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English Fossil Collection | Antique Clocks | Science, Technology …

May 21st, 2012

Prominent antique clock and watch collections will also be offered

MARLBOROUGH, Mass – May 17, 2012 – Skinner, Inc. will host an auction of Science, Technology, and Clocks on Saturday, June 2nd in its Marlborough gallery. The sale features an important 19th century English fossil collection, as well as several prominent antique clock and watch collections.

Natural History Collection Featuring English Fossils

Lot 36: Ammonite, Lyme Regis, Dorset, England The natural history collection featured in the June sale is composed of more than 125 lots, including complete dinosaur skeletons, eggs and other bone fragments, a wooly mammoth tusk, fossilized fish, sharks’ teeth, a sea scorpion, ammonites, trilobites, crinoids, and more. With so many lots on offer at various price points, everyone from the museum collector to the new hobbyist has an opportunity to own a piece of natural history.

Many lots of classic Jurassic fossils from the Lyme Regis, Dorset England were the property of pioneer collector Mary Anning. Others carry the original catalogue labels of famed mid-19th century London dealer Bryce McMurdo Wright. Highlights include a Jurassic ammonite with catalogue label and conservation photography by Tom Rich (lot 36, estimated between $3,000 and $5,000), two Psittacosaurus dinosaur skeletons (lot 75, $3,000 to $5,000), and two dinosaur eggs (lot 76, $1,000 to $1,500).

Antique Clocks & Watches

Clocks featured at the sale range from the modestly priced mantle clock to the high-end precision regulator. For the collector of domestic clocks, the sale features an excellent assortment of American tall clocks, including one by Benjamin Willard (lot 386, $15,000 to $25,000). The Willards were a famous family of clockmakers during the 18th and 19th centuries from Roxbury, Massachusetts. Benjamin was the eldest of the four brothers and examples of his clocks are very rare.

The Skinner department of Science, Technology, and Clocks is well known for offering precision astronomical regulators at auction. The June sale is no exception. Notable precision astronomical regulators include a Riefler precision astronomical regulator (lot 309, $6,000 to $8,000), and an E. Howard No. 74 astronomical regulator with gravity escapement (lot 310, $35,000 to $50,000). An Edward Prior triple case watch, created for the Turkish market (lot 238, $1,000 to $2,000) will also be offered.

For the clockmaker or watchmaker seeking precision machinery, there is a large collection of tools available that would be ideal for anyone starting out in clock and watch repair.

Exploring & Surveying Tools

Notable exploring and surveying lots include a brass mountain barometer by Cary (lot 202, $2,000 to $4,000), and a Ramsden brass reflecting telescope (lot 201, $3,000 to $5,000). A spectacular 100-blade exposition knife by Pius Lang (lot 227, $8,000 to $12,000) will also be offered. Between the mother-of pearl grips are 100 individual tools ranging from pocket-knife standards, such as a scissors and bottle opener, to the more unique earwax spoon and bone toothpick.

Automatons

A Lord’s Supper automaton by Philibois features Jesus and the twelve Apostles engaged in serious conversation (lot 206, $10,000 to $15,000). This automaton was part of the traveling London Mechanical and Electrical Exhibition touring England, Australia, and New Zealand in the 1920s.

 

Previews, Catalogue & Bidding

Previews for the auction will be held on Thursday, May 31, 2012, 12 p.m.-5 p.m., and Friday, June 1, 12 p.m.-7 p.m. Department director, Robert Cheney, will offer a gallery walk on Friday, June 1 at 5:30 p.m. in the Marlborough Gallery. To register, please visit: http://conta.cc/science-june1.

Illustrated catalogue #2600M is available from the subscription department at 508-970-3240. It is also available at the gallery. Prices realized will be available at www.skinnerinc.com during and after the sale. Skinner’s site also allows users to view all lots in the auctions, leave bids, order catalogues, and bid live in real-time through SkinnerLive!

About Skinner

Skinner, Inc. is one of the world’s leading auction houses for antiques and fine art. With expertise in over 20 specialty collecting areas, Skinner draws the interest of buyers from all over the world and its auctions regularly achieve world record prices. Skinner provides a broad range of auction and appraisal services, and it is widely regarded as one of the most trusted names in the auction business. Skinner’s appraisal experts regularly appear on the PBS-TV series, Antiques Roadshow, and its specialty departments include American Furniture & Decorative Arts, American & European Works of Art, European Furniture & Decorative Arts, 20th Century Design, Fine Ceramics, Fine Silver, Fine Jewelry, Couture, Fine Musical Instruments, Asian Works of Art, Fine Wines, Rare Books & Manuscripts, Oriental Rugs & Carpets, American Indian & Ethnographic Art, Fine Judaica, Antique Motor Vehicles, Toys, Dolls & Collectibles, Discovery and Science, Technology & Clocks. Skinner galleries are located in Boston and Marlborough, Mass. For more information on upcoming auctions and events, visit Skinner’s web site www.skinnerinc.com.

 

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collecting memories: Praline Bars

May 21st, 2012


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Split spoon samplin' | spooncollectingtips.info | Spoon Collecting

May 19th, 2012

Collecting soil samples from deep underground with split spoons! Yes… spoons.

Originally posted: Split spoon samplin’

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Split spoon samplin' | spooncollectingtips.info | Spoon Collecting …

May 19th, 2012

Collecting soil samples from deep underground with split spoons! Yes… spoons.

Originally posted: Split spoon samplin’

This entry was posted

on Thursday, May 17th, 2012 at 12:50 pm
and is filed under Videos.

You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.

You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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Reed & Barton Francis First Sterling Silver 46-Piece Flatware Set …

May 17th, 2012


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More Mother's Day letters from our readers | Spoon Collecting

May 17th, 2012


Updated: 10:16 a.m. Monday, May 14, 2012

Published: 10:25 p.m. Saturday, May 12, 2012

Mom’s WWII actions

By the time that my mother, May Sanders, turned 20,she had already had a
memorable life! My mom lived in Liverpool, England, during World War II. She
experienced the bombings that the Nazis did all over England.

Mom worked for the Air Ministry in Liverpool. She inspected barage balloons,
as well as parachutes. So it is possible that your husband, father or
grandfather survived the war because she did her job.

Not that all the war years were dreadful. Mom said one night while her family
was heading toward a neighborhood bomb shelter, my grandmother started
yelling, “my pie,my pie”! Turned out Grandmother had just baked an
apple pie and left it on the window sill to cool. Mom said that she and her
brother-in-law volunteered to rescue the pie. At that time it took nearly a
week’s worth of food ration coupons to bake that pie. They dodged bomb
fragments and falling debris to save that pie. But they saved the pie and
went on to help the Allies win the war.

Thank you, Mom!

John C. Sanders

Austin

Twice widowed, still strong

My mother, Nina Ellen Mills Smith Farrar, was born in Milan, Tenn., on Dec.15,
1888. She died in 1986. She came to Nashville in 1918 on the train with her
little boy (James Smith) after being widowed in 1918. She became matron of
the boys dormitory at the Nashville Bible School, which later became David
Lipscomb College. While there, she met my father-to-be, Henry C. Farrar who
lived on a 78-acre farm (now known as Green Hills) near the college, taking
care of his widowed mother, Lucretia Farrar.

Before his mother died, she asked the teachers to find a wife for Henry. This,
through God’s providence, was my mother. They married on Sep. 15, 1922. I
had three older brothers (now deceased).

In many ways my mother had a difficult life, being widowed two times, but she
believed strongly in God’s providential care and she read the Bible
constantly. I remember sitting around the fireplace reading and memorizing
scriptures with my brother, Henry Jr. He later became an outstanding
missionary doctor who started a hospital in Nigeria in the early 1960s. As
my niece, Carol, wrote recently, my mother was a “woman of strong
character and very intelligent.” My mother and father are buried at
Woodlawn Cemetery in Nashville.

Gene Patterson

Austin

Always time to paint

Joann painted from an early age. Mother was the only one in her family to
graduate college. At 21, she graduated with a fine arts degree from Texas
Christian University and married my father.

They moved many places. Daddy was gone for long periods; she learned to do
everything on her own and found time to paint.

Our family of four moved to Brazil. Providing for the family was hard.
Painting was a sanity break and flowed out of her like a river.

In Brazil, Mother delivered my sister while suffering from hepatitis. Visiting
her in the rat-infested hospital was scary; the concern on Daddy’s face
impressed even a 9-year-old. Two more years in Brazil; back to Fort Worth
and still she painted. More moves; Daddy died of cancer. The paintings kept
coming.

The paintings chronicle her life and experiences. They are treasures to us
all. My mother is one of kindest, smartest, and most gentle humans to whom
one could hope to be related.

Her wonder at the beauty, variety and energy are contagious. She is like her
mother, and if I ever aspired to anything, it was to reflect some of their
shining spirit. At 84, Mother can no longer use a brush to her standards,
but still she paints on the canvases of her children’s hearts and their
families’ with her spirit, her love, her humor and always with the wisdom
learned in her life.

Michelle Maloney

mmaloney73@att.net

Austin

Artistic legacy

Learning to decorate a multi-layered cake with pastry tubes configured from
cut paper always seemed natural to me as a child. I am a professional artist
represented by Wally Workman Gallery in Austin.

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messengers of meaning « meaningfulobjects

May 15th, 2012

I’ve long been a collector of vintage souvenir items, most from the period of the 1940s through the 1960s, some over a hundred years old.  There’s an undeniable appeal to these items, often cheap and gaudy, frequently kitschy and crude, sometimes well-made, always capable of drawing me in.  Souvenirs are portals to different places and different times, witnesses to the unique cultural and economic factors that produced them.

There’s something ironic about a souvenir cup and saucer from the 1950s, decorated with a transfer image of the Capital Building in Washington DC, a hand-decorated slipware dragon surrounding the Capital Building, and marked on the reverse with a red ink stamped “Made in Occupied Japan.”  Ten years previously, some American patriot chopped down the cherry trees on the National Mall in protest; later Americans would purchase these Japanese-made souvenir items in support of our former enemy’s economy.

Or take souvenir spoons, those oh so plentiful remnants of the 1950s and 60s, now commonly found at garage sales and flea markets.  They first appeared in the late 19th century, testament to the successes of the Industrial Revolution, increasing worldwide economic prosperity, and a burgeoning middle-class that embraced vacation travel.  When Mother and Father traveled to the Continent on vacation or the family visited Niagara Falls or the World’s Fair, what better trophy and proof of prosperity than a decorative spoon?

An article in the July 20, 1891 New York Times (More Souvenir Spoons) comments upon the spread of the fashion; collectors are able to purchase spoons in jewelry stores with about 700 different designs offered.  The author traces the popularity of spoon collecting to the Victorian practice of catching “in spoons the tears that dropped from the eyes of sorrowing relatives of a dead person.  This precious brine, it appears, was poured into bottles, and the spoons…retained as souvenirs.”  Later travelers in Europe, in the habit of “buying little trinkets and trifles,” would popularize the collection of souvenir spoons as ornamental mementos of their trips.  By 1891, “There seems to be no weakening in the fashion; it is even said the fad grows more popular every day. […] Until something more popular and unknown takes it place.”

A souvenir is defined as a “usually small and relatively inexpensive article given, kept, or purchased as a reminder of a place visited, an occasion, etc.; a memento or memory.”  The word comes from the French, meaning remembrance or memory.

I have a theory about souvenirs.  They serve as memory aids, links to a geographic place and time, specific people and events, or emotions.  The more cheaply made, gaudy and kitschy, the more effectively they anchor memory (I can’t believe I paid so much for this cheap that was made in China…).

When I purchase souvenir items from places I’ve never been, I somehow acquire those memories and meanings, symbolically joining with the pleasures of that place and time, people and events, and emotions.  Partaking in those messengers of meaning.

Do you possess a treasured memento?

Photo credit: souvenir spoons from the author’s personal collection

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Collecting Children's Books: Sunday Brunch for Mothers and …

May 15th, 2012
Welcome to Sunday Brunch where, among other topics, we’re celebrating Mother’s Day and the legacy of Maurice Sendak.


SENDAK

The children’s book world is still reeling from the death of Maurice Sendak earlier this week. There have been some wonderful tributes online, such as these illustrations from noted artists in today’s New York Times. Author Amy Goldman Koss shares her thoughts in an LA Times opinion piece. And my co-authors Julie Walker Danielson and Elizabeth Bird offered typically thoughtful remarks.

Since the focus of this blog is book collecting, I guess I should add some remarks about the availability and cost of books written and illustrated by Maurice Sendak.

The “bible” for Sendak collectors is known in the book trade as “Hanrahan.” The actual title is WORKS OF MAURICE SENDAK, 1947-1994 : A COLLECTION WITH COMMENTS by Jean Y. Hanrahan. This bibliography gives very specific information on how to identify first editions of each Sendak book, along with price ranges. Needless to say, most of the prices mentioned in the book are now extremely dated. That most sought-after Sendak picture book, WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE, is listed at $350-$500. Today the price has skyrocketed to as much as $10,000 to $20,000!

Much of Sendak’s work was issued by Harper, a publisher notorious for making their edition statements very unclear. The only way to identify copies of his second most-requested work, IN THE NIGHT KITCHEN, is check prices, numbers, and blurbs on the dustjacket; the edition of the BOOK ITSELF cannot be identified. Hanrahan lists this one from $100-$225, but today it’s worth well over $1000.

Because Maurice Sendak’s picure books are so expensive, I would advise beginning collectors to seek out books by other authors that Sendak illustrated early in his career.

The first children’s novel he illustrated was THE WONDERFUL FARM by Marcel Ayme. Because it’s Sendak’s first children’s book of any type, it too can ber fairly expensive, $500-$1000.

However, it’s probably also easier to find a cheap copy of this book at your local used bookstore or charity sale. If a Sendak picture book arrives at one of these venues, someone is going to stop, look at it, and investigate its value. If a book by Marcel Ayme (WHO?) arrives, no one may notice Sendak’s involvement and the book may end up on the shelf for a couple bucks. So keep your eyes open!

Although some of the novels Sendak illustrated are still very collectable, such as MRS. PIGGLE’S FARM by Betty MacDonald:

or much beloved, like the many works he illustrated for Meindert DeJong, such as SHADRACH and THE WHEEL ON THE SCHOOL:

there are also a number of titles that few people remember these days. For example, have you ever heard of this 1955 book that features Sendak illustrations?

I don’t know it at all!


WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE TRIVIA

When Joyce Hanrahan was researching her bibliography, she checked some of the Sendak books that were held by the Library of Congress.

The Library of Congress copy of WHERE THE WILD THING ARE was cataloged and stamped November 22, 1963….


MOTHER’S DAY

Happy Mother’s Day to everyone, whether you are a mother or have one!

Last year I wrote a blog entry on the large number of Newbery winning books in which moms (and dads) are almost completely absent. And it does seem that mothers don’t play roles in most of our classic children’s books. The Darling Children and Alice go off on adventures without their parents. As do Claudia and Jamie Kincaid. Fern’s mother is around, but what function does she serve after her daughter asks her, “Where’s Papa going with that ax?”

This got me wondering about the memorable mothers in children’s books. Who are the best? Who are the worst?

My candidates for the best would include “Marmee” from LITTLE WOMEN; I’m not sure I ever finished this book, but I know enough to think of Marmee as the quintessential children’s book mother.

Who else?

Well, the Runaway Bunny’s mother must be one of the best, considering the lengths she promises to go in order to be near her child:

Bessie Setzer from E.L. Konigsburg’s ABOUT THE B’NAI BAGELS also seems to qualify. Yes, she’s something of a stereotype, but she was one of the first comic Jewish mothers to appear in children’s fiction — both an expert cook (“Raisins are raisins and cabbage is cabbage, and in my pot they won’t meet”) and a baseball coach! PLUS she wields a mean slotted spoon.

In the category of bad mothers, we have to start with Mayzie from Dr. Seuss’s HORTON HATCHES THE EGG. When Mayzie takes a break from nesting, she toddles of to Palm Beach!

Liza Tillerman from Cynthia Voigt’s HOMECOMING and DICEY’S SONG doesn’t get any medals for good parenting. Granted, she’s got mental problems, but abandoning four kids in a parking lot doesn’t make her a good maternal figure.

Who are your most memorable mothers in children’s books?

Which belong in the Motherhood Hall of Fame and which ones belong in the Motherhood Hall of Shame?


COVER STORIES

It’s always interesting to see the dustjackets that publishers choose for their books.

Does the cover illustration reflect the content of the story inside?

Does it follow a contemporary trend in cover art (headless kids; legless feet; the use of stock photographs rather than original art)?

I just recently came across a new “drug” novel for teens called LUCY IN THE SKY, written by (who else?) “Anonymous.”

Do the cover (and the author’s name) remind you of anything?

It reminded me of the paperback cover of that perennnial teenage read, GO ASK ALICE

In the book we just wrote, Betsy Bird, Jules Danielson, and I discuss the murky origins of this dopey (pun intended) YA favorite, but praise the publisher for choosing a cover image that has literally lasted for generations. It’s almost impossible to think of any other YA novel that has used the same cover photograph for nearly four decades. We can only assume that LUCY IN THE SKY (which references the title GO ASK ALICE on its cover) is paying an homage with its similar design.

Incidentally, few people know that, before it was a paperback, GO ASK ALICE was a hardcover book. And even fewer have seen the original dustjacket, so we present it here for your edification:

I may be one of the few people who remember this original dj illustration. Months before the paperback appeared, I happened to run across the hardcover in the adult section of my public library. I checked it out and brought it to junior high with me. Soon everyone in my class wanted to borrow it from me — especially the “cool” kids who had never acknowledged me before. I lent it to several of them (I was a book “pusher” — a book “dealer”!) but my popularity was shortlived. As soon as the book had to be returned to the library, those kids forgot I existed.

I am also intrigued by a new young adult novel by Nina LaCour. The story is narrated by a BOY named COLBY, who plans to spend the year after high school traveling through Europe with HIS best friend Bev. But first they take a road trip with Bev’s rock band, during which Bev informs COLBY that she no longer intends to go to Europe. HE is devastated. The book has received several starred reviews and, although I’ve only read half the novel so far, I think I can say with assurance that this is a strong book and that young MALE readers will relate to COLBY’s issues and would enjoy picking up this book.

If it weren’t for the chicklit cover.

What were the publishers thinking?


PAPER DOLLS

Debbie Reese’s American Indians in Children’s Literature is an important blog that “provides critical perspectives and analysis of indigenous peoples in children’s and young adult books, the school curriculum, popular culture, and society.” Do I always agree with Debbie? No, but I definitely respect her thought-provoking opinions. I’ve learned a lot from her blog and am pleased we are friends on Facebook. (And if anyone reading this wants to keep in touch with me on Facebook, feel free to “friend” me.)

This week Debbie posted the following paper doll figures on Facebook, with the message: “These two paper dolls are excellent! Please SHARE with students in Education or Library School.”

I love them too and want to share them here:

They are the work of Steven Paul Judd, who says he was inspired by paper dolls of the fifties and sixties. Steven says, “I’m not a psychologist so I can’t tell you the effects of seeing your people only portrayed in a certain way. I can only speak on my own experience of being a little kid and looking for others on t.v. that I could identify with. Only person I could find was Erik “Ponch” Estrada from “CHiPs”. So as a youn’un I pretended to be a motorcycle cop. So my thought is, what if our youth could see there selves not in just a historical context, but as doctors, lawyers, astronauts. So that’s when I decided to make these drawings.”

Pretty neat, huh?

Although, as Wikipedia says, “Paper dolls have been around as long as there has been paper,” in the twentieth century they were manufacured by both game/toy companies and book publishers, such as Whitman and Saalfield.

This got me wondering how many children’s books characters have been made into paper dolls.

A quick trip around the internet turned up Curious George:

Madeline:

The Little House girls:

Ramona, Beezus, and Henry:

Ivy and Bean:

and Fancy Nancy:

However, all of these paper dolls — even those based on classic works — were produced in recent years.

Although vintage peper dolls were created in the likeness of every movie star you can imagine, including some that rather arcane (Barbara Brittain?) and/or unlikely (Anthony Perkins?) names, I can’t find any vintage dolls representing older children’s books. No Moffats, no Melendys, no Harriet the Spy with removable hoodie. No Margaret from ARE YOU THERE GOD..? (Can you imagine that doll’s accessories?)

Have you seen any vintage paper dollars based on children’s books?

Also, this thread makes me wonder if any well-known children’s book illustrators from the forties, fifties, or sixties, got their start designing or drawing paper dolls?

That alone might make certain dolls collectable.


GOOD NEWS

Fans of Zilpha Keatley Snyder’s 1966 novel, BLACK AND BLUE MAGIC, will be glad to hear that it’s being made into a movie for the Hallmark Network.

Watch your TV listings later this year or early next year.

I’m always glad when a favorite from my own childhood becomes rediscovered by a new generation due to a movie or TV adadptation.


MORE GOOD NEWS

I was happy to see this poster, designed by Mike Anderick and distributed by the nonprofit group, Burning Through Books, go viral last week.

I think it speaks to (and for) any kids who has ever lost himself or herself in a book.


FINALLY

Okay, it doesn’t have the same prestige of a Newbery or National Book Award sticker, but I can’t imagine anyone not smiling at this new sticker that mocks the design of the Caldecott Award and announces that the book it’s attached to is “Caldecott Eligible.”

Well, of course it is. Nearly every book is Caldecott ELIGIBLE…but many are called…and few are chosen.

That sticker can be found on the cover of Stephen Colbert’s new children’s book I AM A POLE (AND SO CAN YOU.)

This is the book that Colbert pitched to Maurice Sendak during his recent televised interview.

And Maurice Sendak even includes a smiling, shrugging cover blurb: “The sad thing is, I like it!”

And with that, today’s Sunday Brunch both begins and ends with Maurice Sendak.

Thanks for visiting. Please come back soon!

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Northgate Gallery Catalog – Important Estate Auction | Artfact …

May 13th, 2012



View lots


Register to bid

Viewing Notes:


Special Preview Showing: Friday May 18, 2012 from 8:00 AM until 8:00 PM


Sale Notes:


All of the items can be viewed at our auction gallery and showroom.










Lot 1: American cut glass trumpet vase, 8″ high and a cut glass triangular footed candy dish, 6″ wide, 7″ deep, As Found, (small chip)


American cut glass trumpet vase, 8″ high and a cut glass triangular footed candy dish, 6″ wide, 7″ deep, As Found, (small chip)




Suggested Bid: $125








Lot 2: American cut glass bowl with scalloped top, 8″ diameter and a cut glass octagonal shaped bowl, 8″ wide, 8″ deep, two pieces


American cut glass bowl with scalloped top, 8″ diameter and a cut glass octagonal shaped bowl, 8″ wide, 8″ deep, two pieces




Suggested Bid: $175








Lot 3: Sterling silver cream and sugar bowl and a sterling silver serving tong, three pieces


Sterling silver cream and sugar bowl and a sterling silver serving tong, three pieces




Suggested Bid: $125








Lot 4: American cut glass compote, 5″ diameter, 8″ high, As Found (small chip) and a cut glass compote, 5″ diameter, 7″ high


American cut glass compote, 5″ diameter, 8″ high, As Found (small chip) and a cut glass compote, 5″ diameter, 7″ high




Suggested Bid: $125








Lot 5: Collection of eight German sterling silver and beveled crystal double bowl salt cellars with spoons, the silver swans with hinged wings revealing crystal bowl, marked Germany AB (Albert Bodemer) along with sterling spoons with cherub decoration,


Collection of eight German sterling silver and beveled crystal double bowl salt cellars with spoons, the silver swans with hinged wings revealing crystal bowl, marked Germany AB (Albert Bodemer) along with sterling spoons with cherub decoration, c.19 [...more]




Suggested Bid: $250





View all lots in this auction




Accepted Forms of Payment:


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Shipping:


Auction House will help arrange shipment, at buyer’s expense

Buyers Premium:


10.00%


Artfact Live Bidding Fee:


3% of winning bid


Bid Increments:



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From $5,000 to $9,999
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Originally posted: Northgate Gallery Catalog – Important Estate Auction | Artfact









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12 Piece Cutlery Sterling Silver & Mum From Pearl 1899 « Kimbers …

May 13th, 2012

Warman’s Sterling Silver Flatware: Value & Identification Guide (Encyclopedia of Antiques and Collectibles) Sterling silver flatware continues to be highly collectible, especially as family collections are passed down to each new generati… Pacific Silver Cloth by the Yard – Stops Tarnish! (Line drawers, cabinets, etc. – Make pouches) Pacific Silver Cloth – by the yard – 36″ wide. – Treated to prevent tarnish in silver and other precious metals. Sold by the yard,… Reed & Barton Zippered Draw liner for Silverware Casual Storage zippered drawer liner holds up to 120 flatware pieces, including 24 knives. Crafted of brown fabric, liner constru… Mozaik Serving Utensil Set (3 Silver Forks, 3 Silver Spoons), 6-Piece Set (Pack of 6) Sabert® is proud to introduce a fashionable new line of Mozaik Serving Utensils (3 Forks – 3 Spoons) that are heavyweight plastic…

Silver Cutlery

Ring in the New Year with all the Right Party Supplies! The silver plasticware

12 Piece Cutlery Sterling Silver & Mum From Pearl 1899

Source: 12 Piece Cutlery Sterling Silver & Mum From Pearl 1899 « Kimbers …









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