Free Updates

Let us tell you when new posts are added!

Email:

Navigation

Categories

Search

Archives

<September 2010>
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
2930311234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293012
3456789

More Links


# Friday, February 29, 2008
ART POTTERY THEFT IN OHIO - Be on the lookout
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

APPROXIMATELY 175 PIECES OF AMERICAN ART POTTERY STOLEN

HILLARD, OH - Between 3:15 P.M. on Monday, February 25, 2008, and 8:30 A.M. on Tuesday, February 26, 2008, approximately 175 pieces of American Art Pottery were stolen from Belhorn Auction Services, LLC in the Columbus suburb of Hilliard, Ohio.  Also stolen was a cargo trailer in which the pottery was loaded, which was secured and locked at Belhorn Auctions’ office.

Pottery stolen includes various examples of Weller, Roseville, Rookwood, Owens, Van Briggle, Hampshire, Pillin, Fulper as well as others.  Also stolen was an exhibit of fake and reproduction pottery assembled by the American Art Pottery Association for educational and presentation purposes.  The trailer is an unmarked, white American Hauler cargo trailer with fold-down rear ramp and a system of shelving on the inside.

“We are working closely with law enforcement and our property management company to review security tapes covering the area during the time of the theft,” said Belhorn Auction Services, LLC President Greg Belhorn. “All consignors affected by this incident are fully covered and will be reimbursed for any financial loss.  However, I do remain hopeful that the items will be recovered.”

Nearly all of the stolen pieces were slated for the American Art Pottery Association’s 2008 Auction to be held in conjunction with the organization’s Annual Convention on April 23-27, 2008, in the Greater Philadelphia area.  Belhorn Auction Services, LLC donates its time and resources to conduct this auction, which benefits the Association and its endeavors.  The full  commission and buyer’s premium generated from the auction serve as an important revenue source from the American Art Pottery Association.

A general list and photos of the stolen pottery will be made available at Belhorn Auction Services, LLC’s website at www.belhorn.com.  Anyone with information regarding this incident or who is approached by an individual with pottery for sale matching the description of stolen items should contact the Hilliard (Ohio) Police Department at (614) 876-7321 or Belhorn Auction Services, LLC at (614) 921-9441.  A reward is being offered for any information leading to the recovery of the stolen property.


antique | Antique Blog | Antique News | Antique news odd | Antique scams | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs | stolen antiques
Friday, February 29, 2008 12:00:41 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
Antiques Humor? So un-PC...
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

This is truly one of the funniest things I've seen online in a long time and is a good - if somewhat amateurish - spoof of Roadshow, but dead-on in many respects and, if I didn't say it before, funny funny funny.

Check it out and enjoy. It's about five minutes long and is The Roadshow we've all wished we could see from time to time.

The best part is the end: "Don't give money to PBS! We're all going to die!"


antique | Antique news odd | Antiques | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs | Auction | pop art | Antiques Spoof
Friday, February 29, 2008 10:04:19 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
These things were old when the pyramids were just being mapped out on papyrus
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

This is just cool, plain and simple.

An Asheboro, NC man is displaying his massive, and ancient, arrowhead collection this weekend at the Asheboro public library. Some of these things are more than 6000 years old - making them ancient when the pyramids were being built... This event is annual in ASheboro and routinely brings out hundreds of folks.

I'd love to see this collection tour. It's a testament to human ingenuity and the incredible craftsmanship of Native Americans. Check it out. the pic below is of the gentelman with a particularly old example. If you're going to be in Asheboro this weekend, let me know how the exhibition is.

Very cool.


Credit: Joseph Rodriguez/ News & Record


antique | Antique Blog | Antique News | Antique news odd | Antiques | Antiques Blog | Antiques News | Historic Preservation
Friday, February 29, 2008 9:41:38 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
Art Pottery Blog for the Art Pottery Lover in you!
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

This is another blog I have been enjoying quite a bit over the last few weeks, and given how popular and collectible good art pottery is, this is a great resource.

Greg Myroth, who runs the site - and an art pottery business, I  might add - knows his stuff and has packed the page full of great detail and links to pertinent information about makers and styles. It's put together well and has a variety of info to help you on your quest, if your on a quest for this type of thing.

Check it out, let us know what you think... Happy hunting.


antique | Antique Blog | Antique Glass | Antique News | Antiques | Antiques Blogs | Antiques News | Antiques publications | fine art
Friday, February 29, 2008 8:59:05 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
Question of the week - Would your antiques business/hobby survive without technology?
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

I’d be lost without my work Blackberry, or my personal cell phone, or any of the three email accounts I maintain on a daily basis, or without my ability to type my antiques-related feelings about various antiques-related happenings in the world on the Antique Trader Blog – www.antiquetrader.com/atblog, by the way…
 
I lie awake at night and wonder if I’ve sent this email or that, or if a certain press release was sent or of that PR contact responded to my query. As much as I don’t want to admit it, I’m 100% hooked on tech.
 
In fact, I’d say that, if all the technology upon which my work is predicated were to suddenly disappear into the ether, I’d probably wander around, bereft for some time, in the words of Beatrix Potter in Peter Rabbit, going lippity, lippity, lipitty…
 
Then, I reckon, I’d hitch up my jeans and get on with it, doing business the way it was done for thousands of years – in person, face-to-face. It might, in fact, be quite refreshing.

 

Here’s what Antique Trader want to know this week: How would your antiques business or hobby fare without technology? How exactly would you cope in the short term, and what would you do long term?
 

Let me know at noah.fleisher@fwpubs.com, or post your answer in the comments section here.


antique | Antique Blog | Antiques | Antiques Blog | Antiques, blog, question of the week | eBay
Friday, February 29, 2008 8:43:40 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [1]
# Thursday, February 28, 2008
Antique Trader 3-12 preview, comin' at ya'
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Preview of our 3-12 Trader, which just went to press yesterday.


antique | Antique Blog | Antique News | Antiques | Antiques News | Antiques publications
Thursday, February 28, 2008 10:41:24 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
Things aren't going to get any easier for Russ Pritchard
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Disgraced former Antiques Roadshow appraiser Russ Pritchard entered a guilty plea in a Bucks County, PA court yesterday, and is now on the hook for $6,800 to a woman he bilked when he sold her heirlooms and never paid up.

The sad thing - besides Pritchard's agonizing fall from grace - is that the amount he owes Sandra Udinson of Plumstead, is just a drop in the bucket of the hundreds of thousands of dollars he owes in civil damages already and which will probably be leveled at him when he faces similar charges to those in Bucks County in Montgomery County next month.

The article linked to above tells the story of his sentencing, the juiciest bit being the judge telling pritchard, "
The most important thing is that the victim be made whole,” Heckler told Pritchard. “You will pay her, or you will end up in jail.”

I don't know Russ Pritchard, and he brought this on himself - for sure - but I can't help but find this whole thing a bit sad as it drags on and on...

Pictured below is Pritchard from his Roadshow days. The pic is from WGBH, so I'm not sure if it's one of his fake Civil War appraisals.


antique | Antique News | Antique scams | Antiques | Antiques Blogs | Antiques News | Auction | stolen antiques
Thursday, February 28, 2008 10:05:41 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [1]
Carnival glass stolen from Stillwater, MN Mall
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Large glass theft from an antique mall in Stillwater, MN.

I hope they catch the person who did this. If you're in the MN region, meaning the upper Midwest, beware someone peddling several thousand dollars worth of Carnival glass.

Stories like this, and there are plenty, do indeed make me wonder how often this happens and how often it's not reported. I can't help but think that some dealers and malls might think of it as the cost of doing business.

This is wrong and I hope that the security cameras got the people. Again, be on the lookout for stolen glass...


antique | Antique Blog | Antique Glass | Antique News | Antique scams | stolen antiques
Thursday, February 28, 2008 9:37:54 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Wednesday, February 27, 2008
In Case of Apocalypse, break stylish glass
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

This was widely covered, and hailed in the MSM the last few days. I don't know... Philosophically speaking, I find it a little daunting and frightening. A tangible reminder of the damage that humans are wreaking on the planet at alarming places.

It's the Svalbard Seed Vault in Longyearbyen, Norway (nice name). You can see the below pics here.



Architecturally, though, I think - in fine Scandanavian Moderne fashion, I might add - the building is pretty awesome, a real tribute to the modern aesthetic, not that visitors to the planet eons from now will appreciate the differences in Lloyd Wright and, say, Gropius...

It's as if, in a million years or so - hopefully longer - if the planet is rid of humans and retakes everything, then we're visited by our future progeny returned to the homeworld to see exactly where they sprang from - stick with me - thart they would find not only the seed as proof that we wanted to preserve our existences, but a really cool building refelctive of the best of modern design of the time. Man... Won't those bionetic cyborgs be impressed.

Most importantly, the American eggplant will survive.

From the Web site:

    Svalbard Global Seed Vault: Arctic Seed Vault Opens Doors for 100 Million Seeds

    Ceremony Marking Unprecedented Effort to Protect Global Agriculture Draws World Leaders and     Seeds from Over 100 Countries

    LONGYEARBYEN, NORWAY (26 FEBRUARY 2008) - The Svalbard Global Seed Vault opened today     on a remote island in the Arctic Circle, receiving inaugural shipments of 100 million seeds that         originated in over 100 countries. With the deposits ranging from unique varieties of major African     and Asian food staples such as maize, rice, wheat, cowpea, and sorghum to European and South     American varieties of eggplant, lettuce, barley, and potato, the first deposits into the seed vault     represent the most comprehensive and diverse collection of food crop seeds being held anywhere     in the world.  

antique | Antique Blog | Antique News | Antique news odd | Antiques | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs | Antiques News | Antiques publications | Architecture | Ephemera | Fenton Glass | Historic Preservation | pop art
Wednesday, February 27, 2008 2:26:16 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
Alternate Online Auctions - What are you using?
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Just wondering, as I negotiate the explosion of sales and sites that have sprung up in response to eBay's "changes," what sites, exactly, are you going to either to supplement your eBay sales or to use as a whole other alternative?

I'd like to check them out, possibly start offering some reviews and interviews.

Anyone? Anyone?

Let me know in the comments section here, preferrably, or at noah.fleisher@fwpubs.com (as long as email's working by today...)


antique | Antique Blog | Antique Glass | Antique News | Antiques Auction | Antiques Blog | Antiques News | Auction | eBay | Ephemera
Wednesday, February 27, 2008 11:45:40 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [1]
Massive Estate Sale in Shreveport, LA - MArch 7
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

I know there are a lot of bargain hunters out there, and this sale looks like it could have some hidden gems. It's a big one, sent my way by a colleague here in the building, about a massive estate sale from AAA Estate Specialists out of Shreveport, LA.

It came our way too late to get into print.

Surprise, surprise: They have no Web site and no pictures, but this is going to be a wide and varied sale. If you're an interpid antiquer, and don't mind a bit of a chase, you could give them a call and see exactly what't on the block.

My thanks to Susan Sliwicki.

MASSIVE ESTATE SALE IN LOUISIANNA

A massive estate sale in Robeline, La., promises to offer something for nearly every collector’s tastes.

Everything from movie theater equipment and cotton gins to  glassware, toys, books and furniture are among the items up for sale from the historic W.W. Page Jr. estate, said Cindy Wilkinson of AAA Estate Specialists, the Shreveport, La.,-based firm handling the sale.

The sale is set for 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on March 7 and 8. To learn more about the lots and details of the sale, call AAA Estate Specialists at 318-393-0239 between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. CST, Wilkinson said.

It will feature a variety of lots from the family’s businesses, which included the Sabine Theater, Vernon Theater and the Page Store.

A variety of scales, including ones used for cotton, meat and candy, are part of the sale. A water fountain and the general store’s oak counter/seed bin also are part of the sale.

“From the candy store there’s the concrete top, it’s a big rectangle, and they would pour the fudge on that and cut it. That’s pretty neat,” Wilkinson said. “I think it’d be a great island top in a kitchen.”

Movie lovers will appreciate the lots from the theater, which range from the Art Deco era up through the late 1950s to early 1960s, Wilkinson said.

“There’s lots of parts still in the box that were never used,” Wilkinson said.

Collectors of general store and movie theater type memorabilia will definitely want to see what they can see about this one.

For more info, call 318-393-0239.


antique | Antiques Auction | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs | Antiques News | Auction
Wednesday, February 27, 2008 10:39:36 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
Just what you've been waiting for - more blog posts coming!
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Hello everyone-

After a day off, spent in glorious chase of my two-year old daughter, and a week with e-mail problems here at AT World HQ, there will be posts coming today and so on and hopefully the end of email crisis as well.

A lot of what becomes blog posts comes from reader tips and rss feeds - dozens and dozens and dozens of rss feeds - from various places. Those, and any correspondence I've had from any of you over the last week are, sotensibly, lost in the ether in perpetuity throughout the universe.

Things will be coming! Put down those torches!


antique | Antique Blog | Antique News | Antiques | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs | Antiques News | Antiques publications
Wednesday, February 27, 2008 8:22:26 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Monday, February 25, 2008
$3M record collection buyer a fraud - eBay bumming again
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

That record collection - easily the best record collection in one single place - was being sold by Paul Mahwinney out of Record Rama in Pittsburgh, PA (is there ay other?), which sold for $3M to an a buyer in Ireland on eBay last week?

Fraud.

I can't imagine that eBay, who has suffered so much bad press lately, can be terribly happy about this.



The "buyer" said that he was the victim of identity theft and that he got the invoice and couldn't believe it. I reckon that's possible, and a terrible email to get from PayPal, which is already such an unpleasant system.

Furthermore, it's reported that a rare Stones album, that Mahwinney has valued at $10,000, can be bought elsewhere on eBay for $599. Ouch.

antique | Antique Blog | Antique News | Antique news odd | Antique scams | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs | Antiques News | Auction | eBay
Monday, February 25, 2008 9:03:58 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Friday, February 22, 2008
A great piece of architectural glass gone in NYC
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Living for so many years in NYC, I had more than my share of opportunities to check out the Robert Sower's window at JFK Airport's American Airlines terminal. It is - was - truly- an architectural masterpiece and a piece of Modernism that never lost its glory.

 

As an entry point to NYC and America for many millions of flyers, it spoke philosophically of the American spirit, its artistic soul and its ability to make the seemingly impossible possible. As a piece of art, I love this thing.

Now it's gone. Or going, at least, as reported across the nation and against the best efforts of the good folks at Save America's Window.

They did their best to get a sponsor to get behind the project, but many musuems said it would be too hard to keep the piece intact. Personally, I don't believe it and think it's a damn shame the window is coming down, piece by piece, to be scattered across the nation and possibly the world.

Often, traveling through JFK, the airport was so hectic to get into or out of that the only respite I was given, the only moment of zen and calm, was when I could walk out and see the sun streaming in distinct blades through those colored panes, or reflecting the light of night time, reminding me I had indeed just come home.

Goodbye to the Sower's window and goodbye to a distinct American art treasure.

antique | Antique Blog | Antique Glass | Antique News | Antique news odd | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs | Antiques News | Antiques publications | Architecture | fine art | Historic Preservation | pop art
Friday, February 22, 2008 12:10:23 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [1]
Question of the week - Joined any eBay Boycotts lately?
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Every major media outlet has, by this point, covered the recent changes to eBay’s system as announced by CEO-elect James Donahoe, and the resultant reactions of outrage that sellers expressed when they were made public.

Those reactions have also been covered here in the online and print versions of Antique Trader.

A lot of sellers have participated in alternate auctions in direct protest of the changes, while some have boycotted eBay altogether, while many – just being practical – have simply moved to diversify their business by moving a good portion of it to other sites while still keeping a percentage of it with eBay.

I’m not much of an online seller or buyer, but I have been curious to know if there is any extended movement away from eBay – at least a month’s worth – or if, as eBay, its board and its stockholders have bargained on, sellers have simply shrugged it off and accepted the changes as fact.

Here’s what Trader wants to know this week: How have you reacted, speaking from a business perspective as a buyer or a seller, to the eBay changes? Have you switched to a different auction outlet? Participated in any boycotts? Left the online giant altogether?

Let me know at noah.fleisher@fwpubs.com, or post it in the comments here.



antique | Antique Blog | Antiques | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs | Antiques News | Antiques, blog, question of the week
Friday, February 22, 2008 8:40:52 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [3]
I'm going to go about it the old-fashioned way
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Though I don't know exactly what that is, I just thought it would sound good on an antiques blog...

Anyway, there will be posts today, starting in a few minutes, but we are still experiencing server issues...

Happy Friday.


Antiques Blogs
Friday, February 22, 2008 8:27:30 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Thursday, February 21, 2008
Server problems today
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Hi folks...

Server problems company-wide today. Makes trawling for info very tough... Sorry... Tomorrow will be a better day... Happy antiquing...

ntf


antique | Antique Blog | Antiques | Antiques Blog | Antiques publications
Thursday, February 21, 2008 3:56:53 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Wednesday, February 20, 2008
Antique Trader 3-05 preview - Comin' at ya
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Here's your weekly sneak peak at the upcoming Trader, that literally just went to press.


antique | Antique Blog | Antique News | Antique Show | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs | Antiques News | Antiques publications | Antiques, Atlantique City, Antiques Show, Antique Trader, Collectibles | Auction | eBay | fine art | stolen antiques | Toys
Wednesday, February 20, 2008 3:56:27 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
A good point about the stupidity of fine art theft
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Kristy at Here Be Old Things, one of my favorite NYC blogs, sounds off on art thieves and how stupid most of them have to be.

I couldn't agree with her more, and have railed against the fools before. After all, as she points out in both her commentary and her links, where are you going to move a stolen van Gogh or Picasso? The Salvation Army?

My problem really stems, however, from "great" collections in "great" institutions that are about as stupid as the thieves themselves when it comes to keeping their art safe.


antique | Antique Blog | Antique News | Antiques | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs | fine art | stolen antiques
Wednesday, February 20, 2008 11:40:41 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
Buying stolen antiques online - a cautionary tale
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Bad things do happen, even to antiques people and even in the South.

 

This is a story from a Nashville TV station - Newschannel 5 - about a guy whose rental was broken into, in Nashville, and who had $3,000 worth of antiques stolen from his house. A few months later he finds a listing for his property - as someone else's property, of course - on Craigslist.

The address associated with the sale ended up being on the same street!

The police, however, do not think the seller knew he was selling stolen goods, let alone stolen goods from a house on the same street he lived on. I guess the thief, or thieves, took off that piece of yellowed and peeling masking tape with "In case this valuable antique is stolen please return to..." written in Sharpie on it.

"What? This stuff is stolen? And it belongs to you? And you live next door? Man, do I feel stupid..."

Chances are that stuff like this happens quit a bit, really.

The report does contain the rather ambiguous statement from the police that: "We're hopeful this incident will get us to a major player in antique business in the area."

For what, exactly?

Maybe the police are simply looking for some vintage posters to decorate the precinct...



antique | Antique News | Antique news odd | Antique scams | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques Blogs | Antiques News | stolen antiques
Wednesday, February 20, 2008 11:01:18 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
Is eBay trying to fill a leaky bucket?
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

I like this story about eBay after Whitman on the Forbes Magazine Web site, even if it is a bit too much re-hash and a bit too much corporate speak.




The writer, from Wharton College, outlines some interesting options that eBay and CEO-elect James Donahoe might take to shore up some of the problems it has right now. The article is, however, stictly from a business perspective and fails to approach the human side of the story, which is what we all know is going to drive the future of the business.

There still seems to be a disconnect between the corporate side of eBay and Wall Street to the nuts and bolts dealers who live and die in the trenches of online auctions.

One of the main thing I took away from the above article was thatr eBay will be looking to make inroads into Asia in order to beef up its revenue and return to the glory days of bazillions of dollars. Interesting philosophy, but if a bucket is leacking water from a hole, and you simply fill it at the same rate, there's certainly no net gain and - eventually - you're going to run out of water.

antique | Antique Blog | Antique News | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques Blog | Antiques Blogs | Antiques News | Antiques publications | Auction | eBay | Ephemera | Vintage Fashion
Wednesday, February 20, 2008 10:34:34 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [1]
# 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
Tuesday, February 19, 2008 3:01:03 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  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
Tuesday, February 19, 2008 11:07:21 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  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
Tuesday, February 19, 2008 10:52:51 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  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
Monday, February 18, 2008 12:52:45 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  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
Monday, February 18, 2008 12:49:43 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  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
Monday, February 18, 2008 10:14:09 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  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
Monday, February 18, 2008 9:50:56 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  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
Friday, February 15, 2008 2:36:52 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  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
Friday, February 15, 2008 9:17:27 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  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
Friday, February 15, 2008 9:06:05 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  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
Thursday, February 14, 2008 2:26:12 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  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
Thursday, February 14, 2008 10:43:54 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
Antique gun mishap? How 'bout drunken fool...
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

The Cape Cod Times - daily sentinel to a place that is always fun to be smack dab in the middle of February, right on the ocean and facing some of the stiffest winds you can imagine - is reporting about a guy who shot himself in the leg with an antiques black powder colt.



Seems he was cleaning his gun when the thing went off. Police received a 911 call at 6 a.m., which means he was doing his business somewhere around 4 or 5 a.m.

Um...

First, I don't think anybody's going to set the alarm for 3 a.m. to get ready for a good gun cleaning, and second, I reckon the first thing I would do would be to make sure that the gun I was about to clean wasn't loaded. Just saying...

Methinks this guy was loaded himself, and thought it'd be fun to clean his gun by the soft glow of some 24 hour cable tv news. The comments attached to the article are pretty good, too.

antique | Antique news odd | Antiques | Antiques publications
Thursday, February 14, 2008 9:17:19 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
One banana, two banana, three banana four!
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

It is snowing again here in Central, WI, making it a record setting year for snow - In Wisconsin. Did I mention that? At least in Madison, about 90 minutes to the south. Somehow, here in Central WI we manage to dodge a lot of the severe weather just above and just below this.

Going through Heritage Auctions' Web site I cam across a sale that speaks so directly to a Gen-Xer like myself that I had to mention it here. Part of the Dallas Auction firm's current online comics sale.



Man, I remember the Banana Splits like yesterday, along with the freaky cartoons that went along with it. They had a very bizarre version of Tom Sawyer that mixed a live Tom and Becky - maybe Huck - with the rest of the characters being animation. I used to watch in the afternoons - The Banana Splits, that is - as part of a show with an eerie clown who broadcast from a central Ohio amusement park and was always pushing some kind of red frozen treat, whjich I desperately coveted but never got. We moved from Cincinnatti long before the summmer... But I digress.

As you might be able to tell by this Wiki on the Splits, the show and its immortal characters - Fleegle, Bingo, Drooper and Snorky - had quite a history, part of which was filmed in my hometown of Dallas. I also remember Bingo had a thing about hitting Fleegle.

Check out the sale, and that Banana Splits comic. A steal for $100, and my birthday's comin' up...

antique | Antique news odd | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques publications | Auction | pop art | Toys
Thursday, February 14, 2008 8:48:42 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Wednesday, February 13, 2008
Antique Trader 2-27 comin' at ya
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

As we like to do around here, just a li'l sneak peak at the 2-27 cover.


antique | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques publications | Antiques Show | Auction | eBay | Historic Preservation | stolen antiques
Wednesday, February 13, 2008 3:20:10 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
Philatelics rejoice...
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

If you've been living under an anti-auction rock for the last week, then it'll be news to you that Philip Weiss Auctions in Oceanside, NY, recently sold a very rare inverted stamp for a record $1.2M. The stamp is one of a handful printed in 1869 with an upsidedown repro of the signing of the Declaration of Independence on it.



It's an expensive stamp, for sure, and a mighty pretty one. Good for Anonymous for snapping it up. He or she seems to be buying a lot of good things lately.

There was also an inverted Jenny stamp, the Honus Wagner baseball card of the stamp world, that also brought healthy interest and almost $300,000. Seriously, a Jenny comes up for sale with the same frequency these days as a Wagner, and each time.

The stamp is one of only four known to exist. Whatever you do, Anonymous, don't lick it...

antique | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques publications | Auction | Historic Preservation
Wednesday, February 13, 2008 2:17:56 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
World's longest arch bridge to be built in Dubai
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

You just have to wonder why...

And you have to wonder what future alien civilizations will think of our cultures when they excavate our defunct planet millions of years from now. They'll find this bridge, and a building or two from Las Vegas...

I do have to admit that the picture is pretty funky and space age, but I have to wonder about the water in the pictures. Dubai is a desert, no? Also, Dubai? It says that the bridge will allow passage of 2000 cars an hour, that 48,000 a day, right? I guess there will be plenty of men busy driving back and forth on that thing, because they don't allow women to drive over there...

The info above came from a blog called Rocket Boom. Fun stuff.


antique | Antique news odd | Antiques | Architecture | pop art | Toys
Wednesday, February 13, 2008 11:27:36 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
The greatest art thefts of all time?
Posted by Antique Trader Staff



The recent theft of more than $160M in art from the Beuhrle Collection in Zurich has had me quite interested in how such a thing did, and continues to, happen.

Time and time again these little museums or collections have hundreds of millions of dollars worth of great art, and they protect them with the security equivalent of wet paper bags. They take no real precautions, then wring their hands and pull their hair when it happens and cry," How did this happen?"

Forbes magazine posted this great article about what it thinks are the "greatest" art heists of all time. I think, in these terms, that the theft at the Beuhrle ranks up their, though none of them actually have that Cary Grant "To Catch a Thief" thing to it, no sneaking in at night, avoiding laser alarm systems or dropping in on a caribiner from the cieling to cut a delicate hole in the glass with a glass-cutter.

They also mention the 1990 theft at the Gardener in Boston, America's greatest unsolved heist. That art is worth about $300M.

I have better security in my house for nothing more than a Victorian child's tea cup set. My security's name is Fiona. She's two, and she's a mean shot with a stuffed monnkey. So beware...


antique | Antique news odd | Antiques | stolen antiques
Wednesday, February 13, 2008 10:54:03 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
Auction Dupe? Or the name of the game?
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

A story like this one, out of Oregon - where auctioneers aren't required to be licensed - makes me believe wholeheartedly in the work of The Antiques Council and the National Show Management Assocaition to get some national oversite of the antiques business.

I know that this is an auction story, in the rural Northwest no less, but people should have a reasonable expectation of getting a certain value for merch at auction. The folks in this story - one of whom is terminally ill - got all of $200 or so for their stuff after being told - granted, there was no contract - they would get significantly more.

Come on, though... What about human decency?


antique | Antique scams | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Auction
Wednesday, February 13, 2008 10:24:18 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Tuesday, February 12, 2008
Just can't resist this - American Roadside Architecture as serious art...
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

This is about an exhibition of mid-20th century American Roadside architecture - pictures of it, at least - making its way across... are you ready?... Macedonia.



Yes, one of the most ancient places on the globe is getting a good look at how American represented itself architecturally in the era of post-war business hedonism.

Personally, I love this kind of architecture and remember fondly many roadtrips as a kid in Texas and in my 20s - during those blissful summers when i had nothing to do and a car to take to do it - when my friends and I would literally set out for a few days at a time and seek out these places. The more dated the better. I truly believe that America's rapidly dissapearing roadside architecture is replete with gems and they should be saved, if only for the enjoyment of the world and the throngs of Macedonian tourists that are bound to be flocking to our rapidly decaying rural highways...

antique | Antique news odd | Antiques publications | Architecture | Historic Preservation | pop art
Tuesday, February 12, 2008 12:23:38 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
Certainly notable in the antiques business
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

That David Rago is working with Worth Point, one of the more interesting sites dedicated to antiques and those who love to buy and sell them out there. It's also a good research tool, and a place to get opinions from other folks who really have something to offer.

In the interest of full disclosure, I know David somewhat, and have always found him to be an honest and decent person, as well as a savvy businessman. I'm sure it factored into his decision here. He's a man who understands the brand side of antiques.

Just an FYI. Feel free to let me know what your opinions of Worth Point as a site are, especially in light of the recent eBay debacle.


antique | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques publications | Antiques Show | Auction
Tuesday, February 12, 2008 12:05:27 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
When Antiques Get Dangerous!
Posted by Antique Trader Staff



We all know that buying antiques contains an inherent risk, and that's all part of the game. The least I believe we can expect, however, at whatever venue we're shopping at, is to expect that the site itself is not going to do us any damage...



Ellen Schroy, antiques price guide writer extraordinaire and intrepid correspondent to Antique Trader, brought this little story - hot out of Palmyra, NJ - about a flea market site that was a former firing range and the military's surveying for possible live munitions long buried when a drive-in movie theater was put up after World War II.

Talk about a bang for your buck....

Okay, I'm sorry for that...

antique | Antique news odd | Antique Show | Antiques | Antiques Auction
Tuesday, February 12, 2008 8:46:52 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Monday, February 11, 2008
More stolen Art in Europe - $160M worth
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Just what exactly will it take for owner's of private, important collections of art - especially those on public display - to add security?



This is an unbelivable story, reported widely across the world this morning, about more than $160M in art stolen from the Beuhrle Collection in Zurich. I like the New York Times coverage best, so I linked to it here.

Chances are the artwork will go underground and decorate the home of some one who doesn't care that it's stolen goods. The market in art theft if huge, and the paintings are re-sold at hugely below actualy value. You could pick up one of these paintings, the Cezanne for instance, for a song... Say $15 million...

Let me just go check that shoebox in my closet. Maybe I'll cash in those bonds I got for my bar mitzvah so long ago.

Hey Beuhrle Collection! Get a lock on those doors and a connection to the police. Then maybe those priceless paintings will remain where they are and you'll be proven worthy to own such cultural treasures!



antique | Antique news odd | Antique scams | Antique Show | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques Show | eBay | stolen antiques
Monday, February 11, 2008 12:41:14 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
Spring Fever and the beauty of the Rhinebeck Antiques Show
Posted by Antique Trader Staff



Man oh Man, it was cold this weekend in Central Wisconsin where I huddled up with my wife and sick two-year old daughter. The sort of cold that makes it difficult to go outside. I pictured myself freezing solid, quick, as I dropped last night's trash in the can out back. I also thought, for one terrifying moment, that the garage door had locked on me. With Lauren upstairs putting the baby to sleep I would have been a goner.

"Why?" I asked myself. "Why?"

While I do believe that you can only really appreciate spring and summer if you live in a place with real seasons, I'm about sick of winter. February is the month that forgot to pay its rent.

With spring coming I'm thinking of all the great shows that I'd like to get to, though my current location makes it a bit tough. I wil get to a lot of local and midwestern shows, but probably not Philly for Antiques Week there. I will, more than likely, make a sojourn to The Pioneer Valley for May Brimfield, just to see old friends, catch up and talk to folks about Trader and this site.

The show I will miss the most, however, will be Rhinebeck. My beloved Rhinebeck Antiques Show. Something so sweet and friendly about this show, the very first one I ever really loved, back when Jimi Barton was still with us, rest his soul.

There's the unbelievable beauty of The Hudson Valley and majesty of the Hudson River, but there are also great people at Rhinebeck and a host of really good restaurants. My pick? Get the chicken wings at Terrapin Bostro. They are very different, spicy and my most favorite wings ever, anywhere, period.

Bruce Garret and Bret Brandes do a great job with the Rhinebeck show, keeping it fresh and ever-changning. especially as tastes shifts. For years, known best for its folk art and Americana, Rhinebeck has succesfully navigated the minefield of adding modern and design-oriented antiques while featuring some of the best dealers in the nation. There are too many to name, but say hi to Bev and Doug Norwood at Norwood's Spirit of America, Steve and Lorraine German at Mad River Antiques, and Sandy at Jenkinstown Antiques. I'll probably hear from the folks that I miss, but - truly - my heart is with this show and I will miss it.

If anybody has any plans to hit any good shows this spring, let me know what they are... noah.fleisher@fwpubs.com.

Happy early spring and GO AWAY FEBRUARY!

antique | Antique Show | Antiques | Antiques Show
Monday, February 11, 2008 12:09:47 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Friday, February 08, 2008
Question of the week: When to Insure?
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Whatever our instinct to collect is, it must go back quite a ways. I would even posit that our desire to accumulate things is as old, and as evolved, as our consciousness itself.

What a person possessed, or didn't possess, always did - and still does - represent their place within a society. At one time it might have had implications about what you could do with your life, and where you can go. Fortunately for us, we live in the Twenty-First century in the U.S. All you collection does is satisfy an individual need and broadcast - depending on what you collect, and a what level - your good taste, or lack thereof, to the world at large.

And, when I mentioned that lack of taste before? I wasn't talking about what you collect... It's a well-known fact that you have fantastic taste...

In this day and age, when everything seemingly has a value, it's a must to make sure your collection is safe. It's loss may not mean societal downfall, but it could well mean financial if anything is lost, stolen or broken, especially when the collection represents thousands and thousands of dollars and years of effort.

Here's the question then this week: At what point is your antiques collection officially worth insuring? How, exactly, do you decide?

Send your answers to noah.fleisher@fwpubs.com, or go online to www.antiquetrader.com/atblog, look for The Question of the Week, and post your answer there.


antique | Antiques, blog, question of the week | stolen antiques
Friday, February 08, 2008 12:23:59 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
Is calling someone a stupid thief an oxymoron?
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

This story came across the AP wire last night, and is being reported as an odd news story in various media outlets across the country, of which we are now one.

What an idiot this guy had to be...

Honey, are we insured for this? Wife's vandalism complaint leads to husband's burglary arrest

SUTHERLIN, Ore. (AP) _ They say problem gamblers never quit while they're ahead, and one properly insured Oregon man apparently didn't, either.

Authorities recovered a stolen antique slot machine worth $4,000 and arrested the 30-year-old, who they said asked his wife to help file an insurance claim to cover damage done to his van during the heist.

The slot machine was reported stolen in a burglary Monday night at a home in Sutherlin, 170 miles south of Portland, Douglas County sheriff's deputies said. Investigators learned that the victim's housekeeper filed a police report a day earlier claiming someone had thrown a piece of sheet metal through the window of her parked van.

The sheet metal turned out to be from the back of the stolen slot machine, with the serial number attached.

Deputies said the housekeeper's husband stole the machine, which tipped over as he drove away, breaking the van window. He told his wife the van had been vandalized and asked her to report the damage so insurance would cover it, deputies said.

The husband and a 25-year-old man were charged with burglary and theft, but the wife wasn't charged.

The case was still being investigated.

Wow.


antique | Antique news odd | Antique scams | Antiques | stolen antiques
Friday, February 08, 2008 11:49:33 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
Online auctioneers divide eBay exodus booty
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

I've always wanted to use the words exodus and booty in a headline, and today was my chance. Just look at it... Marvelous in its simplistic complexity... Or maybe I just need another couple of hours of sleep - my two-year-old daughter has been up sick for most of the last two nights, so my mind is a little hazy...

Anyway...

I like this story from over at CNN Money, talking about how a lot of other online sites are already picking up the pieces of the shattered eBay buying coalition. Hardcore eBay-ers will stick with the compnay through thick and thin, but many others are leaving, or simply cutting back and "diversifying," if you will, in other online markets. Certainly a good idea given looming economic issues and a highly unorthodox presidential election.

The article also contains links to all of the Web sites it discusses, giving you a good chance to check them out and decide what, if anything, you like.


antique | Antique news odd | Antique Show | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques publications | Antiques Show | Auction | eBay
Friday, February 08, 2008 8:52:00 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Thursday, February 07, 2008
Probably not the best news for the antiques biz...
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

I have been criticized for reporting the negative before, but I'm a journalist first and the story is the thing. To ignore this news, and not analyze what it might mean for our business, would be irresponsible.

The overall January sales figures, as reported on Yahoo, by Reuters, were not too good.



That includes a lot of factors, especially big box stores like Wal-Mar and Target, and a lot of the items people aren't buying are things that they shouldn't be buying there anyway - art, furniture, etc...

A January lull is no big surprise to the antiques business; after the holidays and the lull in mid-level and flea market shows - a lot of high-end happens in the Winter, and you can't really count the health of The Winter Antiques Show or The American Antiques Show as truly reflective of the real health of the antiques economy - there is a lot of space. General line buyers are going online to auctions, or checking out shops or small shows nearby.

There are schools of thought that will consider an economic slowdown healthy for antiques, and I don't disagree with them. I do also know that when the economy gets bad - remember 2001? - the antiques business is one of the first to feel the lack of discretionary income, and one of the last to benefit when people come out of the stupor.

The above report, along a reported and well-documented contraction of the jobs market last month, don't add up to prosperity. No one wants to say recession, but the laws of economics are fairly immutable.

antique | Antique Show | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques publications | Antiques Show | Auction | Vintage Fashion
Thursday, February 07, 2008 12:46:09 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [1]
Just curious... Good shows or auctions this weeked?
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Anyone going to any good shows or auctions this weekend?

I'm curious to know, and curious to see if anyone cares to mention it in the comments below...

Come one, you know you want to try it...


antique | Antique Show | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Antiques publications | Antiques Show | Auction
Thursday, February 07, 2008 12:09:53 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [1]
VBOE not on EBAY
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Since it was mentioned in the 2-20 Trader, and on this blog earlier this week, here's what Specialist Auctions has released about its sale to compete with eBay.

I understand well and good that this is a press release from the company and they are representing their best position on the subject. I feel, from an editorial standpoint, that it bears looking at because it is one of the most public counteractions to eBay's recent changes.

Here's how they put it:

"SPECIALIST AUCTIONS TO GO HEAD TO HEAD WITH EBAY DURING “VINTAGE BLOW-OUT SALE”
 
VBOE on Specialist Auctions February 14 – February 21, 2008
 
In an effort to attract both unhappy Ebay buyers and sellers, the rapidly expanding UK-based site Specialist Auctions (www.specialistauctions.com) announced plans to compete directly with a long-held tradition of Ebay vintage clothing sellers: the popular “Vintage Blow Out Sale.”  During this sale, many vintage items are sold for $19.99 or less.
 
Specialist Auctions is calling its sale “VBOE,” and VBOE is rapidly catching on.  Numerous Ebay vintage sellers, some of them Powersellers, are signing up on Specialist Auctions in order to take advantage of the event, which, like VBO, runs from February 14 through February 21, 2008.  Many vintage items will be also be offered for $19.99 or less. 
 
During VBOE, buyers will be able to pick from a huge variety of vintage clothes, hats, accessories, jewelry, and more.  Just like on Ebay.  And Specialist Auctions is also offering collectibles, comics, in fact, anything that dates before 1989.
 
The recent changes at Ebay have prompted calls for a boycott starting February 18 and lasting at least a week.  By moving to sites like Specialist Auctions, sellers can sell with a clear conscience—and not be held hostage to payment method Paypal, an Ebay subsidiary that recently announced it could put a 21-day hold on payments, even if the item was shipped to the buyer.  Sellers on Specialist Auctions accept a wide array of payment options, including Google Checkout, Western Union, money orders, and bank transfers.  Not only that, the only charge to sellers that Specialist Auctions asks for is 3% of the sale price of an item—no matter how high or how low.
 
So if you REALLY want to shop victoriously, shop at Specialist Auctions during VBOE!
"

I trust you can decide for yourself.


antique | Antiques | Antiques Auction | Auction | eBay | Vintage Fashion
Thursday, February 07, 2008 10:49:25 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Wednesday, February 06, 2008
Antique Trader 2-20, coming your way
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Just putting the final touches on the 2-20 issue of Trader. Only one more left in the longest, if shortest, month of the year.

Click on the front page to go to the site, though the stories won't be up for a day or two...


antique | Antique Show | Antiques | Antiques publications | Antiques Show | eBay
Wednesday, February 06, 2008 3:21:57 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
RIP Sam Pennington, Maine Antiques Digest Founder
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

The Maine Antiques Digest is reporting the death of its founder, Samuel Pennington.

I knew Sam peripherally, as so many in the business did. He created an important paper for the antiques business, one that helped bring alot of northern New England dealers back into the mainstream.

Sam was loved and reviled equally. I always had to hand it to him for being so honest about things in the business, a much cherished and rare trait in this business. We all know, in the antiques print game, you don't always get to tell things unvarnished. Sam had enough power to do so and not suffer diminished returns for it.

It's been  a tough month on antiques publications. First Alison Ledes of The Magazine Antiques passes, then Laura Brant sells her stake in the magazine. Now Sam.

To the MAD family, condolences from Trader.


antique | Antiques | Antiques publications
Wednesday, February 06, 2008 11:31:43 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
The eBay debate continues
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

I know a lot of you out there that trade online, and with eBay are still talking to each other about the changes. This blog puts me in the enviable position of speaking with many of you via e-mail, and quite a few phone calls.

Also, I am able to get information from people within the industry as to their opinions and what their readers are saying.

One of these is Ina Steiner, who most of you will know via the blog www.auctionbytes.com. My thanks to Ina for the following:

"Overall, eBay's changes hit antiques dealers harder than commodity
sellers. eBay is making it cheaper to list but more expensive when an
item does sell. And every antiques dealer knows there are problem
buyers. Sellers tell us they will have virtually no leverage to deal
with them because eBay is taking away their ability to leave neutral
or negative feedback for buyers.

eBay believes this will make for a better buying experience - more
listings, and buyers who are not turned off by receiving negatives.
But eBay takes the risk that sellers will not only turn to other
venues (and antiques dealers have already turned to marketplaces like
GoAntiques, TIAS and RubyLane), but that those sellers will also stop
buying on eBay.

It's a high-risk gamble that is not being well received overall, by sellers."


I also have spoken with Antique Trader Web writer Gabe Constantine, who is a show dealer and a busy eBay dealer as well, and he's certainly talked to more than a few of you in his journeys through the message boards. His comments mirrored many of the ones I got via e-mail.

Here's what Gabe had to say:

"I feel that the eBay leadership needed a change, and since I wasn’t contacted for the job I will have to hope that this newbie will do what needs to be done.

I disagree that eBay is shifting focus. Right off the bat, they lowered listing fees. Don’t be fooled, read carefully and you will see that they raised the final value fee enough to where it will almost equal out and make no difference.

Maybe this new head honcho will shift direction but in 2007 I witnessed a successful “Bid Victoriously “ eBay advertising campaign generated towards their online auctions. Compared in the commercials to Jumping Higher than everyone else and winning the touchdown Catch of a Vase. To me this isn’t shying away from the auction aspect.

I think eBay will remain a strong force in the Antiques & Collectables marketplace. It’s a monopoly of the online auction world. With the growing success of EBay Live auctions I feel it will have no trouble remaining a force.

One thing eBay has always needed to do is get the input from us, the people who specialize in Antiques & Collectables. We need “our voice” as Antiques & Collectables dealers to be heard in all decision making. Just look at how poor the category system is and you should understand how little our input is.
"


antique | Antiques | eBay
Wednesday, February 06, 2008 11:19:08 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
Arson takes an historic Queen Anne in Mass.
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Hate to see something like this, as reported by The Preservationist Online.

These lovely old houses in Massachusetts are amazing and this one was all set for restoration... Someone decided to toss a match on it... I wonder how they can sleep at night, or if they do at all. Maybe it was an organized thing. Maybe it was a bunch of idiot kids, and maybe it was a crackhead who dropped their pipe... Hate this, especially when it was going to be brought back to life...

Check it out.


antique | Antique news odd | Antiques | Architecture | Historic Preservation
Wednesday, February 06, 2008 11:06:35 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Tuesday, February 05, 2008
If you're in a primary state...
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Stop reading this blog and go out and vote!

Your country needs you!

Antique Trader does not care who you vote for, only that you vote!

Minus this public service announcement, this is a politics free zone...


antique | Antiques
Tuesday, February 05, 2008 10:57:54 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
"It's about the antique bottle, I swear!"
Posted by Antique Trader Staff



I do have to say that I hate to see this, especially if authorities do actually have to dump the bottles of whiskey in this report out of Tennessee. The story is from the Shelbyville (TN) Times-Gazette, but has been national news for a while.

Seems this man was indicted and faces possible prison time for possesing a whole bunch of Jack Daniels. He says that he's a bottle collector. Seems reasonable enough to me, given that one of the bottles in the collection mentioned in the link above is worth $10,000 and dates to 1914.

I'm no fan of Jack Daniels, but if bet it tastes pretty good if it's been aged the right way...



antique | Antique Glass | Antique news odd | Antiques
Tuesday, February 05, 2008 10:56:22 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Monday, February 04, 2008
Antiques and the eBay problem continued
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Had an interesting conversation with Bob Clements, one of the principal founders of UK auction site www.specialistauctions.com.

This is a site that started in direct response to the eBay model. Bob and his company place expert moderators to oversee paticular subsets of collecting, making an effort to make sure that their auctions are "vetted" and discussed if questions arise. They've done well for themselves in the European market, with significant gains in this country, as well. SpecialistAuctions is especially well known for its strong vintage fashion component, which can generate a huge amount of hits for its auctions.

The long and the short of it in the U.K. is this: Just like Americans, the British are made about these changes, but even more so. Everything applies the sameas far as the changes, except that in Britain eBay isn't eliminating the gallery fee - which users pay for posting pics of items for sale - which costs them about .30 cents. Ouch.

"People are very upset," Clements said. "Here in the UK they don’t even have the benefit of the removal of the cost for gallery images."

The "Final Value Fee" hike is also a big deal. Clements was able to bottom line the increase, one that equals more than a 50% hike.

"(EBay is) reducing the cost of actually creating the listing," he said, "and then they’re moving the final value fee amount from an average 5.5 percent to an average 8.7 percent."

Ouch again.

The real kicker is that those things aren't even what Clements sees as what's got people riled up.

"What's really got to people is the fact that sellers will no longer be able to give buyers neutral or negative feedback," he said. "But buyers will be able to give sellers neutral or negative feedback."

Besides be a keen gage on the sentiment across the pond, SpecialistAuctions is also hosting it own VBOE sale, or Vintage Blow Off Sale, with a huge amount of dealers and a more hospitable atmosphere.

Check them out above if you wish, if only to see an alternative that many are considering in the wake of these changes.


antique | Antiques | Antiques, blog, question of the week | eBay
Monday, February 04, 2008 1:59:45 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
eBay Sellers and Customers respond to changes...
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

... and boy are they ticked off.




Since the Antique Trader e-newsletter went out last Friday, Feb. 1, with the question about whether eBay, with its changes to sellers and final fees, as well as tweaking its feedback to disallow negative feedback on buyers, I have been overwhelmed with the responses. My inbox has been literally overflowing since early Friday and just slowed down last night. I have not counted the responses, but it is well more than 100 - I usually get 20 on a good week - and illustrates the passion that readers and eBay regulars are feeling in realtion to these moves by the auction giant. That, and the question is just now hitting newstands and subscribers.

As many of these as I can fit will be printed in the 2-20 issue of Antique Trader, and I will make sure the rest get onto the AT Web site and into the e-newsletter of 2-8. Some I can't post in any instance due to the anger and language expressed... Let's keep it clean, folks... I don't want my dear old Ma and Pa to read this and get offended...

Here's what I understand from the overwhelming majority of the responses:

eBay seems to be shooting itself in the foot, or as the old adage goes: "Don't spit on my leg and tell me it's raining," which one reader wrote with a different metaphor for spit.

The companie's loss of revenue and perceived competition, along with Meg Whitman's resignations, have led to some abrupt changes in terms of those things listed in the question an d it seems that eBay is deliberately trying to squeeze out what it perceives as "small" buyers and sellers, or "mid-level" buyers and sellers. To me, this means anyone that buys and/or sells between $800 and $5,000 a year, give or take a few hundred or thousand.

There must be, literally, a million or two million sellers at this level and more buyers. These are the folks that are most at risk to be hurt and, cumulatively, I would imagine represent a great big chunck of cash for the eBay. Yet here they are, alienated and angry by abrupt changes made without explanation or ceremony. Trust me, the anger is palpable, and will drive people away from eBay - if they haven't already bailed - and towards other already extant auction sites, or antique malls like Ruby Lane, where thet can deal in a setting that respects who they are, what they buy and - most importantly - what they spend.

Take note, eBay - if you read this - people are unhappy.

Perhaps this is part of the plan, to lost some business in order to gain liquidity an shift the business model elsewhere. Just as antiquers can't forget what eBay has done for the business in the last 10 years, eBay should not overlook what antiquers have done for its business in the last 10 years.

All empires fall because they fail to change with the times.

antique | Antiques | Antiques, blog, question of the week | eBay
Monday, February 04, 2008 10:37:54 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [1]
Antiques Scammer nabbed in Miami
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

Eric Bradley, the Show Manager of Atlantique City - which is owned by Trader's parent company, F+W Publications - was in Miami Beach over the weekend at the big show there - lucky man to be away from Midwest cold and snow. Evidently there was a scammer passing bad checks on the floor, and thanks to the actions of some dealers, the guy was picked up and a most-  if not all - of the merch found.

Here's what Eric wrote from the floor:

Miami police arrested a man on Sunday suspected of passing bogus checks proportedly worth at least $10,000 at the  Miami Beach Antiques Show. The man is suspected to have been working with an accomplice.

The cops nabbed him after our good friend Howard Roberts spotted a guy who fit the description of a man who passed a phony $4,400 check to one of his friends the day before. The man - who claimed to be from Philadelphia but spoke with a Russian accent -  was identified while he was browsing some jewelry in the booth of dealer Michael Weinstein (who also does Atlantique City). After interrogating the man, police sought search warrants for three Miami-area hotel rooms. Not sure if any were in Miami Beach proper.  

Police were able to recover items stolen with the bad checks on Sunday. It's not clear if they were unable to secure some, or all, of the merch purchased on Saturday.

The Miami police should have a report shortly. It will be in the local press soon!


Eric


Trader will keep an eye on this in the next few days, but thanks Eric!
       


antique | Antique scams | Antiques | Antiques Show | Antiques Show | Antique Show
Monday, February 04, 2008 9:46:00 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Friday, February 01, 2008
Clearly, "lower listing fees" should be in quotes
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

I'm getting a tremendous amount of email from readers on our question of the week - see below - and I clearly should have put lower listing fees in quotation marks.

I apologize for the oversite, but love the passion that people are bringing to this argument, whether in support of the changes (a few) or against (most)... Alot of these responses will be in the 2-20 issue of Trader, with the rest online.

Meanwhile, keep responding, and keep on keeping me on the straight and narrow...


antique | Antiques | Antiques, blog, question of the week | eBay
Friday, February 01, 2008 1:16:11 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [3]
Effect of eBay changes on smaller antiques buyers
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

One of Trader's online readers, Frank, responded to our question of the week - Can eBay stay relevant with its current changes? - and raised a good point from the view of a "casual" user, of which there are many - myself included.

Here's what he has to say:

Noah:

I was reading about eBay, the current subject for your new blog site. Here are my comments. I'll let you decide if they are "bloggable".

I have been a registered eBay user for nearly 10 years. While my selling has been fairly limited, I planned to increase it in the coming years when I retire. My area is mostly antique toys in the $75. to $800. range (at a few dozen per year, a very small dealer in eBay terms).  So I look at every strategic and revenue adjustment at eBay from that perspective.

I don't really think that the site thinks of me as a member of one of their most important revenue categories. If that turns out to be increasingly true, then I may go over to listing quantities of items with traditional auctioneers (some of whom also use eBay or some other internet auctioneer anyway) to appeal to a wider range of buyers. It all comes down to dollars. If it's a wash, who needs the hassle of packing, shipping and the occasional non-payer? The decision will be an easy one.

Frank

I have to agree with what he says. I believe that eBay might be hurting themselves from the standpoint of the small user, like Frank. If, however, these "small" users are spending anywhere from $1,000 to $5,000 a year on eBay - listing and buying - that has to add up when you consider the sheer volume.


EBay might get some of the money from users like Frank, using bigger eBay dealers, but alot of that money is going to go to other dealers on other sites that are specifically dedicated to antiques already, and aren't as problematic, like Ruby Lane, et al.

antique | Antiques | eBay | Toys
Friday, February 01, 2008 10:01:07 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [7]
Worst Building Ever?
Posted by Antique Trader Staff

I am, at heart, a a great lover of groundbreaking architecture - Modern, post-modern, post-post-modern - you name it, I'm an adherent and a seeker.

Esquire Magazine's Web site regularly features some of what it considers the worst architcture on the planet, and I have to frequently agree with the choices of its writer(s). The alert for the column that came across the Web today is for what writer Eva Hagberg calls "The Worst Building in the History of Mankind," it's the Ryugyong Hotel in Pyongyang, North Korea, and I'm not necessarily discinclined to agree, though there is something amazingly thrilling and strange about this monstrosity that was abondoned 2/3 of the way through building, and has sat vacant for the last two decades.

It's a great little essay, with a great couple of videos - totally sci-fi and futuristic in a retro, steam punk kind of way.

From the article:

"A picture doesn't lie -- the one-hundred-and-five-story Ryugyong Hotel is hideous, dominating the Pyongyang skyline like some twisted North Korean version of Cinderella's castle. Not that you would be able to tell from the official government photos of the North Korean capital -- the hotel is such an eyesore, the Communist regime routinely covers it up, airbrushing it to make it look like it's open -- or Photoshopping or cropping it out of pictures completely."

Somehow the cleresy of the North Korean government in the 1980s must have thought that the hotel would be a shining beacon of communist architecture, anticipating the flood of visitors to Pyongyang when capitalism fell. Now, simply, they are saddled with it.

I have to say, though, there is something awe-inspiring  - and frightening in a totalitarian sort of way - about it. Read the link above and see what you think.


antique | Antique news odd | Architecture | pop art
Friday, February 01, 2008 9:40:26 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)  #  Comments [0]