I recently was told it was an indonesian colonial furniture set from the 1900 th century- worth around $500-800 at auction (3 pieces), not usually found in North American, and is not in high demand (little demand for indonesian pieces) If you google “indonesian antique furniture”, the hand carvings are a dead give away. The Rolled arms are seen with colonial style furniture. I believe the information is correct, and you are correct since Inda and Afghanistan are neighboring countries. As a side note the furniture is beautifully made, and carved and the furniture pieces are great examples of an artisian’s craft at their very best.
Settee with two matching chairs, irregularities in spindles, carvings and arms, no nails, only pegs and glue (hand-made and hand-carved). What style is this? Era? Thank you in advance.:) I have more pictures if needed. [img size=448]https://kovels.com/media/kunena/attachments/legacy/images/freland.JPG[/img]
Movado doesn’t get a lot of love these days. Its current manifestation is a faint shadow of its former self. But in its heyday, Movado could hold its head up with the big boys, producing complicated wristwatches that competed with Longines, Omega and Zenith. Here’s a watch that’ll show you what Movado once was.
This is a Movado Subsea, a late version of Movado’s handwound chronograph calibre 95M. It is intended to be waterproof, with screwback and round pushers. It is a supremely elegant design, with a lacquer black dial and contrasting white subdials, a tuxedo in a watch case.
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