Gilli Hanna Decorative Antiques

Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire

       

Beautiful and decorative eighteenth and nineteenth century antiques, accessories and country furniture, sourced primarily in France:

Fruit wood and oak furniture
Painted furniture
Mirrors
Chandeliers and candelabra

 

Glass and ceramics
Linens and soft furnishings
Oils and watercolours
Books
Accessories

 

This website features a few items currently on display in Chipping Norton. See below for details and prices.

Based at Station Mill Antiques in Chipping Norton. 

Close to Oxford and the Cotswolds, open 7 days a week, 10am-5pm.

On the ground floor, near the café.

Station Mill Antiques, Station Road, Chipping Norton, OX7 5HX
01608 644 563 - www.stationmill.com

 

Friday 30th July 2010 - A selection of pieces currently for sale:

 
  Fishing boats on a Normandy beach. In subtle tones and with bright green and red colours on boats.  Price: £195.
  The Blue Van. Oil on canvas with a pre-used backing previously announcing the sale of oysters!  Price: £89.
  French Confiturier. Solid oak cupboard for storing jam. With one internal shelf. SOLD
  Small French oil-painting by Roger Worms, reputed 20th Century artist. Natural wood frame. SOLD
  Victorian bedroom chair, recovered in 100% linen. 

SOLD

  French farmhouse table with drawer.  Fruitwood top on painted base.  SOLD
 

Stunning Louis XIII table, later painted

Full width drawer to front. Gilded finial. Base is a distressed grey, the top is painted to simulate marble.

SOLD

 

Large painted French mirror with crest

Original mirror plate.

SOLD

 

 

Large French metal candelabra

Showing harvest and fishing scenes around base.

SOLD

 

French Louis Philippe mirror

This stunning late 19th century gilt mirror has been beautifully restored. It has new mirror plate. The border has an egg and dart design and shows traces of madder red through the gilt. It has a large, flamboyant crest to the top.   Dimensions: 162 cm high by 104 cm wide.  Price: £1575.

 

French church tabernacle

This tabernacle survives in it's original grey, gold and pink paint.  It would have formed part of a larger surround to a painting in one of the small chapels of a church.  Part of the sides are not painted, where the tabernacle would have formed part of a stepped shelf.  Tabernacles do not typically have bottoms to them.  This tabernacle dates from the late 18th/early 19th century.  It has been fully woodworm treated but the top surface has suffered from previous generations of furniture beetle! Price:  £120.

 

French exotic wood folding chairs

Two substantial hard wood chairs with arm rests.  The tops are decorated with carving. They date from the early 20th century.  When found, their red velvet seats were hanging in rags.  They have been given new Romo fabric velvet seats in a blueberry and pistaccio stripe, and backed with a strong canvas.  Price per chair:  £175. (If you would like to purchase just one of these chairs, please do give me a call).

 

French 1950's canapé

A pretty canapé with moveable side arms.  The wood trim is painted in Farrow and Ball Lime White.  The canapé has been recovered in a sumptuous purple chenille, with piping and matching braid.  The cushions are buttoned.  Dimensions: 49" long by 26" deep.  Price:  £550.

  French 18th century oak commode
This robust piece of country furniture has two drawers, two doors with a working lock and one shelf. The front two corners of the top are rounded. The commode has been painted in a moss green, with details picked out with a grey line. It has been slightly distressed, and waxed to give it a subtle sheen. Dimensions: 105 cm wide by 61 cm deep by 76 cm high. Price: £1195.
  French 18th century table with cabriole legs
A small table with a drawer at either end would originally have been used as a portable table for eating, before the advent of the dining room. The wood is walnut, with a wonderful patina. The top is composed of panels and the drawers carry a circular detailing around the handles. Dimensions: 82 cm wide by 53 cm deep by 68 cm high. Price: £2200.
 

French Louis XIV commode
A pleasing oak commode of ample proportions. The piece has four deep and wide drawers, with a gentle curve to the front, and brass handles and key plates.

The commode became fashionable with the French aristocracy in the early 1600's, replacing the coffer. Drawers offered ease of access to items, rather than having to delve to the bottom of one's coffer. Commodes were designed to be imposing pieces that captured the attention. The Louis XIV style is characterised by it's majestic and imposing lines. Dimensions: 124 cm wide by 64 cm deep x 88 cm high. Price: £3800.

 

If you would like to source something specific or would like to find out more, do call Gilli on 07771 766055 or email info@gillihanna-antiques.co.uk.


The Latest Entry from my Blog

The Diary of a Brocanteuse

brocanteuse.blogspot.com


Off again, direction Angers and beyond. In Le Lion d'Angers I stopped to visit the local antiquaire but regretfully only bought some 1940's postcards of the town. “Ah, but you have a photo of me!” he said. The little boy standing in front of the Vieille Eglise, he assured me, was him, several decades before, on the day the local photographer had been capturing the town's notable edifices.

I reached the village where Francois, the dealer lived. I had no actual address, so pulled up in front of the church and enquired of a man passing by.“Le Brocanteur? Il est la,” he said, and pointed directly across the street. Large metal gates opened and there was Francois and his charming wife. She had prepared some beautifully monogrammed linen sheets for me to see – I was not disappointed.

The sky was full of sunset as I headed across country to find Graham. In Vouille I spotted his motorbike through the huge gateway of what had been a coaching inn. The large courtyard had a dovecot, and the logis was pretty, with white shutters and pink roses climbing up the stone walls. From our room we could hear the occasional great beating of wings as fifty white doves migrated from one gently sloping terracotta tiled roof to another.

Mornings are darker in September though. At 5am I groped open the huge wooden doors of the gateway and made my way to market. At 6am I found myself on the far side of Poitiers in a long line of white vans being directed into a field. I leaned out the van and said to the chap with high-vis jacket that I wasn't wanting to set up a stand but to buy! “Oh vous etes anglaise! Well, well!!” came the reply, sounding very Sherlock Holmes. I’d forgotten my torch and had to content myself with buying things in the light of van headlights, or following other people with torches very closely. As the sky lightened I was relieved to see that what I’d bought were actually rather nice.

It doesn’t take much to put me in a good mood: as I bought a few lovely items from one stallholder – blue spotty coffee bowls, a set of skittles painted to look like sailor boys – he said, “I saw you here early this morning. You’re not a brocanteur from around here, are you. I know all the brocanteurs around here. I said to myself, she must be an antiquaire from Paris.” An antiquaire from Paris indeed!
 (Added 30/07/10)

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