The dining set was from Bernhardt. It had a number (290 or 290-1) on each piece. The first picture shows a bureau that has cabinets on the bottom and drawers on the top. The second picture shows the China Cabinet with 2 cabinet doors on the bottom plus the glass doors on the top. The table has a set of 2 legs in each corner, shown in a separate picture and 2 individual legs that were in the center of the table. Their are 5 chairs as shown.
The set was, most likely, given to my grandmother by her son Frank in 1943 based on writing on the bottom of one of the chairs.
12 separate etchings/illustrations from Don Quixote, with descriptions from the text underneath (ex. "How Don Diego Garcia with his single force defended the passage of a bridge against a great army" - pg 204). Each is 11"x14", on heavy "creamy" paper. These don't appear to be prints - each individual line is extremely sharp, distinct, and "raised" when held at an angle to a light source. There is no pixellation whatsoever under magnification. Lithographs, maybe? They are in excellent condition, but a few have slight moisture warping. There are no ID marks whatsoever besides the signatures in the illustrations. Any help is appreciated... Thank You!
I bought this figurine of a duck at a garage sale for 50 cents. The duck is yellow and sits atop a white egg that has a pink ribbon around it with yellow flowers on it. The serial number is 05919 and is dated 1987
this is a harmonica made by M. Hohner in the 1940's as far as we know it was my grandfathers. it is acalled The "Chromonica". It is in the original box and has the trade mark stamps enc=graved on one side of the piece.
Prints and frames are in excellent condition. No fading is evident. Each of the frames are glassed and the prints have never been outside the glassed frames. Notice the initials "M R". My research has not turned up any info on an artist with these initials.