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  2. Barrow Hepburn & Gale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barrow_Hepburn_&_Gale

    Barrow Hepburn & Gale was founded in 1760 under the name of Hepburn and Sons by John Hepburn, after having moved to Bermondsey from Chesham and there opened a tannery. There are records of the Hepburn family working from Long Lane in Bermondsey throughout the 19th century, eventually coming work with the Gales in both Deptford and Bermondsey.

  3. Limoges Box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Limoges_Box

    Limoges porcelain boxes were first created in the mid-18th century after Jacques Turgot, Finance Minister of King Louis XVI, gave a Royal edict to the city of Limoges, France the exclusive right to produce Royal Limoges porcelain for the Kingdom of France. The first Limoges trinket boxes were long narrow containers that were created for ...

  4. Decorative box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decorative_box

    Some of the most expensive are French and German 18th century examples, and the record auction price for a German box is £789,250 (about US$1.3 million), bid in 2003 at Christie's in London. Modern snuff boxes are made from a variety of woods, pewter and even plastic and are manufactured in surprising numbers due, largely, to snuff's ...

  5. Cooper (profession) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooper_(profession)

    Cooper readies or rounds off the end of a barrel using a cooper's hand adze Assembly of a barrel, called mise en rose' in French. A cooper is a craftsman who produces wooden casks, barrels, vats, buckets, tubs, troughs, and other similar containers from timber staves that were usually heated or steamed to make them pliable.

  6. Tunbridge ware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunbridge_ware

    Early makers of Tunbridge ware, in Tunbridge Wells in the mid 18th century, were the Burrows family, and Fenner and Co. In the 19th century, around 1830, James Burrows invented a technique of creating mosaics from wooden tesserae. Henry Hollamby, apprenticed to the Burrows family, set up on his own in 1842 and became an important manufacturer ...

  7. Vienna porcelain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vienna_porcelain

    Service set - a tray and two jugs, c. 1770. National Museum in Warsaw Chinoiserie plate, 1730–1735, Du Paquier period. Vienna porcelain is the product of the Vienna Porcelain Manufactory (German: Kaiserlich privilegierte Porcellain Fabrique), a porcelain manufacturer in Alsergrund in Vienna, Austria. It was founded in 1718 and continued until ...

  8. Lady's Workbox, 1808 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lady's_Workbox,_1808

    The interest is twofold, firstly it gives samples of 75 types of woods giving their 18th century names, and secondly it gives an insight into the woods then available in Lancaster. Catalogue of the Specimens of Curious Woods (English and Foreign) Introduced in a W0RK- BOX, made for Miss GIFFARD, of Nerquis, by ROBERT GILLOW and BROTHERS, of ...

  9. Tinderbox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tinderbox

    Sheet Iron tinderboxes. English, 18th and early 19th C. Pocket tinderbox with firesteel and flint. This type was used during the Boer War due to a scarcity of matches. A tinderbox, or patch box, is a container made of wood or metal containing flint, firesteel, and tinder (typically charcloth, but possibly a small quantity of dry, finely divided fibrous matter such as hemp), used together to ...