Free Updates

Let us tell you when new posts are added!

Email:

Navigation

Categories

Search

Archives

<February 2008>
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
272829303112
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
2425262728291
2345678

More Links


 Tuesday, February 19, 2008
"eBay specials won't raise sinking ship"
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

I'm hard-pressed to disagree with Daryle Lambert's take on eBay's latest salvo - too late - to it's angered buyers.

Daryle posits, as several in the business have, that it's the mid-level buyer that get's hurt the most. eBay's original attempt to please stockholders was it's first mistake. Then it throws a piece of candy to a starving person and says it's dinner.

Many readers have written and agreed with this stance, and many have said that eBay, because it's eBay, will always have a palce. What alternative is there, right?

Right...


antique | Antique Blog | Antiques | Antiques Blogs | eBay
2/19/2008 4:01:03 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [1]
Ephemera your thing? Here's a good site...
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

I've been enjoying Marty Weil's ephemera blog for quite awhile now.

Being a great fan of ephemera, especially the really obscure and cool stuff, this site is a breat of fresh air. Marty's a good writer with a keen sense of humor, an excellent touch as a blogger, and he doesn't take himself or his subject matter too seriously - as the Buddha said, or perhaps it was Oscar Wilde, seriousness is the last refuge of the shallow - which allows for good stories and excellent interviews with prominent collectors.

Check it out and enjoy. It's worth a daily click or two...


antique | Antique News | Antique news odd | Antiques | Antiques News | Ephemera | Antique Blog | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs
2/19/2008 12:07:21 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
Dude... It's like, this dude's got all these records... and, dude, he's selling them...
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Antique Trader had an article about this sale, by one Paul Mahwinney of Pittsburgh, of perhaps the greatest single collection of records ever to be sold at one time. Our story was in the 2-20 issue.

It is truly an amazing collection, and, if I had a cool $3M for just about every record ever recorded - and you can bet there are some rare and valuale ones in there - then I'd get in a second.

I'd reference Trader's article, but I couldn't resist this headline: Dude Auctions off "World's Greatest Record Collection."

Dude... Whoa...


antique | Antique News | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques News | Antiques publications | Auction | eBay | pop art
2/19/2008 11:52:51 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Monday, February 18, 2008
Beats the CoinStar at the IGA
Posted by Antique Trader Staff



A collector just got $10M for a collection of rare pennies. So, before you head out to the supermarket with that glass jar full of coins - in anticipation of the $35 it'll get you for the mid-week meal at your local Olive Garden - check out what you got and remember this story.

Your pennies could be worth big bucks!

antique | Antique News | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques News | Auction
2/18/2008 1:52:45 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
U.K. busts stolen antique jewelry fence
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Good for the Brits! If the U.S. would police and regulate traffic in stolen antiques more often than we might have less of a problem with scammers hurting dealers at shop shows and auctions.

Check out the story here.


antique | Antique News | Antiques | stolen antiques
2/18/2008 1:49:43 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
Save the suburban ranch house!
Posted by Antique Trader Staff



Growing up in the Dallas suburbs, the ranch house was ubiquitous. It's what the word "suburb" means to me. I see a ranch house and I see yellowed summer days, neat little lawns, abutting fences and paved driveways with little pieces of broken glass just waiting to lodge in the unsuspecting foot of a kid running to the front door for lunch - baloney sandwiches on Wonder with yellow mustard. (Forgive me, but there has been steady snow, more than a foot, over the last 24 hours and I am a bit snow-blind, desperate for a warm day, if only in memory.)

This is an article from the Arizona Star Net about Tucson's vast tracts of ranch houses, and whether some - or all - of them could be considered historic and worth of preservation.

For the record, seeing the proliferation of McMansions that have sprouted like weeds across the nation, I do believe these houses are worthy of preservation and historical designation.

I've been to Tucson a few times, and find it to be a pretty groovy - if funky - little town. It rambles and has a certain endearing shabbiness to it. It also has some of the coolest looking post-war  neighborhoods you'll ever come across, with bright colors and  - believe it or not - totally pleasing ranch architecture.

I've always found that the ranch house spoke to the American boom of the the 1950s, when millions of Americans were able to buy houses and settle areas that were pretty inhospitable, at least by today's suburban standards. The best of ranch house architecture embodies the Usonian ideas of Frank Lloyd Wright, and speaks to the master's philosophy. They have open living spaces, open fire places and large windows onto the backyard, even if it's just scrub or hardpan with a rusting swingset. The worst have that horrible peeling green carpet that everything in the 1970s seemed to have.

Take a look and decide for yourself.

antique | Antique News | Antique news odd | Antique scams | Antiques | Architecture | Historic Preservation
2/18/2008 11:14:09 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
How to stay current - CA antique dealer does a good job
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Here's a cool article out of Costa Mesa, CA about a longtime L.A. Antiques Dealer who opened up a shop that takes into account changing tastes in collectors and styles.

The place is call Big Daddy's Antiques, and owner Shane Brown is approaching his first strictly retail antiques outlet with an open-minded approach.

I know there has been much griping among traditionalists in the antique world about the influx of Modern, industrial and design elements into shows and shops, but it's simply the reality of the business right now and of new collectors. Very few people just collect one thing or style only. It's about mixing elements.

The article's interesting and the Big Daddy Web site is well-done. It's a good look at a dealer keeping up with modern trends in collecting antiques.


antique | Antiques | Antiques News
2/18/2008 10:50:56 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [1]
 Friday, February 15, 2008
VIva The Dallas Market Center!
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

In my travels across the Web, a story brought me to the Web site of the Dallas Market Center.

  

That triple-tiered building, that gigantic atrium with the glass elevators, the vast halls with brown carpets, massive showrooms and juat about anything of any kind could ever want. I practically grew up in the place. My folks had a showroom on the 11th floor, called The Fleishers, Inc., when it was still called the Dallas World Trade Center and didn't have the massive market hall that it has today across the street, where what used the be the Anatole Hotel and, I think, The Wyndham. I don't know if it still exists.

My parents were dealers in fine art and furniture, which where - I'm sure - the seed of antiques was planted. Man, there was a lot of trouble for a kid to get into, unsupervised, in a building of that size. I'm pretty sure my brothers and I were roundly feared. I do recall being somehwere around four or five years old and wading, in my blue jeans, into a goldfish pond in the lobby of the old Trade Mart building, with my brothers watching, ostensibly - I reasoned - to catch a "flying fish." That, however, was the only the begining... We roamed those halls for at least 10 more years...

It's good to know, somehow, that it's still there.

antique | Antique News | Antiques News | Antiques publications | Antiques Show | Toys
2/15/2008 3:36:52 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
Trader Question of the Week - 10 Years from Now?
Posted by Antique Trader Staff



In 1998, the Internet boom was full steam ahead, billions were being made simply by attaching .com to certain words. The age of the World Wide Web had arrived! In a matter of days - no, hours! - the everything was going go completely digital and anyone left behind was going to be sorry and, worse, poor in a world of uber-millionaires!

No one needs to be told what happened next.

We can also remember a little online auction site called eBay that was just starting to get legs under a female CEO named Meg Whitman. In the 10 years from then until now, eBay has helped redefine not only the auction business, and the antiques business, but the very nature of the Web itself. Who, exactly, could have foreseen that? My guess is very few.

My powers of prognostication are limited, weak, but I did get to wondering this week where the auction business will a decade from now. If I had to guess, which I suppose I do seeing as how I'm the one posing the question, then I would say there will be two or three major online auction players who contract with every large and small auction house and individual dealer. The world of Web auctions will be like one giant Brimfield of the ether, where anything can be gotten to through a few central portals. There will, of course, always be a few rogue individual auctions that will have to be chased down and brought to heel...

Antique Trader, then, wants to know this week: Exactly where do you see the Antiques Business in 10 years?

Post and answer here in the comments, or email it to me at noah.fleisher@fwpubs.com.

antique | Antique News | Antiques | Antiques, blog, question of the week | Auction | eBay | Historic Preservation
2/15/2008 10:17:27 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
Like a Byrdcliffe on a wire - Rare Arts & Crafts antiques on the block Feb. 22
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

One of my very first assignments as an antiques writer, way back when at the turn of the century, was to journey across the Hudson River from my home in Rhinebeck, NY to Woodstock, NY - the namesake town of he concert that actually happened in Saugerties, NY, just one town north (where, incidentally, I covered high school sports at the same time) - to do a story on the Byrdcliffe Colony.



I was working for a Hudson Valley antiques paper called Notheast Journal of Antiques and art, and it owner and founder, Harold Hanson thought it would be a good story for me. Harold was never wrong.

I knew Woodstock well, having one of my good friend's family based out of the town. I loved its natural beauty, and - sometimes - the funky hippy vibe. The Tibetan Buddhist vibe there was also very cool. Somehow, though I'd see the historical markers everywhere, the history of Byrdcliffe had eluded me.

Check out the link above to learn more, and let me just say that I was quickly charmed by the elegant furniture and Utopian ideals of the movement's founders. A tremendous amount of great talent was gathered in one place for a very brief time, and it yeilded extraordinary, and far too few results. The pieces of furniture are well-valued and well coveted.



Byrdcliffe was founded in 1903 by rich Englishman Ralph Whitehead and his American wife, Jane Byrd McCall. They might while students of Arts and Crafts guru John Ruskin. They set about creating  Byrdcliffe in 1892. It continues today as the Woodstock Byrdcliffe Guild.

Here's some exciting news about Brigg's Auctions in Boothwyn, PA, auctioning off several pieces of Byrdcliffe furniture from the Whitehead house itself on Feb. 22. Amazing and elegant stuff and I'll be interested to see how it sells.


antique | Antique News | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques News | Antiques publications | Historic Preservation
2/15/2008 10:06:05 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Thursday, February 14, 2008
Antique Blog in NYC I've been enjoying
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Given that most of the reports Trader gets coming out of NYC are of super-high priced sales, where the glamorous and the flfthy rich - not to mention the beautiful - can afford to go an play while the rest of stubbornly soldier on, paying $3 or more for gas and wondering when that suitcae of money is going to fall from the sky. We snag what we can at auction, when we can. Or, if you're a dealers, then going to sales, auctions and shows, many many of them, is simply your job. It would be nice to know what it's like sometimes to simply be a journeyman antiquer...




The link here is to a blog in NYC called Here Be Old Things, and its proprietress faithfully charts the whole spectrum of NYC antiques, from the big shows and auctions they wouldn't even let me in the door to, to the weekly sales and shops, like Hell's Kitchen (formerly Chelsea) and some of the day-in day-out auction houses that aren't the monopolizers. It doesn't hurt that she's a fan of Trader's blog, as well.

Living in Manhattan for a dozen years, I had more than one occasion to go through many NYC fleas, and they were always interesting, and you could always tell who had the really good stuff because their booth was basically an empty spot on the ground.

Check out the blog and let me know what you think. We'll be linking to it from time to time to check out the coverage.

antique | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques publications | Antiques Show | Auction | Antique News | Antiques News
2/14/2008 3:26:12 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [1]
Drug bust jewels auctioned in Richmond, Feb. 20
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

This was sent to me too late to get into the print version of Trader, but sounds like a good sale for a good cause, from Motley's, in Richmond, VA.

Richmond Auction House Sells Jewelry Seized In City Drug Bust.
Proceeds Help Police In Fight Against Drugs



RICHMOND, VA — Motley’s Auction & Realty Group will auction on Feb. 20, a large quantity of jewelry seized recently during a Richmond drug bust. All of the seized jewelry, including a diamond-encrusted man’s watch by Benny & Company, will be offered to the highest bidder, with no minimum price or reserves. The proceeds from the sale will be returned to Richmond law enforcement in an effort to help fund their continued fight against drugs.

Nearly 100 lots of jewelry, including those from numerous estates, will be offered starting at 3 p.m. at Motley’s galleries at 4402 West Broad Street in Richmond, VA.

All lots are viewable at www.motleys.com or are available for personal inspection on Monday, February 18, from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. and Tuesday, February 19, from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Items can also be previewed on February 20, the day of the sale, from 10 a.m. until all lots are sold. Motley’s offers online (eBay Live), absentee and phone bidding for those unable to attend the auction in person.

Motley’s next auction, on April 2, 2008.

For more information on any upcoming Motley’s auctions or their comprehensive appraisal services, visit motleys.com or call 804-355-2100.


There'll be some interesting stuff in this sale, sure enough...

antique | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques publications | Auction | stolen antiques
2/14/2008 11:43:54 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #  Comments [0]