What should I do with these ?

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pubrunner

Legendary Member
Hi All,

Every 5 years or so, we'd have a clear out of old tat from our pub; we'd build a large bonfire on our larger carpark, made up from rubbish from the pub, hedge cuttings - basically, anything that was surplus to requirements. Kindly passers-by (presumably under the cover of darkness) would take the opportunity to dump their ^_^ old tat - including old TVs and car tyres, on the same bonfire.

About 15 years ago, I was adding more stuff to the bonfire, when I found that amongst the stuff that had been kindly donated from other sources, were two doors - as shown in the image below.

I thought that they were too good to burn and decided to keep them - I stuck them in the pub's attic for a few years. I now live in a house - something that I'm still getting use to - after so long in the pub. The two doors were taken from the attic of the pub - & to the delight of my missus:whistle:, they now languish in our attic.

I'm really not sure what to do with these doors - both of them have a lip on the inner vertical upright, so presumably, there must have been a vertical centre piece. I've considered having them made into a piece of furniture - I can't think of anything other than a Drinks Cabinet, but given my personal history, perhaps that's understandable.

I know very little about antiques and old relics - apart from having met @rich p ; has anyone any idea what the metals in the inlay might be ? Copper, Nickel ?



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Old Doors 2.jpg
And how old are these doors ? I'm guessing that they're Art Nouveau(ish), so 1900 - 1910 ? And what wood are they ? (it's not veneer and they are quite heavy)

I'd love to know who made them, 'cos the workmanship looks first-rate.

If these were your doors, what would you do with them ?
 

slowmotion

Quite dreadful
Location
lost somewhere
The wood looks quite like sapele but I could well be wrong.
https://www.google.co.uk/search?q=s...X&ved=0ahUKEwiVy-XYkcjKAhXHuRQKHYCkAiAQiR4Ieg
 
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annedonnelly

Girl from the North Country
Location
Canonbie
I can't tell from the photos but are they tall enough to be from a wardrobe? I have bedroom furniture from about 1910 with inlays in. Not as nice as those though.

I wouldn't bin them either. I love that design style.
 
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pubrunner

pubrunner

Legendary Member
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OP
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pubrunner

pubrunner

Legendary Member
The two black square inlays - are they a different wood ? Or is it wood that has been stained ?
 

rich p

ridiculous old lush
Location
Brighton
Hinge them together, Pubby, and use them as a modesty screen for when you get out of the tin bath...
I once bought an antique Dutch dresser for the kitchen, which my son, in his yoof, informed me that I'd been done up like a kipper, and it was almost certainly secondhand.
 
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If you can`t think of a suitable use for the doors, you can always put them on fleabay. Some of the stained glass doors are on there for several hundreds.
 

annedonnelly

Girl from the North Country
Location
Canonbie
I'm not going to bin them; but in the event of my premature demise, my better half will have no compunction in consigning them to the nearby tip.
Would she let me have first refusal?

I like it too . . . but what is it ?

The leaves look very much like William Morris' Acanthus - he used the design within a lot of his tapestries, fabrics and wallpapers.
 
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pubrunner

pubrunner

Legendary Member
[QUOTE 4126516, member: 259"]

I sympathise with your wife. Our attic is full of old bits of mahogany and Victorian church doors that will never be used or sold, but my wife got 'just in case'. I would burn the bloody lot given half a chance!

[/QUOTE]

Sir, your wife is clearly a lady with impeccable taste.
 
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