Antique wood chairs with a sage velvet.
Upgrade for PDF reports, more daily appraisals, and ad-free experience.
Antique wood chairs with a sage velvet.
Upgrade for PDF reports, more daily appraisals, and ad-free experience.
This appraisal is provided for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute a certified, licensed, or formal appraisal.
Appraisal results are generated using automated systems, including artificial intelligence, and are based solely on the information and images submitted by the user, along with publicly available data. As such, results may contain inaccuracies, omissions, or errors.
InstAppraisal does not authenticate items. No determination of authenticity, origin, materials, maker, or age should be considered verified. Many items—particularly luxury goods, watches, jewelry, coins, art, and designer products—are frequently counterfeited and may closely resemble genuine examples. Authenticity cannot be confirmed from images alone.
Any statements regarding authenticity are expressions of opinion only and should not be relied upon as fact. Independent professional authentication is strongly recommended before any purchase, sale, or valuation decision.
Appraisal values are estimates only and may vary significantly based on condition, provenance, market demand, and additional information not available at the time of review.
Appraisals must not be relied upon for insurance, legal, tax, estate, or financial purposes without independent professional verification.
InstAppraisal disclaims all liability for any losses, damages, or disputes arising from reliance on this appraisal, including transactions conducted based on the information provided.
By using this service, you acknowledge and agree that you assume all risk associated with reliance on appraisal results.
Re: Antique wood chairs with sage detailed velvet
Very odd looking chair, has quite a mix of styles thrown together, like Art Noveau, and Empire. Chairs like this are often late Victorian, but this one seems to have a lot of hand carving. Pieces like this were often made in the Eastern Colonies of Britain by local craftsmen and brought back by Diplomatic Corp/Military members after their posting was over.