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Check Ebay for Chinese Carved products.
Check out Amazon for Chinese Carved big bargains!
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Hand Carved Brown Jade Tea Set
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Tea drinking was a feature of Chinese cultural life for thousands of years. From the end of the 17th century, tea was shipped from China to Europe as part of the export of exotic spices and luxury good. Intricately hand carved and polished from ornamental brown jade, this traditional Chinese tea set is one of a kind for collection and will provide an interesting focus wherever place. For decorative purpose only.
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Enrico RootWorks Chinese Fir Salad Servers
Sale Price: $25.00
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These graceful, large-scale salad servers are hand-fitted using sections of branch for handles with gracefully carved spoon and fork ends. Complete your organic, eco-intelligent salad service by pairing them with one of our gorgeous root bowls. Food-safe lacquer finish.
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Authentic Chinese wooden Mooncake mold - three flowers design
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Reorients vintage wooden mooncake molds are each individually hand carved and were originally produced in the late 1970s soon after Chinas Cultural Revolution. Though over 30 years old these mooncake molds are unused and like new. They were stored away in unmarked crates in the back of a Hong Kong warehouse until we recently discovered them. Each shows the true character of handcrafted wood carved with simple traditional tools. This round lotus mooncake mold imprints a single flower design on three seperate mooncakes. Collectors of antiques will find these mooncake molds to be a unique look into Chinas past. Bakers will enjoy these traditional mooncake molds for both their simplicity and authenticity and for making mooncakes for the Mid Autumn Chinese Moon Festival. According to the Chinese Calendar the Moon Festival falls every year on the 15th day of the 8th month. Mooncakes are said to have played a key role in the rise of the Ming Dynasty as secret messages were hidden inside the mooncakes or encrypted in their intricate designs.
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Beautiful Inexpensive Good Quality - 25" Ming Ginger Jar Oriental Table Lamp w/ Calligraphy JCOX 696
Sale Price: $79.00
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Finely crafted porcelain oriental lamp- large square ginger jar shaped body, landscape and calligraphy decoration, elegant carved dark hardwood base, fine white sateen fabric shade as shown, decorative brass finial, UL approved 3 way switch, wiring and socket, accommodates standard 3 way & single filament light bulbs, ships in 48 hours professionally packed fully insured from our Massachusetts warehouse via Fed Ex Home delivery, expedited delivery available.
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Magnifying Glass with Jade Handle #MG1
Sale Price: $22.00
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Pretty magnifying glass with decorative silver and genuine Jade handle.
This functional yet decorative magnifying glass is 3 1/4 inches in diameter and 7 inches long including the handle.
Use it for any close up work, very handy!
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Natural Hand Carved Traditional Oriental Ox Horn Comb
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Ox horn and sheep horn are traditional medicinal material of Chinese medicine. This horn comb is made of keratin which is very good for the scalp and which is the same protein that hair is made of, so it eliminates static and tearing. Using a horn-comb often not only has a great role in the treatment of hair-shedding and headaches, but also it can make your hair brighter and cleaner. It is good for your health. CONDITION NOTE: Horn combs are hand carved from natural organic materials. As horn is naturally curved in shape you will often find waves or curves throughout the combs. These combs are not made in a cookie cutter factory where all combs are straight and perfect; there may be slight natural curvature in the comb. PLEASE: Thoroughly review all product photos before purchasing any combs. We do our best to photograph any curves and natural shaping so there is no misconception of what you are purchasing. You are buying a natural product.. We believe there is beauty in nature and in all the unique and original shapes we find in natural products, we hope you see the same.
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Xiaoping Natural Hand Carved Sandalwood - Wood Comb With Beautiful Aromatic Smell - 5"
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This wood comb will benefit your hair in multiple ways. The porosity of the natural material has the ability to absorb the natural oils from your hair and scalp. The comb is able to transfer the abundantly plentiful oils near your scalp and roots to the much needed lengths and ends. Static is absent with the use of a wood comb eliminating the possibility of easy snapping and breakage which usually accompanies static. The soft round teeth comfortably massage your scalp creating better circulation which promotes the health and longevity of hair and scalp while preventing hair loss.
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M&M BONSAI CHINESE STONE WATERPOT IMPORTED
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M&M BONSAI CHINESE STONE WATERPOT IMPORTED. EXTREMELY HARD TO FIND. WHAT YOU SEE IS EXACTLY WHAT YOU GET. REAL CHINESE CARVED STONE. GREAT FOR ANY TREE. 13X11 HUMIDITY TRAY RECOMMENDED.
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More Info On Chinese Carved:

Chinese Snuff Bottles â Sensations in Glass!
The first bottles we decided to buy that were not carved out of stone were made of glass. A huge range of glass bottles is to be found in all shapes and colours as well as a variety of manufacturing techniques.
Much more research is needed in order to date these bottles, but it is generally now agreed that glass and metal bottles were the earliest materials to be used. The problem is that glass has been used throughout the whole snuff bottle period right up to the present day.
The Chinese had little use for glass prior to the 17th century mainly because of their highly refined porcelain skills. They had no glass windows, favouring translucent paper. We are not sure if glass had been used centuries earlier in China but it was certainly introduced to them by Europeans in good time for snuff bottles.
Cameo Glass
They considered it as a valuable material and excelled in producing very fine works of art. Sometimes they treated it just like a stone and carved bottles out of a solid piece, otherwise they blew glass into moulds. Creating many unusual bottles ranging from transparent to white as backgrounds for colour overlay work. They were also able to control bubbles and by the addition of white flecks in the glass, colours such as these apt names suggest were created: - Sodden Snow, Camphor, and Snowflakes.
These bottles would then be dipped into bright coloured molten glass which later would be carved away to leave a cameo style of design. Some were dipped more than once to provide more than one coloured layer. Another technique was to apply to different areas of the bottle coloured molten blobs of glass. When these were carved the bottle could have up to as many as eight different colours cameo carved without increasing the number of layers.
Quality Counts
To a connoisseur, the number of colours or layers is not so very important, as it was not such a difficult process and a far softer material to carve than stone. What really should be valued is the quality of the carving and the overall design. Quite often a wonderfully carved and well-designed single colour overlay will be worth far more than a multicolour but poorly finished bottle.
To assess these bottles the colour is a consideration but great attention is paid just as with stone cameo carving, to the quality of the carving and especially to how well the background is finished close to the edge of the overlay. I have selected a ruby red single overlay as a good example to photograph. It shows a coiled `Chih Lung' or dragon on both sides; also having mythological animal mask and mock ring handles on each shoulder 1750 - 1860. The dragon is a birth sign used rather like our zodiac signs. (See the photograph by clicking on the link at the end of this article).
There is a group of rather special, very finely worked overlay bottles known as the `Seal School' because they always include a seal with the design. They were made later and date back from the second half of the 19th century.
Although these were made in the same way, the overlay is far more delicately carved and often even the thickness of the overlay is controlled to create shading. They normally used opaque white bottles as the background but some were also worked on other opaque colours. So far, I have never seen any on the clear or snowflake backgrounds. The photograph* shows a fine seal school bottle depicting a pair of cats at play with hovering insects amongst the flowers. On each side there is a bowl of fruit on a table and on the reverse is another scene of a drunken poet asleep in a garden. (*See the photograph by clicking on the link at the end of this article).
Layers of Glass
Apart from these overlay types there are many interesting mottled, swirling and colourful designs as well as the plain colour bottles, both uncarved and carved.
Many of these were quite complex in the way they were made: some were blown into moulds then finished by hand; others involved blowing a clear glass into a mould but then another layer was blown inside the first bottle. This layer was a thin colourful one, sandwiched by yet a third clear layer that was also blown in. When looking down at the neck of one of these bottles you can clearly see these three layers.
A variety of colours were successfully used, together with gold in the creation of snuff bottles. There is no doubt that their advanced knowledge acquired in firing porcelain, and how metallic oxides react, was put to good use in glass.
It has also been suggested that apart from mixing in metals, even small particles of precious gemstones such as Sapphires, Emeralds and Rubies were added to the molten glass.
Particular attention was given to the feel of the finished material, which was achieved by the type of polishing and even the weight was controlled by the addition of lead. With transparent bottles the inside could be controlled and made to appear crazed as these names suggest - Cracked Ice, Fish Net or Sea Spray.
Most of the really fine snuff bottles were made in the Imperial Workshop and other small glass works around Peking.
Stone Imitations
With such expertise the Chinese were able to make astounding imitations of other materials. There are many bottles that look and feel just like Jade, Aquamarine, Agate and other stones. There has been a view in the past that the Chinese made these as fakes with the intention to deceive. I am sure that this was not the case, as it was far too easy to find them out by careful inspection. Under magnification little holes on the surface that could not be polished out and tiny bubbles would be seen proving it must be glass. Lastly, glass unlike the stones can be scratched quite easily by steel.
The Chinese enjoyed making convincing imitations of highly valued minerals as a demonstration of their skill. One other mineral cleverly copied was Realgar with its bright red and yellow swirling colours, impossible to use because of a high arsenic content, so these copies would have caused a lot of intrigue.
Imperial Yellow
I have already mentioned that a wide range of colours was used for glass bottles. Such colours as sapphire blue and ruby red seem to have been the most popular of the earliest ones. However the Emperor Chien-Lung had a favourite colour that he decreed could only be used by the Imperial family and this was an opaque shade of yellow that is now referred to as `Imperial Yellow'.
Not all bottles of this colour really are Imperial as after his death this colour was available to all. A true `Imperial Yellow' bottle must be one from his period and that can only be confirmed by the quality of the bottle and the carving. The `Imperial Yellow' bottle pictured is well carved with an archaic design on both sides and is of the period 1736 - 1795. (See the photograph by clicking on the link at the end of this article).
Painted On The Inside
There remains one other area of glass bottles that really amazes everyone, these being the `Inside painted' bottles. I have only a couple of examples in the collection, as I do not generally favour them as in my view they were never made for use. Once snuff was put into them the picture would not show up well, and the spoon would soon ruin the painting.
I should also explain that they did not restrict inside painting to glass but have applied the same techniques to Crystal and Chalcedony. The vast majority however are in specially designed glass bottles of a uniform shape.
What is remarkable is that through such a tiny hole in the neck they could paint on the inside landscapes, animals, calligraphy and even portraits. In order for the image to show through the glass the painting had to be done in reverse, all such fine details as the eyelashes for example, had to be painted first! All of these bottles are signed by the artist and many, some very attractive ones too, are still being made today.
For our own collection I felt that we should have one or two examples and I was lucky enough to buy the earliest known, dated and signed inside painted bottle by Kan Huan-Wen. He is one of the first well-known artist and highly respected. He has painted inside a rock crystal bottle, a scene of Buddhist Lions with a poem on the reverse. This bottle is signed and dated 1822. (See the photograph by clicking on the link at the end of this article).
Later we acquired another rock crystal example, and these two are the only inside painted bottles that we have. I think that this one is quite remarkable, as the interior space is so limited, it is hard to imagine how such a beautiful painting was achieved on one surface without completely ruining the other.
It originally would have been a rather poorly made double bottle. I do not know if the damaged half that has been removed was done so before it was painted, but I believe that it would have been. This was a very badly hollowed out bottle, of little value, before it was painted.
To my mind it is the fact that it was so poorly hollowed that makes the painting even more amazing! Have a look at the photograph. A continuous scene of fish amongst aquatic plants was painted in red, gold, pink; white, green and grisaille dated 1896 and signed Chu Chan-Yuan. This crystal has a natural flaw in the stone that adds to the under water appeal of this picture. (See the photograph by clicking on the link at the end of this article).
Most of the glass bottles purposely made for inside painting are much larger than this crystal one. Some of the paintings achieved however are hard to believe possible. There are even portraits that are so well done that they just look as good as black and white photographs!
About the Author
John N. Cohen A past director of Jacey Cinemas Ltd. Later the proprietor of a design & photographic studio, now a director of Jacey Homes Ltd., a property development company. Interests and Hobbies: A top international award winning photographer who also became a well known Asian antiques collector and an enthusiast of Jensen British classic cars. Other interests are skiing and Salsa dancing.
For John’s other interests please have a look at: - http://www.jncohen.net
The author has been a very keen collector for many years in helping to create ‘The Cohen collection’.
See the photographs relating to this article by using the following link: - http://www.jncohen.net/antiques/articles.htm
http://www.jncohen.net/Chinese_Snuff_bottles/index.htm
Cursed?????Today I got my purchased from ebay - a hand bone carved chinese monkey snuff bottle?
And I eagerly got it out of the box and there is nothing wrong with it but it does not feel nice. I dont know what it is but I had the urge to put it outside in its box. It just does not have a friendly feel - can things be cursed and if it does not feel right is there something I can do - like wash it in green tea or something??? Its supposed to be an antique but its just got this vibe .....Has anyone else had a similar experience. I am disappointed now, could you offer any ideas??
Stop being daft! The Monkey is highly esteemed in Chinese folklore,and the cleverest of the Chinese Zodiac animals.
Mapes Auctioneers ANTIQUE STATE AUCTION SUNDAY, FEBRUARY, 28TH @10:00AM
PREVIEW: 8:30 A. M.
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January 27, 2009 at 4:40 pm, filed under
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