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A MATCHED SET OF EIGHT GEORGE III FEATHER-EDGE DESSERT SPOONS (four, crested, by John Lambe, London 1774) and four initialled by John Lambe, London 1780 and a set of four dessert spoons, Feather-edge with shoulders, crested, by Thomas Daniel, London 1767; 12.6 oz (12) £100-150 (+ 30% BP*)
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AN EDWARDIAN PART SERVICE OF OLD ENGLISH THREAD PATTERN FLATWARE INCLUDING:- Nine table spoons, seven table forks, seven dessert spoons & nine dessert forks, crested, by the Goldsmiths & Silversmiths Co. Ltd., London 1908; 76.75 oz (32) £650-700 (+ 30% BP*)
| CADDY SPOONS | |
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AN EDWARDIAN CADDY SCOOP with a green-stained, turned ivory handle, by T. Bradbury & Sons, Sheffield 1908; 3.5" (9 cms) long; 0.4 oz £40-60 (+ 30% BP*)
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A WILLIAM IV / VICTORIAN SCOTTISH PROVINCIAL FIDDLE PATTERN CADDY SPOON with a rounded rectangular bowl, by George Booth, Aberdeen (GB, A, B, D, N) 1830-50; 3.5" (9 cms) long; 0.5 oz £70-100 (+ 30% BP*)
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A GEORGE III CADDY SPOON with a drop-shaped bowl and shoulders, engraved in the bowl with an acorn and oak foliage, vacant cartouche, by Cocks & Bettridge, Birmingham 1811; 3.1" (8 cms) long; 0.23 oz £60-80 (+ 30% BP*)
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A LATE 20TH CENTURY SCOTTISH CADDY SPOON with an openwork scroll stem and a "Luckenbooth" terminal, maker's mark "PD" over "AC", Edinburgh 1987; 3" (7.5 cms) long; 0.4 oz £50-80 (+ 30% BP*)
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FOUR 20TH CENTURY CADDY SPOONS:- A parcelgilt example to commemorate the Prince of Wales's Investiture, by Roberts & Belk, Sheffield 1981, a plain example, maker's mark "CWF", Sheffield 1915, a caddy scoop with an engraved thistle terminal, maker's mark "JC&S", Birmingham 1938 and a "jockey cap" caddy spoon; the latter 2.1" (5.4 cms) long; 2.25 oz (4) £100-120 (+ 30% BP*)
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A CONTEMPORARY CADDY SPOON in commemoration of the late Captain J.D. Norie (founder of the Society of Caddy Spoon Collectors) with a part-covered bowl and a tug boat and bouy on the terminal, also incorporating the initials and dates "12.9.63 JDN 12.0.02", one of a limited edition of forty eight spoons, by Michael Softley, London 2005; 2.8" (7.2 cms) long; 0.95 oz £80-120 (+ 30% BP*)
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A GEORGE III CADDY SPOON with an oval bowl and an engraved lug handle, crested, maker's mark only, by Thomas Tookey, London c.1780; 3.25" (8.2 cms) long; 0.25 oz £100-150 (+ 30% BP*)
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A GEORGE III SCOTTISH PROVINCIAL CADDY SPOON with a shell bowl and a bifurcated Thread pattern stem, by George Smith, London 1796; 3.5" (9. cms) long; 0.45 oz £80-100 (+ 30% BP*)
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A LATE VICTORIAN SCOTTISH PROVINCIAL CAST CADDY SPOON with a view of Balmoral Castle in relief in the bowl, by William Robb of Ballater, with Edinburgh hallmarks for 1900; 3.2" (8 cms) long; 0.6 oz £200-250 (+ 30% BP*)
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A MID / LATE 20TH CENTURY DANISH ACORN PATTERN CADDY SPOON by Georg Jensen of Copenhagen; 4" (10 cms) long; 0.75 oz £80-100 (+ 30% BP*)
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A GEORGE III SCOTTISH PROVINCIAL CADDY SPOON with a deep, egg-shaped bowl, initialled "AD", by William Ritchie of Perth (WR, WR, Double headed eagle), c.1800; 4" (10 cms) long; 0.4 oz £100-150 (+ 30% BP*)
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A VICTORIAN ENGRAVED FIDDLE PATTERN CADDY SPOON with a drop-shaped bowl, initialled "J", by George Adams, London 1861; 3.5" (9 cms) long; 0.45 oz £40-60 (+ 30% BP*)
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A GEORGE III CADDY SPOON with a shallow heart-shaped bowl, decorated with pricked engraving, no maker's mark, Birmingham 1799; 2.75" (7 cms) long; 0.25 oz £80-120 (+ 30% BP*)
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A LATE 19TH / EARLY 20TH CENTURY RUSSIAN SILVERGILT & CHAMPLEVÉ ENAMELLED CADDY SCOOP maker's mark "IK" (Cyrillics), with Russian State marks for 1896-1908 (88 zolotniks); 5.2" (13.2 cms) long; 1 oz £300-400 (+ 30% BP*)
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A CONTEMPORARY CADDY SPOON in the form of a Trinity House pilot's cap in commemoration of the late Captain J.D. Norie (founder of the Society of Caddy Spoon Collectors), one a limited edition of forty eight spoons, inscribed inside "12/09/63 JDN 12/09/92" by Timohty J. Burtwell, London 2005; 1.75" (4.5 cms) long; 0.95 oz £80-120 (+ 30% BP*)
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AN ASSORTMENT OF SEVEN LATE 18TH CENTURY OLD SHEFFIELD PLATED CADDY SPOONS and a gilt copper example; the latter 3.5" (9 cms) long (8) £80-120 (+ 30% BP*)
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OLD SHEFFIELD PLATE:- An assortment of nine late 18th century Old Sheffield plated caddy spoons; the largest one 3.5" (9 cms) long (9) £80-120 (+ 30% BP*)
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A VICTORIAN ENGRAVED CADDY SPOON with a leaf bowl and hollow Fiddle stem, initialled "M" by Hilliard & Thomason, Birmingham 1851 and a Scottish caddy spoon with a bright-cut stem, by Robert Gray (of Glasgow), hallmarked Edinburgh 1806; the latter 3.9" (9.7 cms) long; 0.65 oz (2) £100-160 (+ 30% BP*)
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A LATE 19TH CENTURY RUSSIAN CADDY SCOOP with engraved geometric & scroll borders, by Ivan Alexeyev, Moscow 1890; 4.75" (12 cms) long; 0.8 oz £150-200 (+ 30% BP*)
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A GEORGE III CADDY SPOON with engraving and a pierced bowl, initialled, by Joseph Taylor, Birmingham 1810 and an engraved caddy shovel with a turned ivory handle by Lesdam, Vale & Co, Birmingham 1825; the latter 3.4" (8.5 cms) long; 0.35 oz (2) £150-200 (+ 30% BP*)
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A VICTORIAN DIE-STAMPED CADDY SPOON with a leaf bowl, scrolls, oak leaves and a flower at the end of the stem by George Unite, Birmingham 1849, another with a bright-cut stem by Alice & George Burrows, London 1805 and another with fluting in the bowl by Jonathan Hayne, London 1832; the latter 3.6" (9.2 cms) long; 1.1 oz (3) £180-220 (+ 30% BP*)
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A PAIR OF GEORGE CADDY SPOONS with bright-cut, heart-shaped terminals and batswing fluting in the bowls, one initialled "D" over "WM", the other "WM" over "D", both by Peter and Anne Bateman, London 1801; 2.85" (7.3 cms) long; 0.65 oz (2) £300-400 (+ 30% BP*)
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AN EARLY 20TH CENTURY DANISH BEADED PATTERN CADDY SPOON by Georg Jensen of Copenhagen with English import marks for London 1922; 4.55" (11.5 cms) long; 0.85 oz £80-120 (+ 30% BP*)
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A LATE 20TH CENTURY CADDY SPOON assymetrical in form, with a textured handle, by Graham Watling, with Jubilee marks for London 1977; 2.9" (7.3 cms) long; 0.85 oz £150-200 (+ 30% BP*)
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AN EARLY 20TH CENTURY HAND-MADE "TREE OF LIFE" CADDY SPOON with a hammered finish to the bowl, by H.G. Murphy, London 1929 (with Falcon Studio mark); 3.95" (10 cms) long; 0.95 oz £500-600 (+ 30% BP*)
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A GEORGE III CADDY SPOON with a bright-cut stem and a scallop shell bowl, initialled "HB", by Peter & Anne Bateman, London 1794; 3.1" (8 cms) long; 0.25 oz £100-120 (+ 30% BP*)
| A PRIVATE COLLECTION OF CADDY SPOONS | |
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A GEORGE III SMALL CADDY SPOON with a fluted oval bowl, inset with a filigree panel, ring handle, by Joseph Wilmore, Birmingham 1807; 2.25" (5.7 cms) long; 0.2 oz £70-100 (+ 30% BP*)
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A VICTORIAN CADDY SPOON stamped with leaves and flowers in relief in the bowl and a small leaf terminal, by Aaron Hadfield, Sheffield 1850 and another caddy spoon with a frilly-edged, circular bowl & reeded stem, by the same maker, Sheffield 1866;' the latter 3.25" (8.5 cms) long; 0.8 oz (2) £60-80 (+ 30% BP*)
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SCOTTISH PROVINCIAL:- A George III Scottish provincial caddy spoon with a fluted bowl and a disc terminal, by William Jamieson of Aberdeen (WJ, ABD), 1800-1815; 3.2" (8 cms) long; 0.4 oz £100-150 (+ 30% BP*)
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A GEORGE III CADDY SPOON with pricked borders and an inset filigree panel in the bowl, another with a fluted circular bowl and another with a fluted, drop-shaped bowl and a feather-edge stem, initialled, all three by Thomas Wilmore, Birmingham 1802; each approx. 2.65" (6.7 cms) long; 0.5 oz (3) £100-150 (+ 30% BP*)
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A GEORGE III CADDY SPOON with a fluted oval bowl and a canted rectangular handle, initialled "S", by Thomas Lamborn, Sheffield 1806, another with a stamped leaf motif in the bowl, by Thomas Watson & Co., Sheffield 1807, another with a stubby handle and a fluted bowl by Richard Morton & Co., Sheffield 1803 and another with a navette-shaped cartouche, struck with the double duty mark for Sheffield 1797 (maker's mark unclear); the latter 3.25" (8.2 cms) long; 1.1 oz (4) £120-150 (+ 30% BP*)
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BY JAMES COLLINS:- Three engraved caddy spoons with part-fluted but different-shaped bowls and Fiddle stems, one initialled, all by James Collins, Birmingham 1832, 1839 and 1864; the longest one 3.5" (9 cms) long; 0.65 oz (3) £100-150 (+ 30% BP*)
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CHESTER:- A late Victorian silvergilt caddy scoop, inscribed "1837-1897", by C. Saunders & F. Shepherd, Chester 1896, another caddy spoon with a stamped circular bowl and vacant cartouche, by H. Williamson Ltd., Chester 1896 and another with shamrock on the terminal by Friedlander & Co., Chester 1902; the latter 4" (10 cms) long; 1.1 oz (3) £50-70 (+ 30% BP*)
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A GEORGE III SMALL CADDY SPOON shaped like a frying pan with stamped decoration in the bowl and an engraved bifurcated stem, initialled, by Joseph Wilmore, Birmingham 1807 and two other caddy spoons by the same maker; the former 2.75" (7 cms) long; 0.75 oz (3) £150-200 (+ 30% BP*)
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A GEORGE III SMALL CADDY SPOON with a pierced bowl and an engraved stem, crested, by Joseph Wilmore, Birmingham 1806 and a slightly larger spoon with an oval pierced bowl by Thomas Wilmore, Birmingham 1802; the latter 2.65" (7 cms) long; 0.35 oz (2) £100-150 (+ 30% BP*)
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AN EARLY 20TH CENTURY ARTS & CRAFTS CADDY SPOON the stem decorated with a wire border and two beads, by Amy Eleanor Stewart*, Chester 1920; 3.25" (8.2 cms) long; 0.55 oz £80-120 (+ 30% BP*) *A.E. Stewart, artist of 28 The Crescent, Northwich.
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A LATE GEORGE IV CADDY SPOON with a hollow Fiddle stem and pricked engraving, initialled, by Joseph Wilmore, Birmingham 1819 and a George IV caddy spoon, stamped in the bowl with assorted flowers and fluting, by the same maker, Birmingham 1825; the latter 3" (7.8 cms) long; 0.5 oz (2) £80-120 (+ 30% BP*)
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A VICTORIAN CADDY SPOON with a pierced and engraved stem by Hilliard & Thomason, Birmingham 1881, another caddy spoon resembling an anenome flower by the same maker, Birmingham 1854 and another with a chased leaf bowl and a tendril stem with florets, also by the same maker, Birmingham 1852; the latter 3.6" (9 cms) long; 0.65 oz (3) £120-160 (+ 30% BP*)
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A LATE GEORGE III CADDY SPOON with an Hourglass pattern stem and a circular bowl with a chased border, by Joseph Wilmore, Birmingham 1818; 3.5" (9 cms) long; 0.45 oz £80-120 (+ 30% BP*)
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A GEORGE IV FIDDLE PATTERN CADDY SPOON with a drop-shaped bowl, by either Robert Lowe or Richard Lucas (of Liverpool), Chester 1829, together with another Fiddle caddy spoon, initialled, by George Lowe, Chester 1814 and another with initials and an engraved shamrock on the terminal by John Coakley (of Liverpool), Chester 1807; the latter 4.4 " (11.2 cms) long; 1.6 oz (3) £120-160 (+ 30% BP*)
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ASSORTED:- A George III jockey cap caddy spoon with ribbed decoration and a vacant circular cartouche, no maker's mark, Birmingham 1799 and three other George III caddy spoons (one initialled); the longest one 3.75" (8.5 cms) long; 1.1 oz (4) £100-150 (+ 30% BP*)
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A GEORGE III CADDY SPOON in the form of a scallop shell with a rope-bordered lug handle, by Henry Tudor & Thomas Leader, Sheffield, 1780 and another caddy spoon of similar form with a bead border, initialled, by George Ashworth & Co., Sheffield 1781; 2.5" (6.5 cms) long each; 0.65 oz (2) £120-160 (+ 30% BP*)
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A GEORGE III KING'S PATTERN CADDY SPOON with a fluted bowl, by Peter Lambert (of Berwick upon Tweed), Newcastle 1810, a stubby Fiddle pattern spoon by John Robertson & John Walton, Newcastle c.1815 two other Victorian, Newcastle-made Fiddle caddy spoons (one initialled), with scallop shell bowls; the longest one 4" (10 cms) long; 1.35 oz (4) £100-150 (+ 30% BP*)
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A GEORGE III "LEAF" CADDY SPOON with a tendril handle, by William and Samuel Knight, London 1815 together with four various Continental/Foreign caddy spoons and three plated caddy spoons; the longest one 3.5" (9 cms) long; 2.6 oz weighable silver (8) £100-150 (+ 30% BP*)
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A GEORGE III STAMPED LEAF CADDY SPOON with a coiled tendril handle by Joseph Wilmore, Birmingham 1805, another similar spoon with grapes in relief in the bowl, by the same maker, Birmingham 1808 and another with a fluted oval bowl, also by the same maker, Birmingham 1807; the latter 2.3" (6 cms) long; 0.8 oz (3) £100-150 (+ 30% BP*)
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DUTCH:- Six various 19th century Dutch caddy spoons, another with a fluted bowl and a shaped & engraved terminal, by Jan A. de Haas, Amsterdam 1803 and another with a gilt end fluted bowl and a small cast terminal, maker's mark "B" (crowned), Amsterdam 1793; the latter 3.7" (9.2 cms) long; 2.9 oz (8) £100-150 (+ 30% BP*)
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A GEORGE III IRISH BRIGHT-CUT AND STAR CADDY SPOON with a fluted bowl, initialled "P", by Thomas Townsend, Dublin c.1800 (no date letter) and an Irish Fiddle caddy spoon with a shaped & fluted bow), and an Irish Fiddle caddy spoon with a shaped & fluted bowl, by Thomas Farley, Dublin 1832 (retailer's mark of GRAY); the latter 3.75" (9.5 cms) long; 7 oz (2) £100-150 (+ 30% BP*)
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A GEORGE III LEAF CADDY SPOON with engraved veins, a deep-sided bowl and a coiled tendril handle, by Joseph Wilmore, Birmingham c.1806 (date letter); 3.25" (8.2 cms) long; 0.35 oz £100-150 (+ 30% BP*)
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