Wyvern Antiques

Wyvern Antiques Welcome to Wyvern Antiques & Old Wares, suppliers of fine Antique and Vintage Collectables We're based in Sydney Australia and post Worldwide.

Specialists in antique, vintage and retro china, pottery, crystal, glass, silverware, jewellery, lighting and other collectables.

What a find!
27/06/2025

What a find!

A 200-year-old clay pipe — sold as an unwanted item by a bottle collector at auction — has been described as the "holy grail" of Tasmanian archaeology.

The intact pipe has a motif of the Tasmanian tiger, and is thought to be one of the earliest European depictions of the extinct creature.

Principal archaeologist with Southern Archaeology, Darren Watton, said it was a very exciting find.

"It's hard to contain myself as to how exciting it is," he told Helen Shield on ABC Radio Hobart.

"In terms of Tasmanian archaeology, it's the holy grail."

Clay pipes were used before ci******es, and were mass produced through moulds and designed to be used and discarded.

The pipes were generally made in the United Kingdom or other parts of Europe and imported to the colonies.

But this pipe was handcrafted locally using river clay.

"It's got some really special attributes which we don't usually see," he said.

"It indicates it was a local person making it, perhaps for themselves.
"It could have also been a convict."

The pipe was found in a bottle dump near Launceston, with the bottles dated at about 1830, making the pipe at least 190 years old.
Mr Watton was alerted to the pipe a few months ago, after an avid collector of Tasmanian tiger paraphernalia bought the pipe at auction.

He has since got second opinions on it.

"There's quite a buzz in the archaeology and academic community about this particular pipe," he said.

"It conjures up all these sorts of ideas about where it was made and who made it."

The pipe's finder was an amateur bottle digger who found it sandwiched between two larger bottles at the base of a pit on a private property near Launceston in 2016.

The collector then sold the pipe as an unwanted item.

Stephen Sleightholme, from the International Thylacine Specimen Database, snapped up the pipe at auction.

"The rendering of the thylacine, with its distinctive striped coat on the bowl of the pipe does not appear to relate to any 19th century image that could have been used to assist in the modelling," Dr Sleightholme said.

"So the somewhat naïve artwork appears to be original.

"Consequently, the image is one of the earliest depictions of a thylacine we have on record."

Adding to the mystery is the motif of what is belived to be a kookaburra — a bird which was not found in Tasmania until 1902. [Image: shorturl.at/cvBDO ]

The birds were not introduced to Tasmania until 1902, suggesting the maker spent time on the mainland before moving to Tasmania.
Another theory is that the bird is actually a Tasmanian kingfisher, or a generic bird.

The find will be published in an archaeology journal.

Source (ABC - 2020)
Images: ABC / Darren Watton

25/05/2025

Fabulous!

29/04/2025

ÉMILE GALLÉ
ENAMELLED SCENT BOTTLE AND STOPPER
CIRCA 1890
The vessel painted in coloured enamels with a preying mantis and chrysanthemums, outlined in gilt, fine engraved signature E. Gallé
6 ¼ in. (16 cm.) high

03/03/2024

I trembled as I took them to the till, buzzing with adrenaline

Wonderful find!
20/12/2023

Wonderful find!

Jessica Vincent says she was drawn to the colours and words on the base of the vase, which turned out to be a rare piece by an Italian designer.

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Wyvern Antiques
Bateau Bay, NSW
2261

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