Welcome to Just Pip It

This is my business blog. A blog where you'll find information of antiques, collectable, fashion and other items of interest.

Stunning artwork by Becky Bailey

Buyers and Sellers, please email justpipit@hotmail.co.uk for more information or visit www.justpipit.co.uk

At Just Pip It, we love our fashion

We buy and sell a wide range of fashion brands and styles. If you are looking to buy a top designer fashion item or have items to sell, please contact Just Pip It.

Just Pip It sell a wide range of antiques and collectables.

Just Pip It are looking for a wide range of antiques and collectables. If you want your item valued, contact us and we'll arrange the items to be collected and you'll receive a full description plus an estimated sales figure.

Click on the tab above for further information regarding our fees.

Just Pip It are more than just an Ebay broker. We sell on various websites and offline auctions to make sure that your item sells for its true market value.

Monday, 28 May 2012

Diamond Jubilee! A Rare Collectors Item.


Queen Elizabeth and King George VI Coronation Invitations and Service.

This year marks the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee - There is no better way to commemorate the event or add to royal memorabilia collection then a Genuine invitation to her Coronation 60 years ago. The item it in perfect condition. This lot contains The official invitation - the bound order of service and  information on location. It is rare for invitations to come onto the market especially such a high ranking invitation number 006.
A great opportunity not to be missed. 
Also in this lot is the official order of Service to King George VI Coronation these can be brought together or sold separately just visit www.justpipit.co.uk to view the whole lots including more descriptions and photographs and me with any questions at justpipit@hotmail.co.uk

Tuesday, 24 April 2012

Meissen Makers Marks


Meissen Marks

Meissen porcelain marks date to the 1720's.

Meissen is, of course, the cradle of hard-paste European porcelain. Around 1710, alchemist Bottger was first in Europe to discover the correct ingredients and firing process to produce it. Up until that time, the Chinese were the only ones able to make true porcelain.

The Meissen porcelain marks mostly involve variations on a "crossed swords" effect. The king, Augustus the Strong of Saxony, commissioned special pieces upon which the famous "AR" for "Augustus Rex" appeared. Blue Onion and other later period dinnerware feature the name "Meissen" enclosed in an oval and floating above a simple five-pointed star.


There are some great example of Meissens Figurines at http://www.justpipit.co.uk/

Saturday, 21 April 2012

Just Pip it

Wonderful collectible from Meisson to Royal Memorabilia- look now. www.justpipit.co.uk

Missing Masterpieces.

Henri Matisse. The Luxembourg Gardens.
Luxembourg Gardens

Luxembourg Gardens, 1904, Henri Matisse --- In February 2006 at the Chacara do Ceu Museum in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil security was forced to turn of the surveillance cameras. Using the cover of carnival celebrations four armed men made off with paintings by Pablo Picasso, Salvador Dali and Claude Monet during the robbery. The value of Luxembourg Gardens isnÍt estimated.
Madonna with the Yardwinder
Madonna with the Yarnwinder, 1501, Leonardo da Vinci  --- Disguised as tourists two men assaulted a tour guide and made off with the painting from Drumlanrig Castle, Dumfries, Scotland, in 2003. Its current value is estimated at $65 million.
Pool in the Harem
Pool in the Harem, 1876, Jean-Leon Gerome  --- Displayed in the French wing of the Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg, Russia it was hanging near Manet, Picasso, Matisse, Monet and other priceless masterpieces. For some reason the thieves chose this particular work valued at only $1 million in 2001.
Beach at Pourville
Beach in Pourville, 1882, Claude Monet (Picture #4 shown) --- September 2000 the Polish National Museum was startled to realize that what they thought was the Monet painting was actually a forgery done on cardboard. Thieves had cut the original out and replaced it. The exact date of the crime is not known. It is valued at $7 million.
Nativity with St. Francis and St. Lawrence
Nativity with St. Francis and St. Lawrence, 1608, Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio --- Two thieves entered the Oratory of the Church of San Lorenzo, Palmero, Italy in 1969 and cut this painting from its frame. At nearly 9 feet by 7 feet it is one of the largest paintings ever taken. It was suspected stolen by the Sicilian Mafia. Current value of the artwork is $20 million.

Wednesday, 4 April 2012

Elizabethan Dress - A Guide to European to Styles

Women's clothing begins with their underwear, which is a chemise or smock. The chemise is nightgown-like undergarment, usually of white linen. It may show slightly above the bodice or through the sleeves, but it is underclothing and therefore normally hidden.. It is typically worn with a partlet -- a garment gathered to a neckband that filled in the part of a woman’s chest above the bodice. The comon style of chemise is with a drawstring neck and wrists. Italian women used a smocked style of chemise, where the gament is gathered to a solid band, but the average woman's chemise was very ancient in design, being made tunic-like of square, ungathered pieces.Working women are often  depicted without oversleeves or jacket, with their chemise sleeves rolled up. For upper class women, this chemise may be of very fine linen, and beautifully worked with embroidery that no one but the lady, her maids, and her bedfellows ever saw.
What happens after the chemise is a question of social class. For lower class women, the next garment may be a kirtle, a one-piece, sleeveless dress, and over this a gown or overdress, which has a bodice attached to a skirt. The gown opens up the front and is laced together. Sleeves may then be attached by pins (even the poorest women would be expected to have a little "pin money" for those so-necessary pins to keep her clothes together.). Although this is a style of the 1560s and 1570s, lower class people's clothing changed much more slowly than upper class fashion
A
.Over her chemise an upper class woman would probably be wearing a "pair of bodies" (corset) and a variable number of petticoats.  The corset is  boned in order to give the proper flat-chested, long-waisted look without wrinkles. The boning was done with caning or rushes (modern substitutes are of plastic or metal). Over the corset and petticoats and upper class woman would wear a gown. This is one piece, with skirts sewn to the bodice, as for the peasant overdress, but it does not usually  lace up the front. Instead, it is more likely to fasten almost invisibly up the back side. The bodice has "princess seams" shaping its back, and the opening is often along one of these seams. It may be open down the front of the skirt to show petticoats or a special "forepart" underneath.

The skirts of gowns are very full, with multiple petticoats underneath and often padded out at the hips with a bum roll. The gown may also be hiked up and tucked in the waist to show the petticoats. Working women wore their skirts above their ankles, and often as high as mid-calf. They couldn't afford to be tripping on them around the hearth!
Queen Elizabeth
The 1590s saw the arrival of the drum farthingale for upper class women, which looks like a platter around the woman’s hips, with the skirt falling straight to the floor from the edge of it. Often a flounce was pinned around the edge of the "platter" (this flounce seems more English than French). How this was constructed is debatable, but it may have been an overgrown bumroll. The more traditional cone-like farthingale was still worn in Spanish-influenced territories (including the Imperial states) but it was out of fashion in France. For an extreme version of a truly royal gown wth a drum farthingale, see the portrait of Queen Elizabeth..  This woman is clearly wearing a bumroll, not an elaborate contraption.
Catherine of Austria
Women from the middle to upper classes also sometimes wore loose overgowns, rather like a long robe, with no waist or belt, over a kirtle. This would have been a rather comfortable and warm style in the winter (men
also wore the same type of overgown, usually at home or as a magisterial robe). This portrait of Catherine of Austria is an excellent example.
Women wore ruffs like men, both with and without partlets (it was a maiden’s privilege not to cover this area, and Elizabeth of England made a point of it). They did not wear the falling collar as much as men at this time, but upper-class did wear a dramatic, stiff, fan-like collar wired to the side and back edges of the bodice, sometimes with veils flowing out behind. This picture of Marguerite of Valois from the 1580s demonstrates the style.
Marguerite of Valois

Women wore caps of various kinds. The "Mary Stuart" style, with a heart-shaped outline around the face, is still worn. Wearing the hair brushed up over pads to make a kind of beehive is a trendy aristocratic style -- a more modest version of the same is also worn. Close curls are still worn also, with the long hair gathered into a bun in the back that was usually covered with a small cap or net of some kind. Women also wear men’s style hats over their caps -- a scandalous fashion development according to some. A woman rarely has her hair completely uncovered, and an older or widowed woman would be likely to be even more covered. A working woman would probably have a kerchief or headcloth. A common style is to braid the hair and wrap it circularly around the back, then cover the braids with a small cap or cloth that might be woven into the braids.
A woman wore knee-high stockings under her skirts, held up with simple garters. She might also wear knee-length drawers for comfort and warmth (these are crotchless, for convenience). The custom of wearing drawers seems to originate from Italy and was not necessarily widespread elsewhere.
A gentlewoman traveling out of doors commonly wore a mask -- a full-face number, often made of black velvet, to protect her delicate complexion from the elements. She would also wear a traveling cloak.
A working woman wore an apron. This might be nothing more than a piece of cloth tucked into the waistband of her skirt -- maybe with the upper piece of it pinned to her bodice. Like her brothers, a working woman’s wardrobe was not much subject to change.

Louis XV Style Movement.

Bernard van Risenburgh

Masterpieces were created under Louis XV. It was a period of extraordinary creativity. Curved lines and asymmetry became the rule. New pieces of furniture were produced to perfection. Foreign masters came to Paris to work at the Court such as Bernard van Risenburgh or B.V.R.B., Vandercruse known as Lacroix whose stamp was P.V.L.C.

Vandercruse Lacroix

During this time the fashion for Chinese lacquer had begun to have great influence on European styles. There wer many type of popular decoration. Typical examples of these would be that of flora and fauna combined with chinoiseries and feminine faces, flowers and moulding work. The wood was often painted or in gold leaf. Considerable bronze ornamentation was an essential part of some items. Flower marquetry was very fine during this age.



Some chairmakers of note include; Nicolas Heurtaut and Tilliar, Famous stamps abounded: Godreaux, Oeben, Criaerd, Dubois, Foliot, Lieutaud, N.Petit, Migeon, Joubert and Roussel.

Veneers in Paris was led by the like of Vernis Martin. The vital official stamp "JME" appeared on furniture in 1743 followed by the crowned "C" in 1745 on the gilded bronzes.
Caffieri was the great bronze craftsman to the period.

The provinces kept up with the movement: Nogaret in Lyons, Hache in Grenoble.
Furniture : in addition to cupboards, bookcases, often decorated "sans traverses", new items appeared : chiffoniers, writing desks with flaps, card tables, roll-top desks, ladies' furniture : dressing tables, chairs with short armrests, desks, escritoires. Wooden paneling could be seen.
Materials: most precious woods imported, gilt wood, bronzes.



For an opportunity to own your own peice of Louis XV furniture visit www.justpipit.co.uk