“These are the most important artifacts,” Russell said, with only six known from these two women. Works by Rockwell Kent, Maud Lewis and others were on exhibit in Scott Ferris’ booth, J&R Ferris, Boonville, N.Y. Thien sold a pair of Flamingo life-size water sprinklers, saying, “I thought they were fabulous, I will never find them again.” He also sold a folk art painting from his personal collection depicting a house in Maine. Suydam rig. “Its such a pleasure to be where the Americana lovers all congregate for this one magical week in August,” she told Antiques and The Arts Weekly. Among them, they had exhibited a David Cochran swimming brant, circa 1920 from Blue Point, Long Island, that had come from the W.L. The dealer had a mob in his large booth at the start of the show looking into his extensive redware collection. He occasionally treasure hunts and is the fix-it man. “We had a very nice show,” Gerry said when asked in a follow-up call, noting sales in furniture, smalls and decoys. He also said that he did just as much business on the second day as he did the first. “It’s very consistent…When we have the opportunity to choose new dealers, we choose based on that criteria, as well as fit and style.”, “The key to these shows is that you don’t know what you’re going to find,” she continued. More likely than not, we’ll be able to take it off your hands for a good sum. Buying Without Boundaries At Fox Valley Antiques Show, After 2019 Hiatus, ADA/Deerfield Show Reprises Online & Sates Collectors, Vermont Antiques Week: New Normal Drives Antiques Shows Outdoors Into Autumn. He featured a vast inventory of both Southern and Northern stoneware, redware, early American glass and a Jacob or Jonas Weber miniature footed box, among a booth absolutely loaded with quality smalls, fine and folk still life paintings, a copper bannerette vane with the year 1857 on it and more. You don’t need to be an expert about the items you’re trying to sell to get a good deal. Living in Missouri, you may not be aware that you have a ton of help available for selling your gold, jewelry, and antiques. The Pilgrim chest was the only example of New England furniture that stayed in that region, according to Eaton, with the other five examples selling to buyers in Florida, North Carolina, Maryland and New Jersey. If you’re in the Manchester area or beyond, please give our services a try for yourself.
“We’re very much looking forward to 2020, and we thank all the people who came and said such nice things,” DiSaia said.
Gunselman sold a Buddy L railway express caged truck in black paint as well as two Chien wind-up toys from the 1930s, a merry-go-round and a rollercoaster. Also of note in the booth was a “Sacred Sheet,” a spiritual communication artwork conceived in the Era of Manifestation, a period between 1837 and the mid-1850s when the Shakers were able to make contact with the spiritual world. Please choose a different date. It snaked through the lobby here and continued outside. Another was a work from Wilbur H. Lansil (1855-1897), a Boston artist, featuring a calf. It’s the Midwest. “It was encouraging that we sold all the way from our very early European material, some of our best, to folk art and terrific American things,” said Grace Snyder. The dealers related that they had interest from people from California, Oklahoma, Texas and Canada. A media booth set up in the lobby captured collector interviews with the hashtag #WhyICollect, a campaign DiSaia launched that is meant to tell the story behind the collector, what draws these people to particular object and to explore the human component of these works from the people who come to own them. If you send us a relic from World War II, we will be able to tell you all about it.
The small work, 4-5/8 by 7-1/8 inches, featured a note in the bottom that read “Mountain [on the right] to be left out.” The final painting, which did not include that mountain, brought more than $1.4 million at Christie’s in 2015.
“The greatest potential for keeping an Americana market alive lies in New Hampshire,” they said. Will return. “He sometimes did them as tablets on top of mirrors, with Max Kuehne doing the frames… an interesting combination,” Ferris said. Among the works exhibited was a watercolor on silk memorial to Waters Chillson Esquire, dated 1806, from Wethersfield, Conn. Withington Auction Inc. Rare & Unusual * Dolls * Textiles * Miniatures, Gustave J.S. The waves of attendees that came through the doors of the Sullivan Arena on the campus of St Anselm College set a record gate for the show, clocking in at 650 collectors in the opening rush and growing to more than 900 throughout opening day August 7. The show pulled together 68 booths filled with dealers from around the United States for two days of selling August 7-8, regaling visitors with antiques and art that demonstrated, in DiSaia’s words, quality. The nicest people run the store.
Tillou, Eaton and plenty of others noted good sales on Thursday, the second day of the show. “It’s one of the few events where people come… and they’re not just going to be entertained by it, but they already have it in their mind that they’re going to buy – and that’s what sets it apart,” Hilary said. He shares a passion for antique treasures with wife, Sue. Russell said it was only the second all-original example known, and it was sold within the first hour of the show. The dealer featured a reverse painting on glass by Kent titled “Girl Tripping Downhill.” Ferris said Kent painted on glass between 1918 and 1920, producing under 30 works in the medium. beaten path almost turned around thinking we missed it. Among her ceramics, she featured notable works by Edwin and Mary Scheier, Bodil Manz, Susan Benzle, Angela Verdon and others, though New Hampshire showgoers were reportedly soft on them this year. For additional information, www.antiquesinmanchester.com or 860-908-0076. DiSaia reaffirmed this, mentioning that at least 130 people who had been at the opening returned the second day. Many of the larger items like gas pumps have been put in perfect condition. This place is way down a road off the. He also noted a national buyer base, saying, “It seemed like these shows, with the concentration of the others around in the week – its drawing from a more national crowd. Plus, we will be able to tell you its value and will be able to offer you a fair rate to take it off your hands. “I think we’ve become recognized as a show that you don’t want to miss,” show manager Karen DiSaia said. Robert Snyder and Judy Wilson, Lititz, Penn., featured a well-documented 46-inch barber pole in original paint.
The dealer also featured three mirrors that spanned Eighteenth Century style: a William and Mary pillowtop mirror, a transitional mirror and a 19-inch-high Queen Anne mirror. The dealers personally knew Doris Stauble, the antiques dealer and arrangement artist, and featured a nice example of her work in their booth, a wooden trencher overflowing with watermelon, cantaloupe, a pumpkin, blueberries and an apple core. Send us your antiques, relics, coins, gold, and anything else you think is valuable. From Camden, Ohio, dealer David Good was truly impressed with the merchandise on the show floor, “a top-notch show with high quality; I thought the show was beautiful,” he said.
The property is set up like a small old town. The Snyders sold a Seventeenth Century English needlework looking glass frame with provenance to Irwin Untermyer. Around 1878, the same time that study and painting were executed, Bradford became friends with United States Navy commander Charles De Long, and Kochan also featured a variety of artifacts from De Long’s ill-fated final journey along the Jeannette, including the final letter the commander ever sent his daughter. What hotels are near Shelton Lane Antiques? Among the vanes exhibited was a molded and sheet copper horse and sulky attributed to J. Howard & Company; a molded steer by the same company; an Arabian rearing horse and a horse and hoop, both attributed to A.L. I thought there was a lot of energy… the crowd was excellent – bigger than I remember it.”. Russell said, “It’s not really what sold; what’s interesting about the show is that it’s really an opportunity to see certain people once a year. This is the version of our website addressed to speakers of English in Canada. Elliott and Grace Snyder, South Egremont, Mass., had a productive two days, selling about two dozen works. Living in Missouri, you may not be aware that you have a ton of help available for selling your gold, jewelry, and antiques. I was really impressed with the quality of the antiques at Shelton Lane. Ferris related a range of sales from an early Nineteenth Century percussion rifle by a Virginia maker, a small silver votive, a decoupage box, a copy of Moby Dick illustrated by Rockwell Kent, photography, prints and more.