Posted on Leave a comment

Fine Fresh Stock

Candlesticks

It’s almost Christmas!

The last chance to post is fast approaching (if we use express, this Wednesday!), and we have more than ever to tempt you with….

You’ll find some Fresh Furniture, a group of Australian Art, Paris Porcelains, Sterling Silver, Fantastic Fossils….

There’s a huge variety!


And we can always send it now for delivery in the New Year…….

Christmas Feature

See our ’12 Days of ANTIQUE Christmas’ …. to be sung to the well-known tune, we have a progressive feature for you to enjoy.

Pop back to see the daily update, from 1 to 12 rather interesting Antique Gifts! Can you imagine what ’12’ might be?

Visit >

Fresh Stock

Fresh Art

A collection of 20th century Australian Art is Fresh today, purchased in the 1970’s. Interestingly, this is the very beginning of several of these artist’s careers, making them scarcer ‘early examples’- even if only 50 years old!

Fresh Silver

Fresh Fossils

Millions of years, for a few dollars….

Featured Collections

We have some additions to our Featured Focus pages, showing you collections of items that may be of interest….
Chose one below & have a browse!

Fossils - at Moorabool Antiques, Geelong
Posted on Leave a comment

Fossils, Meteorites, Minerals…. Millions of Years for a few $!

Fossils - at Moorabool Antiques, Geelong

You would think the older something is, the more expensive…. but in the case of Moorabool’s Fossils & Natural History, that’s definitely not the case.

In fact, the oldest items in our shop are the cheapest!

While most of them are not featured on the website, you will see a good selection of pieces below.
Our mounting is bespoke, natural, and exclusive to Moorabool. As it is done in-house, unmanned items can be mounted on similar stands on request.

Note: some items may not be available: if the exact one is not still in stock, we will contact you with similar options to choose from.

Orthacras sp.

Fossils Under $50

Australian Fossils

Dinosaur Bits!

Other Fossils

Large fossil Ammonite, Gonioclymenia species, Morocco
Posted on Leave a comment

The 12 Antique Days of Christmas

The Antique Days of Christmas….

All Stock @ Moorabool Antiques

Twelve travelling Teaspoons…..

… these spoons are from many different countries, and were the personal collection of famous Australian, Dame Mabel Brookes.

…Eleven Saucers Flying…

Cups & Saucers, that is…..! A lovely selection from Moorabool’s extensive stock

….Ten Chairs just sitting…

From 17th – 20th century, here’s a sample of our amazing variety of chars @ Moorabool.

…Nine Paintings Hanging…

Some special characters, including Jean Baptiste Perronneau (1716-83), Francis Cotes RA (1726-1770)

… Eight Ancient Artefacts…

Some fascinating ancient items including Indus Valley Culture 6,000 years old, Danubian Greek, South Italian Greek, and a lovely Tribal piece at the back – a canoe splashboard from the Solomon Islands.

Seven Censors Smoking…

Some Chinese bronze censors in various forms, 17th-18th century, plus a remarkable Japanese 19th century example.

…Six Lords a’hanging…

Personal Silhouettes, each with a story to tell… the Instagram of the 18th century!

….Five… Wedgwood Plaques.

Small Jasperware plaques, mostly 19th century

Four Kandy Elephants,

From Kandy, Sri Lanka, where they parade through the streets…. earlier 20th century

Three Frog Mugs,

Staffordshire Pottery – and all three frogs are in the large central one, circa 1860!

Two steamy teapots,

left: Old Sheffield Plate c.1820. right: Austrian c.1900

… and a Peacock in a Topiary ….

Minton, circa 1835

Posted on Leave a comment

Some Stunning Sterling Silver

Kings Pattern Sterling Silver setting for 12, 1820's and 1880-20653

Sterling Silver is a very desirable Antique these days: it’s the allure of a precious metal that glistens beautifully, formed into beautiful shapes by the hand of a gifted craftsman – but is also an incredible asset that has increased in value to dizzying heights over the past decade.

So it’s a beautiful display item, often usable, and something that will retain a high dollar-value into the future.
That’s worth collecting!

Sterling Silver at Moorabool Antiques, Geelong
Some ‘usable’ Sterling Silver at Moorabool Antiques, Geelong

What is ‘Sterling Silver’?

‘Sterling’ Silver is a standard enforced in Britain, with severe consequences for any fraudulent activity.
The requirement is the silver content of 92.5% is achieved – the ‘Sterling Standard’, applying originally to currency and bullion. The other 7.5% of metal content actually has a purpose: solid silver is very soft and unsuitable for items that will be used, such as cutlery: the extra metal provides some strength without affecting the appearance of the silver.
Items are assessed by a series of government appointed ‘Assay Offices’, which also recorded the year the item was assessed.

Reading Sterling Silver Hallmarks

This example has very clear marks as they were struck into the silver very deeply.
From top to bottom:
‘WE’ Maker’s Mark – for William Eaton
(0) Leopard’s Head – the mark of the Assay Office in London
# Striding Lion – the British Hallmark indicating it is ‘Sterling Standard’, ie. 92.5% Silver Content
-J- Gothic capital ‘J’ – the date letter for London Assay Office in 1844
ø Head facing left – Young profile of Queen Victoria, left-facing in contrast with previous monarch, which was William IV & faced right.

This example shows the Irish variant of the ‘Sterling’ mark:
‘JS’ – for John Smyth, Dublin
ø Head facing left – Young profile of Queen Victoria
# Seated ‘Hibernia’ figure, representing Ireland, standing in for the striding lion used in the other Assay Offices in Britain
^ Crowned Harp – indicating the Dublin Assay Office
‘m’ Dublin year mark for 1857

Other Solid Silver standards

German .800 silver centerpiece, baroque Four Seasons embossed, c. 1880-12446

Elsewhere, silver of the same standard is also made. American and Australian silver conforms to the 92.5% standard, often using the word ‘Sterling’ for a mark, but without any assay office to mark it. On the Continent, silver content varies a lot, but is often handily marked with the parts of silver out of 1,000: ie. ‘.900’ is 900/1000, or 90%, close to Sterling standard, while items that are going to be used a lot are often .800 silver, 80%, making them hardier.

Caring for your Silver

The one thing about silver is… it inevitably goes black. One way to guard against this is to shut it away in an airtight storage – but then you can’t enjoy it.
Casual usage actually helps keep an item clean, as when you use it and then gently wipe it dry, any traces of black is removed, and your item remains lovely.
However, there always comes a time when you will need to clean your silver. The key is to go gently – while some methods and available cleaners do a fast, brilliant job, this is because the strip off a layer of the surface to reveal the shiny metal beneath. Do this too often, and you will seriously wear away the value of your piece!

For many decades, Moorabool has used & stocked the ‘gentle’ silver cleaner, used by silver collectors and dealers all over the world. This is Hagerty’s, see our stock by clicking the button below.

Our Latest Silver items

English, Irish & Scottish Sterling

Australian Silver

American Silver

Asian Silver

Continental & Other Silver

Usable Silver

(This link includes Old Sheffield Plate, Electroplate, and other objects that are less than Sterling standard but have a silver appearance)

Posted on Leave a comment

Fresh Stock: Staffordshire Figures, Chinese Pottery, plus more!

We have an amazing selection for your browsing pleasure today.

First, some lovely mysteries….
This group of beautiful little figures of children are all not in the books…. all of mysterious origin. We have a few educated guesses, but there is no definite attribution for any….. yet.
The pair of children with dogs are particularly interesting; they are recognisable as the ‘Royal Children’, The Prince of Wales & the Princess Royal. They were popular items in the 1830’s, made by quite a few different porcelain – and Staffordshire Pottery – manufacturers. This pair, however, are superior to every other example, and must be by one of the high-quality factories.

Fresh Pottery

Dick Turpin on Black Bess
Dick Turpin on Black Bess

There’s a great selection of Fresh Staffordshire to explore, with all sorts of characters lurking….

Asian additions

Gift Certificates

Can’t decide? Let them choose! Gift Vouchers are the perfect present for anyone who loves Antiques…

$50 – $100 – $200 amounts available.

We can provide you with a physical copy – or a document you can print yourself – or attach to an email. It’s then simply a matter of presenting this document when you make a purchase.

POSTAGE

We’re ready to post your items to you, and Australians still have time to get it to you before Christmas…..

Christmas Postage Deadlines

Australian Post items:
WA -15th Dec
NT 14th Dec
VIC, NSW & QLD 18th Dec

International – last week of November – 1st week December.

We have some excellent ideas for presents – there’s a page here on our website >> –
or have a browse through the Fresh Stock uploads below for inspiration.

Posted on Leave a comment

Fresh Stock, including Australiana, Antiquities, and Sterling Silver

This last week of November is the perfect time to start thinking about Presents….. and we have a few ideas.

We have a series of ideas for presents – there’s a page here on our website
or have a browse through the Fresh Stock uploads below for inspiration.

Fresh @ Moorabool

Fresh Antiquities

Fresh Australiana

Sterling Silver

Asian Antiques

Posted on Leave a comment

Christmas Gift Ideas 2023

We all have a ‘Problem Present Person’ – someone who has ‘everything’, so the problem is what on earth to buy them for Christmas?

Moorabool offers some fabulous ideas for the situation.
Have a browse through the galleries below, there’s sure to be something unique for your unique needs!

Click on a ‘theme’ below to see some suggestions.

Under $100

Usable on the Christmas Table

Fossils! Dinosaurs!

Posted on Leave a comment

A rare fake ‘TP Dexter’ Sterling Jug: Silver Fraud!

Serling Silver Jugs

These three jugs look very similar, and yet only one is genuine.
Below is a Genuine engraved jug of 1798, a Victorian version of 1888, and another Victorian…. but with marks claiming it is Sheffield 1797.
Can you pick the fake?

Slide down the bar on below image to reveal the dates

Left ImageRight Image

Late 19th century Sterling Silver milk jug, of helmet shape, with elegant curved handle, the body with engraved lines to rim, a central reserve with initials ‘JJC’ to one side , the other blank. 
Hallmarked for Birmingham 1795, also ‘TL’ for an unknown maker –a mark used in documented ‘fraudulent’ pieces of Sterling Silver discovered in the premises of Reuben Lyon in the late 19th century.

FAKE sterling silver hallmarks
The FAKE sterling silver hallmarks, claiming to be Birmingham 1797

The fraudulent nature of this piece of Sterling Silver is an interesting study. 
The hallmarks are clear, and ye have something different about their wear; particularly notable is the background, which shows up lumps & bumps not usually seen in hallmarks. This is because normal hallmarks verified at the assay office have been struck into the piece using a die, with a flat end incised with the initials; the background is therefore flat. The ‘bumps’ indicate this piece is cast at the time of making, ie. there is some texture from the casting medium that cannot be buffed out from the recessed marks……… something that is only done by a forger. 
This maker’s mark ‘TD’ appears to be copying T.P. Dexter’s mark, which was only registered in 1805. As the registry of marks was not published or accessible in the 19th century like it is now, it would not have been possible for a forger to look up the active dates of a silversmith. In this case, it is a decade out, making identification easier. 
In 1899, the London Goldsmith’s Company published a booklet to expose a group of fakes they had detected and destroyed recently. At the premises of 70-year old Reuben Lyon of Holborn, more than 200 fraudulently hallmarked ‘Antique’ pieces were found by officers of the Goldsmith’s Guild, and the hallmarks of ‘around 50’ makers on the pieces recorded and published. The ‘TD’ mark is one of them. 

These pieces were destroyed by the guild. This is still their practice, and they constantly assess the trade in Anbtqiuue silver to ensure that fraudulent pieces are not circulating as genuine. A silver collector witnessed this in action in London recently: visiting one of the seller son silver, a man entered with a portable anvil, the fake was brought out, and completely mashed into a formless lump with a hammer!

Interestingly, an article written about forged silver at the time refers to the technique of casting marks, ‘…adopted by a forger a year or so ago, who recieved his due punishment…’ This suggests the evidence of casting in a piece puts it into an 1890’s context,  100 years after the marks they were depicting. 

The fakes were detected, and their source investigated by the Guild. Reuben claimed innocence, stating he had purchased the goods ‘from a man named ‘Clarke’ …. who had subsequently disappeared’. He was fined £3,000, an immense amount for the time. It was the end of him and his business…..


This was a time of intense interest in English Silver from the Georgian period, especially by the Americans – and the occasional Australian. I wonder if ‘Clarke’ tried selling to this lucrative market of wealth Australians, far away from the eyes of the Goldsmith’s Guild?
This jug came from a local source, and may well have been imported into Australia as an ‘Antique’ around turn of the century, despite it being pretty recently made! 

The irony is, this is now a rarity; in the UK, the Guild has ‘taken care’ of any examples, and only in a place like Australia are there examples to be seen…. at least knowingly!

Read more on the Reuben Lyon pieces here >

The London Assay Office report >

Posted on Leave a comment

Introducing…. artist A. E. Jobson 1868-1955

A E Jobson pastel - with restorations

An interesting recent discovery by Moorabool was this small pastel scene of an Australian beach.
Signed ‘A. E. Jobson’, it is an interesting chalk sketch, done on a coarse textured grey toned paper.

Looking for the artist proved to be pointless; they are not recorded anywhere, and seem to belong to the class of ‘talented amateur’. We believe we have a likely candidate, a local Melbourne author who used the name ‘A.E.Jobson’.

AE Jobson Signature
AE Jobson’s Signature


As with many artistic people, it seems that Jobson could draw as well as write. It was writing which came to dominate, as they found success when they began publishing their short stories.

A report in the ‘Queensland Times’ sheds some light:

they have obtained the ‘sole rights’ to a ‘remarkable clever series of stories’ which they promise are just like Sherlock Holmes….

The first story to be published is interesting. Titled ‘The Hercules Cameo’, it is a story about a carved cameo of Hercules – purchased at Christies for 3000 Guineas – stolen by a German prince, and recovered by a private eye named Russel Howard. Hobson clearly had an active interest in the art world.

Over the next few years, we traced 12 newspaper stories published by A.E. Jobson:

Over the next few years, we traced 12 newspaper stories published by A.E. Jobson:

  • 1: The Hercules Cameo
  • 2: The Seventh Burglary
  • 3: The Removal of the Millionaire
  • 4: The Case of Lord Ponderry
  • 5: The Scheming Lady
  • 6: The Two Wax Candles
  • 7: The Lady with the Pince-Nez
  • 8: The Modern Highwayman
  • 9: The Prince’s Letter
  • 10: The Man Who Stole the Child
  • 11: The Fire Insurance Matter
  • 12: The Open Shaft

But who was A. E. Jobson?

These ‘AE Jobson’ stories, and at least one published book, never give the name of the author beyond the initials. There is a distinct possibility that this was intentional, to hide the author’s true identity. The ‘Queensland Times’ article of 1909 does refer to ‘him’, but they were not necessarily aware of exactly who was writing the stories, being rather a long way away. This is something often seen in the world of literature. Clearly, some research is needed!

Searching the available records, two candidates appear with the right initials and in the right context, an Arthur Earnest Jobson, Banker in Sydney, and Adelaide Ellen Hobson, daughter-in-law to prominent Victorian businessman, John Jobson JP.
Nothing came of researching Arthur the banker, but Adelaide was a different matter.

John Jobson, Williamstown, c. 1895- father-in-law to Adelaide Ellen Jobson

Adelaide Ellen Jobson was born at Port Adelaide, 1868, the eldest in her family. Her father, Stedman, died in 1887. Three years later, she married Charles Jobson, son of John Jobson, JP, businessman, Williamstown Football Club president, & Mayor of Williamstown (Victoria) in 1885.  

The pastel has a certain ‘family’ feel to it: there are 6 children represented, plus a few adults. 

The scene could well be Port Phillip Bay, somewhere near Spotswood where a day’s outing with the family would be likely-  with Williamstown’s ‘back beach’ being a prime candidate. 

Williamstown back-beach, 1906 postcard

We propose Adelaide Ellen Jobson was a very creative lady, who raised a family of five, but longed to write and paint to express herself; when her oldest children were entering their teens, she would have had more time to dedicate to writing, and so her first few stories were submitted to the papers for publication. Over the next decade, she produced quite a number of fictional books. A quick read – as they are all rather short stories, suitable for a newspaper – certainly shows an active mind, and perhaps we can see a female perspective: one story, written in 1916, is an interesting study. 

It begins “Samson Greene was an artist, and it happened on one day in September, or it may have been in early October, that he was in Bathurst. Anyway, when he rose in the morning the sun was shining briskly upon everything.”   

The character Samson is something of an old-fashioned gentleman artist, but by the end of the story, he is helplessly in love with a girl he ‘accidentally’ met while out painting – except the whole thing is a set-up by the girl, who has set a trap for him which he falls for, hook line & sinker!  It has a definite twinge of ‘Barbara Cartland’ to it, and attributing it to a female author makes perfect sense. 

Adelaide Jobson, Beach at Williamstown, c. 1910
Adelaide Jobson, Beach at Williamstown, c. 1910

Her other artistic enterprise was pastel art. This small work documents a lazy day at the beach very well, with family members relaxing and children playing. She had five children between 1892-1909, so if this piece was dated to around 1910-15, the children shown could well be her own. The location is not distinct, but the general layout of the water/land conforms to the local area they grew up in; Williamstown has a beach with beautiful white sand like this, and the distant higher ground could be the far side of Port Phillip Bay, a scene still the same today. 

Martha Walter oil painting, beach scene
American artist Martha Walter, beach scene from the same period in oils.

An interesting comparison can be made with American artist Martha Walter. She was active in the early 20th century, the same date as the work we are examining, and the similarity is unmistakable. Rather than a direct influence, it is probably just a result of the shared ‘beach culture’ seen in America and Australia – the gathering of families, the bathing suits – combined with an impressionist style which was the international vogue at the time.
The price is certainly different, with Walter’s work bringing many thousands for even minor paintings!

Adelaide Ellen Jobson could have been a notable artist, but her success as a published author, and no doubt also her dedication to her large family, restricted her opportunities. She’s a talented amateur, previously unrecorded.

We’d love to hear anything else you may have to add to this very brief répertoire!

Posted on Leave a comment

Fresh Stock – Derby Figures, Staffordshire Poodles, Artworks + more

Welcome to our latest ‘Fresh Stock’ release.

It’s a terrific variety of fine pieces this week. There’s lots more to come in the next few weeks also…. just in time for Christmas!

How much is that doggy in the window….? The two rare mini-dogs are in today’s Fresh Stock, the others already in stock. Quite a pack of poodles!

NewArtists in Stock‘ Page

Artists In Stock
Artists In Stock

NEW! Introducing our New Page, ‘Artists in Stock’. Here you can browse through an alphabetical listing of Artists, grouped by Period & Country, to find any of interest. Clicking their name will bring up all works by that artist.

<- click the image to go to the page

Christmas is Coming…..

The year is nearly over, and that means it’s time to think about Christmas.
At Moorabool, we have a vast selection of potential Christmas Presents for you to browse……

Why not get in early and let us post them to you?

Our cut-off dates for Australian Post items is:
WA -15th Dec
NT 14th Dec
VIC, NSW & QLD 18th Dec

International – last week of November – 1st week December.