$275.00
$145.00
$85.00
$275.00
$125.00
$365.00
$435.00
$125.00
$475.00
Possibly carved from cryptomera wood and darkened with age, this carved figure has both a simplicity and elegance which are, for me, the major characteristics of Japanese asthetics.
$325.00
The box is 5.5 inches x 4.75 inches and 2+ inches high.
$400.00
$950.00
Excellent condition, no loses. 7 inches high and 9.5 wide including the stand.
$350.00
$95.00
$325.00
$275.00
The kiri wood box has a strip of wood on each side to act as a carrying handle. The box is 14.25 inches (36 cm) square by 28.25 (72 cm)...
$275.00
$447.00
Vase is in very good condition, no chips, no dents, and no losses.
$950.00
Mask measures approx 8 inches high and 6 inches wide
Vase is 8 inches tall and is in pristine condition
The box on the plate stands approx 9.5 inches tall. and is approx 5.5 inches in diameter. The plate is 9 inches in diam...
$150.00
This cannister style caddy is from an estate in the US...Both the Chinese and Japanese used this shape tea cannister and Lu Tongs poems were also highly regarded in Japan, so it is possible the these tea caddies are Japanese in o...
$150.00
$275.00
On the black lacquered back is the rement of a very old label with indistinguishable Asian characters. Plate is 10.75 at the widest point.Sourced from an old estate in the US, Chinoiserie of this detail and quality are rare, probably Edo Period between 18...
$275.00
On the black lacquered back is the rement of a very old label. Plate is 10.75 inches at the widest point. Sourced from an old estate in the US, Chinoiserie of this detail and quality are rare, probably Edo Period between 1840-185...
$375.00
Dated by McKinley Tariff Act requiring name of country of origin to be permanently engraved (stamped) or imprinted into a piece.
$350.00
$175.00
$750.00
Condition excellant with the exception of a couple of small surface paint chips on face reveal white undercoat (clears shown in pictures)
pristine condition....8 inches high 9.5 inches wide and 9.5 inches deep
$150.00
Unfortunately, though in otherwise excellant condition this Meiji period princess has lost some of the foil pedals from her headdress.
$295.00
$125.00
$175.00
$195.00
$95.00
$135.00
$135.00
$110.00
In 1881 Kintarō Hattori opened a watch and jewelry shop called "K. Hattori" in the Ginza area of Tokyo, Japan. Eleven years later, in 1892, he began to produce clocks under the name Seikosha (精工舎), meaning roughly "House of Exquisite Workmanship" The beginnings of the Seiko watch company...