Style and elegance…

Words by:
William Gregory MRICS, Golding Young and Mawer Auctioneers
Featured in:
April 2015

Richly hued rosewood furniture regularly appears for sale in auction rooms across the country.
This hardwood has dark streaks giving it a distinctive figuring when used to make polished furniture and has a strong, sweet smell which persists for many years, explaining its name.

Popular from the early part of the nineteenth century, the Georgian Regency period and throughout the Victorian era, the strong nature of the wood, along with its decorative properties, made it most suitable for dining and drawing room furnishings, as well as small items and musical instruments. It is also often combined with other woods as a veneer banding or marquetry inlay.

All rosewoods belong to the genus Dalbergia and there are two main sources – ‘Dalbergia nigra’ from South America and ‘Dalbergia latifolia’ which is native to India and known as (East) Indian Rosewood.

Over logging and production in the twentieth century has led to ‘Dalbergia nigra’ becoming a CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora) listed endangered species meaning that post-1950s items may need licences to be sold or exported.

At the 150th Anniversary Auction at The Lincoln Auction Rooms of Golding Young & Mawer, several items made of rosewood were sold. The highest price achieved was £1,200 for a William IV rosewood chiffonier by T&G Seddon, which was the top of its £800 to £1,200 estimate. Meanwhile a George IV rosewood breakfast table made £400 and a Victorian rosewood footstool sold for £220.

In the same sale, a later nineteenth century French rosewood double bed sold for its top estimate of £150; a William IV rosewood and mother of pearl inlaid table cabinet made £100; and a Victorian rosewood and marquetry tea caddy was purchased for £95.

One of the smallest items, a late nineteenth to early twentieth century Indian Vizagapatam-style rosewood and ivory inlaid hexagonal tea caddy sold for £50, just above its £30–£40 estimate.



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Grantham school joins Carol Service in celebration of town’s hospitalPupils from St Mary’s Catholic Voluntary Academy are taking part in the first Carol Service to celebrate the special relationship Grantham and District Hospital has with the town and surrounding communities.The school children will join in the singing of favourite Christmas Carols as well as perform their own set musical piece at the Carol Service on Thursday 11th December at 7pm, in St Wulfram’s church, Grantham.Deputy Head Teacher Olivia Mumford said: “The Carol Service is a fantastic opportunity for our pupils to share the joy of music while showing appreciation for the incredible work done at Grantham and District Hospital. It’s a privilege to support such an important event in our town."The Carol Service has been organised by United Lincolnshire Hospitals Charity, who work closely with staff at Grantham and District Hospital and provides those extras for staff and patients that NHS budgets are unable to fund. Further details on the Grantham NHS Carol Service can be found by visiting www.ulhcharity.org.uk/news/christmas-carols-at-grantham-st-wulfram-church-in-thanks-for-towns-sup... ... See MoreSee Less