When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: modern mantel clocks john lewis

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of clock manufacturers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_clock_manufacturers

    John Alker, Wigan (1775-1850) Benjamin Ward; London (1799–1808) Eardley Norton, a most highly esteemed member of the Clockmakers' Company, was working between 1762 and 1794. There are clocks by him in the Royal Collection and many museums worldwide. Norton made an astronomical clock for George III which still stands in Buckingham Palace.

  3. Metamec - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metamec

    The first Metamec model was a mains-powered mantle clock numbered "701" (approx. 1947). All clocks produced by Metamec were produced to a high standard, and the factory expanded with the purchase of new machines to allow them to create their own movements, rather than import the movements from other clock companies.

  4. Clock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clock

    Balance wheel, the oscillator in a mechanical mantel clock. The timekeeping element in every modern clock is a harmonic oscillator, a physical object that vibrates or oscillates repetitively at a precisely constant frequency. [2] [83] [84] [85] In mechanical clocks, this is either a pendulum or a balance wheel.

  5. Thwaites & Reed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thwaites_&_Reed

    1805 John Thwaites Clerkenwell clock at Farlington School, West Sussex. Royal Small Arms Factory Clock Tower [17] (c 1783, refurbished in 1808) Old Bank of England clock (1811), which told the time remotely in sixteen different offices. [18] Mast House Clock, Simon's Town Naval Base, South Africa (1816) Clock at All Saints’ Church, Wokingham ...

  6. Mantel clock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mantel_clock

    One of the most common and valued types of mantel clocks are the French Empire-style timepieces. Simon Willard's shelf clock (half clock, Massachusetts shelf clock) was a relatively economical clock which was produced by the celebrated Simon Willard's Roxbury Street workshop, in Boston, Massachusetts, around the first decades of the 19th century.

  7. Ormolu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ormolu

    French ormolu mantel clock (around 1800) by Julien Béliard (1758 – died after 1806), Paris.The clock case by Claude Galle (1758–1815) Ormolu (/ ˈ ɔːr m ə ˌ l uː /; from French or moulu 'ground/pounded gold') is the gilding technique of applying finely ground, high-carat gold–mercury amalgam to an object of bronze, and objects finished in this way.