henrietta (Mrs Ernest Normand)
Redfern, J. F.
Redgrave, Richard
Reid, Flora M.
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Richmond, W. B.
Riviere, Briton
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Robinson, Heath
Roe, Fred
Rollins, H. Wenlock
Romney, George
Rooke, T. M.
Roscoe Mullins, E
Rossetti, Dante Gabriel
Rossetti, Elizabeth (nee Siddal)
Rossi, J. C. F.
Ruskin, John
Ryland, Henry Sadler, Dendy
Sandys, Frederick
Sant, James
Sawyer, Amy
Scanes, Mrs (Maude Goodman)
Schenck, Frederick
Schmalz, Herbert
Scott, Gilbert
Scott, William Bell
Shannon, J. J.
Shaw, Byam
Shaw, Richard Norman
Siddal, Elizabeth
Sievier, Robert William
Skipper, G. J.
Small, William
Smirke, Robert
Soane, John
Solomon, Abraham
Solomon, Rebecca
Solomon, Simeon
Solomon, Solomon
Southall, Joseph Edward
Spartali Stillman, Marie
Spence, Benjamin Edward
Spence, T. R.
Stanfield, Clarkson
Stannard, Joseph
Steell, John
Stephens, William Reynolds
Stevens, Alfred
Stillman, Marie Spartali
Stock, H. J.
Stokes, Adrian
Stokes, Marianne
Stone, Marcus
Storey, G. A.
Stott of Oldham, William
Strang, William
Stratton, Helen
Street, G. E.
Strudwick, John Melhuish
Strutt, William
George Stubbs
Sullivan, E. J.
Sumner, Heywood
Swain, Joseph
Swan, J. M.
Swinstead, G. Hillyard Tadema, Alma
Tadema, Lady Laura Alma
Taylor, Leonard Campbell
Tenniel, John
Teulon, S. S.
Theed, William
Tinworth, George
Thirtle, John
Thomas, John
Thornycroft, Hamo
Toft, Albert Vedder, Elihu
Vicat Cole, George Walker, A. G.
Walker, Fred
Walker, Marcella
Wallis, Henry
Ward, James
Waterhouse, Alfred
Waterhouse, J. W.
Waterlow, E. A.
Watson, M. L.
Watts, G. F.
Webb, Aston
Webb, Philip
Weekes, Henry
Wenlock Rollins, H.
West, Benjamin PRA
Westmacott, Richard
Whall, Christopher
Wheelwright, Roland
Wilkins, William
Williamson, F. J.
Wilson, Richard
Windus, William
Wirgman, T. B.
Wollen, W. B.
Wood, F. Derwent
Wood, Warrington
Woolner, Thomas
Wright, Ethel
Wyllie, W. L. Yeames

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W

A
Absolon, Louis
Adderton, Charles William
Atkinson, John

Baker, Thomas
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Balmer (Attrib.), George
Bentley, Charles
Birch, Samuel John Lamorna
Boyce, W T N
Breanski (Jr), Alfred Fontville de
Bryant, Henry Charles
Buchanan, Peter S
Bunting, Thomas

Kay, Archibald
Knox, William
Krause, Emil Axe
Laing, Thomson
Lambert, Louis Eugene
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Leaver ARCA, Noel Harry
Leickert, Charles
Liddell, John Davison
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McCullum, W L
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Mellor, Everett Watson
Miller (nee Cameron), Josephine Haswel
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Muirhead, John
Muller, William James
Palmer, Harry Sutton
Parker, Henry H
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Richardson, Edward
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