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  2. Thrift Stores Are the BEST Place for Last-Minute Gifts - AOL

    www.aol.com/thrift-stores-best-place-last...

    Brass is one of the more common materials found in thrift and antique stores—bowls, vases, boxes, sculptures, and figurines. “Baldwin and English-made brass are highly desirable,” says Hilbert.

  3. Art in bronze and brass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_in_bronze_and_brass

    The earliest piece of work in brass from the Meuse district is the baptismal font at St Bartholomew's Church, Liège (cf. Fig. 1 in Gallery), a large vessel resting on oxen, the outside of the bowl cast in high relief with groups of figures engaged in baptismal ceremonies; it was executed between 1113 and 1118 by Renier of Huy, the maker of a ...

  4. Bronze sculpture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bronze_sculpture

    Over the long creative period of Egyptian dynastic art, small lost-wax bronze figurines were made in large numbers; several thousand of them have been conserved in museum collections. The 7th-8th century Sri Lankan Sinhalese bronze statue of Buddhist Tara, now in the British Museum, is an excellent example of Sri Lankan bronze statues.

  5. List of Royal Doulton figurines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../List_of_Royal_Doulton_figurines

    This is a list of list of Royal Doulton figurines in ascending order by HN number. HN is named after Harry Nixon (1886–1955), head of the Royal Doulton painting department who joined Doulton in 1900. [ 1 ]

  6. The Brass Armadillo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Brass_Armadillo

    The Brass Armadillo Antique Mall® is a privately held chain of antique malls based in Ankeny, Iowa, USA. The company was founded by Larry Gottula and Dave Briddle in 1992. The chain has six malls in Denver, Des Moines, Kansas City, Omaha, Phoenix, and the Phoenix suburb of Goodyear, Arizona.

  7. Luristan bronze - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luristan_Bronze

    Luristan bronze objects came to the notice of the world art market from the late 1920s and were excavated in considerable quantities by local people, "wild tribesmen who did not encourage the competition of qualified excavators", [10] and taken through networks of dealers, latterly illegally, to Europe or America, without information about the contexts in which they were found. [11]