News

NEWS

See all News

FEATURE

NEWSLETTER

Subscribe

Email updates from Georgian Antiques:

We will not pass on your details to third parties.
You can unsubscribe at any time.

Features & Articles

Subscribe to the Georgian Antiques newsletter to get these articles (and more) delivered via email.


  • Scottish Clockmaking: A Brief History

    Scottish Clockmaking: A Brief History

    From the 15th century onwards public clocks had been erected in the squares and local spaces of larger towns around Scotland, from Peebles to Dundee. The mechanisms of these early clocks were produced overseas, and it wasn’t until the late 15th century to early 16th century that British clockmakers became competent in making and repairing…

    Continue reading…


  • Wood and Metal

    Wood and Metal

    We have a large and interesting collection of mahogany and brass furniture in stock at the moment. This type of furniture possibly derived from cabinetmakers fitting out carriages, ships and trains in the last century. Wood and brass was used for various fittings, such as door handles, luggage racks, and coat stands. Some of this…

    Continue reading…


  • Black Forest Carvings

    Black Forest carvings usually depict forest animals, particularly bears, and also trees and foliage. A common misconception is that they originate from the Bavarian Black Forest of southwestern Germany, but it has in fact been established that they are the creation of Swiss carvers, originating in the town of Brienz. From humble beginnings of a…

    Continue reading…


  • Curator’s Choice Tours

    John Dixon, owner of Georgian Antiques for over 30 years, will offer his expert views on antiques ‘Made in Scotland’ as part of the Curator’s Choice Tours at Dumfries House. Thursday 28th January 14.00-16.00.

    Continue reading…


  • Antique Bookcases

    Antique bookcases come in a wide variety of sizes, styles and woods and remain a functional as well as an attractive piece of furniture to grace any home or office.

    Continue reading…


  • The Orkney Chair

    The Orkney Chair

    The Orkney chair is probably one of the most iconic pieces of Scottish vernacular furniture. Now highly collectable (with examples at the Victoria & Albert Museum) Orkney chairs were originally made with a very practical design. The chair style that we know today was standardised in the mid-19th century by David Kirkness of Kirkwall. It…

    Continue reading…


  • The Furniture of Sir Robert Lorimer

    The Furniture of Sir Robert Lorimer

    (Robert Lorimer at work in the office of Sir Robert Rowand Anderson. Painted by his elder brother John Henry Lorimer, 1886) Sir Robert Lorimer is to Edinburgh what Charles Rennie Mackintosh is to Glasgow. Lorimer’s impressively vast body of work covered the length and breadth of Great Britain, as well as venturing into Europe. Here…

    Continue reading…


  • Charm and Character

    Charm and Character

    The chest of the drawers is one of the most iconic pieces of Georgian furniture. It superseded the previous custom of storage in trunks, colloquially called ‘kists’ in Scotland. Most early Georgian chests were made of oak or oak veneered with native woods such as walnut, and rarely more exotic examples were veneered with laburnum. …

    Continue reading…


  • The Furniture of William Trotter

    William Trotter was one of Scotland’s finest and certainly one of Edinburgh’s greatest cabinet makers, whose distinctive furniture is recognisable by its style and excellent quality.

    Continue reading…