Possible plant stand from the 1950's. Very light weight. Intricate wooden spindle; shaved into spiral. No signature of distinguishable markings of any kind.
I have a picture of it but i am not at home. But it is an original painting done on wood of a clown. The clown is wearing a hat and bowtie, and frowning. The artist signed his name on the bottom. Its arcylic paint i would guess and original. I have seen other paintings done by him, but not the same one so i would assume its the only one of that nature by that artist.
This is a beautiful solid 14k gold Jerusalem Cross pendant featuring an authentic 2000 year old coin from Jerusalem. It was purchased from a reputable source Shop NBC about 12 years ago and features an authentic Azes II Tetradrachm Magi coin signifying the birth of Christ. This coin, features King Azes II portrayed on horseback and holding a whip, a rare version from the typical bust or head image.
Print of a painting. Depicts a boy wearing a green newsboy cap and feeding green vegetables to a white rabbit. He is sitting in a doorway. The signature of the painter, 'K Witkowski' is in the lower right side of the painting. The 'i' in the painter's name was cut off of the picture. The paper is a thick, ridged, printing paper of some sort (I am not particularly familiar with prints). The back contains no markings, only a few smudges from where it was in a frame. There are a few bends and scuffs around the edges of the print.
Roll top desk. Number 2110, built by leopold desk company of Burlington, iowa. Desk has 1 center drawer, 4 drawers on the left side and 3 drawers on the right side made to look like 4 drawers. The bottom drawer on the right side looks like was made to hold files. I bought the desk for $100.00 from a antique store in san diego. It was in pieces in the back room. All of the major parts are there with a few missing and broken pieces. Desk has several deep scars and stains on the desk top and upper top of the roll up portion. Most of the desk is tongue and groove construction with a few screws in various places. I have begun to disassemble and sand.
"Loading Up Time" and "New Water in an Old Texas Rig" were done by Jack Unruh for a company called "10X" in Cleburne, TX, exclusively for two of their early 1980's clothing catalogs and to give to special customers. The prints owned are both 143 of 250; signed, numbered and remarked by the artist.