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Windsor Chair

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bodrogit
10 years ago
AI Appraisal
Description

A numbered and signed british ash and elm Windsor armchair from the 19th century.

Category Furniture
Medium ash and elm
Distinguishing marks 13 / 18 H
RJ
Condition Good
Size and dimensions of this item c.a. 100x51x51 cm
Date Period 19th century
Weight unknown
History Unknown
Price unknown
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Submitted by bodrogit

I would really appreciate any information you could give on this piece, specially what could it worth. 

Submitted by Lovejoy

The elm seat does indicates this one is most likely English, seats on North American examples would be pine or basswood. Chairs of this type have never really been out of production, we retail comparable English Windsors for about $150.00.

And how about those marks on the underside of the seat? What could the " 13 / 18 H" and the "RJ" signs mean?
I just "googled" and it dropped out the 13 / 18 Hussars from the english army.

Is it possible, that theres some connection between the chair and the army ( marked for respect, marked by a soldier etc...). The "RJ" has to be the makers monograms, I guess.

Cant these things raises the price of the chair or it just doesn"t mean anything?

Submitted by Lovejoy

English sets of chairs were often marked to indicate the number in the set, eg 13/18 could indicate this one is 13th out of a set of 18. Without a provenance it's pretty difficult to determine much else.

18 piece in one set sounds too much for me.

Unfortunatley I don"t know much about it's history.

All I know is that an old lady gave it to my father a couple years ago in Paris. She told him that she inherited it by her aunt, who lived in the UK.

This lady also died, so theres no chance to get now anything el about it.

I was searching for windsor chairs in the last couple of days and which appeared for me is that usally tah back of the most windsors contains 7 full rods and one or two half on the sides. Contrasts mine has nine and five on the sides.
 

Otherwise, the worth of these types of chairs depends on what? I mean, how come that if I want a brand new chair wich is exactly the same as this, it could cost much than the value of this 100-150 years old. I wish i could be an expert of antique things. :) :) :)

 

Submitted by Lovejoy

It's not uncommon finding large sets of chairs in Britain made for schools, libraries, government offices and even large country houses. I've seen sets with markings as high as 24 at auction. Values depend on availability and Windsors of all types survive in very large numbers. Value is also dependent on location, for example, English Windsors tend to go for less in North America than the home grown versions of the same period.

Aham, I see. So theres no fixed value of a windsor chair? It can be variable at different auctions or collectors.

Submitted by Lovejoy

Correct, there are no fixed values for antiques and collectibles, just value ranges that flucuate all the time depending on current trends, supply & demand.

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