Good Economic News

Here's some good news on the antiquing/economy front, just published on the elegant 1st Dibs website. Their statistics show a higher sell-through rate this year than last.




Of course, it helps that they have some of the very nicest antiques for sale. Every time I surf over to the 1st Dibs site, I find truly dreamy items. Here are just a few that caught my eye recently. Click the pic to see the item on 1st Dibs...

  • Sold (I think it was about $3500)




  • $1600



  • $7500

I hope I'll find a treasure like one of these soon. Maybe at the Scott Antique Market at the Ohio State Fairgrounds in Columbus -- Friday is the show's season opener, and I always find something great there. Or at the Urbana (Ohio) Antique Show next weekend (Dec. 6&7).

Happy Thanksgiving! and Happy Antiquing!!!

American Glass Gallery

Here's an article from the Findlay Antique Bottle Club website...


"A Special Showing ... (showing-off!) of some special bottles"

Pix and text by Todd Knisely


Pattern Molded Club Bottles


The pattern molded club bottles show here were actually used as table bottles or table decanters. They are similar to the famous "Zanesville Swirl" bottles seen in many auction catalogs and bottle shows around the country. The difference is a "club" shaped bottle has noticeably straighter sides which eliminates the bulbous form seen in the "swirls or globs".


Although this type of bottle was popular in America from the 18th century, the ones pictured here are all from 1797-1830's period. They are from various glasshouses ranging from the three New Geneva glasshouses (the first being started by Albert Gallatin) in Pennsylvania near West Virginia, O'Hara & Craig in the Pittsburgh District, and branching westward into the Monongahela and Ohio Valley regions following the Ohio River all the way over to Moscow, Cincinnati, and Kentucky.


Although examples of these forms come in varying shades of amber and sapphire blue, they are almost always found in various shades of aqua and apple greens. The lightly colored ones (pictured) range in value from $250-800. You can find less expensive examples but the ones pictured are all better than average examples. Rib counts do vary but usually show up in 16, 18, & 24. These bottles are always pontiled and (rarely) are even found with iron pontils.


The club bottles pictured are from the collections of John Pastor, Jim Salzswimmer, Todd Knisley, and John Apple.




Ten Diamond Pocket Flasks:


Ten diamond pocket flasks (or chestnuts) are regarded as the best form and pattern of that era. They are attributed to Zanesville Ohio area glass works and were blown between 1810-30's. They come in a nice range of colors including aqua, amber, green, and yellow.


The most common colors are somewhat affordable to most collectors and can be found in the $600-1200 range. Examples in this lower price range typically have a lot of highpoint wear and weak impressions. A spectacular example in a common color can double it's value.


The examples pictured here are super colors and very good impressions. The dark aqua/teal flask in the middle exhibits an outstanding impression and glass clarity. All three are top shelf examples and it is very rare that you will find more than one in any one place. This gathering of three was for a collectors show-and-tell and was a rare event for items of this caliber. An outstanding display can be seen at the Philadelphia Museum of Art in Pennsylvania.


The diamond flasks pictured are from the collections of John Pastor, Jim Salzswimmer, and Jamie Houdeshell


My thanks to Todd for his article and pix.


I have posted this because I want to mention that one of the aforementioned flask collectors, John Pastor, has a new website, called American Glass Gallery, which will be running online auctions of early bottles and glass, running the gamut from figured (historical) flasks, free-blown glass, pattern molded bottles, bitters, medicines, mineral waters and sodas, beers, inks, poison bottles and demijohns.


His first online auction ended recently, and you can see some amazingly beautiful flasks and bottles in the catalog. A really nice feature is that you can see the realized prices. The website is layed out very professionally, and is clean and easy to navigate.


Here are a few gems AGG sold:

George Washington flask, $3750

Sunburst flask, $3750

Eagle flask, $2750

I can't wait to see what'll be in the Spring 2009 auction. Check out American Glass Gallery, and tell John that Marianne sent you!

Fruit Jars in the News



Recently, Tom Caniff, fellow Findlay Antique Bottle Club member, had an article in the Antique Trader. It's always great to see coverage of the bottle collecting hobby, especially fruit jars, which is Tom's interesting subject: "Collectible Fruit Jars Preserve The Past". It's an overview of the history of fruit/canning jars, with some photos.

An interesting info tidbit from the article:

  • Today’s collectible fruit jars were the indirect result of Napoleon’s desire to rule all of Europe – and possibly the world. Food for his armies was a problem as they moved farther from home, finding cattle hidden and crops burned before them. So Napoleon offered a prize of 12,000 francs for the development of a way to preserve foods that could be carried with the invading troops.

Congrats, Tom, on being published.

Auctiva to Offer non-eBay Stores

As always, Auctionbytes.com has the latest info. I just read their article about Auctiva's new development-- non-eBay stores, coming in Jan. 2009.

Sounds like a great way for an individual seller to set up their own web store, with all the important features -- especially a shopping cart.

Here's some info from Auctiva's website:

"In the past ... we best served sellers by helping them grow their sales on eBay. However, a lot has changed and eBay no longer offers the best opportunities for growth... now is the perfect time for sellers to make the leap to opening their own storefront."

  • Auctiva has launched a beta version of an e-commerce platform that will allow merchants to develop full-featured, independent Web stores.
  • Auctiva Commerce is in limited release as a test environment, allowing users to set up stores and conduct mock transactions to try out the extensive array of features—which, according to Auctiva Chief Executive Jeff Schlicht, "blow away the features offered through eBay Stores. It's like comparing a bicycle to a Ferrari."

Auctiva Commerce includes an online "wizard" tool that sellers can use to design their sites with features that include:

  1. a customizable merchant dashboard
  2. unlimited categories, subcategories, products, pages and links
  3. inventory controls
  4. daily and monthly sales reports
  5. a shopping cart
  6. a shipping calculator
  7. customizable tax codes
  8. e-mail marketing tools
  9. support for a wide variety of electronic and paper payment methods

This sounds great. I can't wait to see it. If anyone is in the beta test group, leave a comment and let us know what you think, please.

Here's the auctiva comment thread on their site: http://community.auctiva.com/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/5371029503/m/6841049503

All The World's A Stage


I grew up in a very theatrical home. My parents loved "The Theatre", and were very involved in the community theater wherever we lived. We had a huge collection of books of plays and on acting, piles of Samuel French scripts, and an amazing collection of records which Dad used in making the soundtracks for his awesome productions. I remember my neighbor friends always asking what was up with all the weird music playing at our house? As an adult, I have had the pleasure of seeing many great plays, especially at my favorite theatre, South Coast Repertory in Costa Mesa, CA.

After moving to Ohio, and becoming an antiques dealer, I discovered antique paper shows, and became enthralled with all the colorful lithographed postcards and labels I saw. My favorite paper show has always been the Columbus Postcard, Paper & Book Show.

I showed my treasures to my Mom, and she was immediately hooked, too, and in short order put together a large collection of theatrical items. and so, we come to the reason for today's post. I'm announcing Mom's new Ecrater shop:

  • " EPHEMERA offers theatrical memorabilia from the 1800s & early 1900s: postcards, cabinet cards, cigarette cards, tobacco silks, playbills, broadsides, flyers, souvenir programs, a splendid collection of stone-lithographed cigar box labels, and theatrical weeklies & monthlies that were popular back in the day.
  • Our background is liberally sprinkled with performers of every stripe—comedian, tragedian, vaudevillian, and all manner of warbler & terpsichorean—setting the stage for a grand collection of theatrical mementos.
  • But now the book's been written, space has been reduced, and our treasured ephemera is being offered to you who share our fondness for theatrical history. "

Here are some of my favorite items she has in her shop:




















Mom's adding new items every day. If you love the theater, check out her shop. Thanks!

EPHEMERA ~ Theatrical Collectibles & More

Findlay Bottle Show Report

Here's the show report I wrote for the Findlay Antique Bottle Club website:

2008 FAB-Club Show ~ A FAB-ulous time was had by all!

Findlay Bottle Show
Well, our October 2008 Show was another FAB-ulous event! Our 32nd one, in fact, and they get better every year. That's due to all the efforts of our hard-working and devoted club members. They all deserve a pat on the back, and a BIG THANKS! (Especially from the members, myself included, who couldn't be there during set up.)

As usual, we sold out of our 75 dealer tables. Luckily, the weather was nice enough to allow us to have 6 dealers set up outside.

Show Chairman Fred Curtis did another great job of wrangling it all together, from getting the contracts printed and mailed out, handling the table assignments, and trying to accommodate all the late dealer entries. Fred also coordinates the WONDERFUL club members during show set up, getting the tables arranged and covered, the chairs in place, the name tags dispersed. KUDOS, FRED!

One of the nicest things about our show is the dealer-only 1st day, which includes set-up, lots of visiting time, and our renowned FREE DEALER SUPPER. The club provides the meat dishes, and everyone else brings sides and desserts. Richard Coppler does a fine job of coordinating the kitchen, getting it all on the "groaning board" by 6pm. Thanks goes to Richard, and to everyone for their YUMMY contributions!

We had over 300 dealers and shoppers at our show this year. Everyone I talked to, dealers and shoppers alike, all said they had a great time. Many times I was told that our show is one of their favorites because of the friendly atmosphere, the time available on Saturday to really have a good visit with fellow dealer/collectors, as well as re-connecting each year with faithful Sunday show attendee/customers.

The club says "Thanks!" to all of the show attendees, be they dealers, club members, or Sunday's shoppers. You all make our great little show what it is -- FAB-ulous!

Winter Bottle Shows



Here are some upcoming bottle and fruit jar shows:

  • NOVEMBER 22 - TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA The Wabash Valley Antique Bottle & Pottery Club's 11th Annual Show (Sat. 9 AM - 2 PM, Free Adm.; Early bird/Set-up 7 AM, Early buyers Adm. $10; Bottle Auction Fri. 7 PM) at the Shadow Auction Barn, 1517 Maple Ave., Terre Haute, Indiana. INFO: NED PENNINGTON, 367 So. 22nd St., Terre Haute, IN 47803, PH: (812) 234-2214, E-mail: squarenail@verizon.net

  • NOVEMBER 23 - GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA The Southeast Bottle Club's 7th Annual Antique Bottle & Collectibles Show & Sale (9 AM - 3 PM, Dealer Set-up 7 - 9 AM, no Early Buyers) at the Greensboro Farmer's Curb Market, Greensboro, North Carolina. INFO: REGGIE LYNCH, PH: (704) 221-6489, Website: www.antiquebottles. com/greensboro

  • JANUARY 11 MUNCIE, INDIANA Midwest Antique Fruit Jar & Bottle Club Winter Show & Sale, (9 AM to 2 PM), at the Horizon Convention Center, Muncie, IN Info: DAVE RITTENHOUSE, 1008 S. CR. 900 W., Farmland, IN 47340 (765) 468-8091, email: rittjman@aol.com --- http://www.fruitjar.org/

  • FEBRUARY 21 - COLUMBUS, OHIO The Annual Columbus, Ohio Antique Bottle Show (Sat. 9 AM - 2:30 PM, Adm. $2; Early Adm. 7 AM, $20) at the Ohio State Fairgrounds, 17th Avenue (Exit off I-71), Columbus, Ohio. Scott Antique Show also same day at the fairgrounds. INFO: JOE HARDIN, 594 Layman Rd., New Vienna, OH 45159, PH: ( 937) 371-0264.
This certainly not a complete list, just some that are perhaps close enough for Ohio collectors to consider. Find many more shows listed on these Show Calendars:

Change and Competition Are Good For Biz

Today I had the pleasure of being telephone-interviewed by a reporter from SmartMoney.com. I enjoyed my conversation with Stacey Bradford, and I look forward to reading the article she writes, even if I wind up on the "cutting room floor". My thanks to David Steiner at auctionbytes.com for recommending me.

After our talk, I wrote a note to Stacey that I thought would make a good blog post, so here it is:

Thanks for taking the time to talk to me. Besides it being my business, I love to do anything that supports the hobby aspect of antiques collecting.

I realize that your focus is on rising eBay fees, and the effects on buyers. I am sure I rambled and got way off that track. Aside from the eBay's new "paypal-only/no checks" policy, I don't think buyers will really notice the changes as much as the sellers do.

Some buyers will stop buying on eBay, others will just sign up with Paypal. Paypal is actually super from a buyers perspective. It's free, and you generally get quicker shipping. As with any eBay transaction, you want to check out the seller's reputation via their feedback ratings page.

There will still be plenty of antiques and vintage treasures for collectors to find. EBay is still the Big Dog -- no other site compares for auction selling. I love auctions, because that is where the potential is for the higest prices. With the fixed price, you are putting a cap on any upward potential, and you don't get the benefit of auction fever driving the bids to heights you'd never have dreamed of pricing an item at.

There are more fixed price listings than ever before, because eBay drastically reduced the up-front fixed-price listing fees to .35 for 30 days (which is why it seems that the items are on forever without selling --they are!). But if it doesn't sell, you aren't out much $$. The final value fees are higher, but still not unbearable.

The eBay fees for sellers are still much less than having a B&M shop, and eBay gets more traffic, certainly, than I would in my teeny town of Harrod, Ohio. The average 10% commision fees (plus the booth rent) for an antiques mall booth are much more than eBay as well.

Buyers looking for new/current items just have more shopping sites to choose from now that eBay's in the fixed price game as well as Amazon, etc. Collectors have more sites to shop on too. Established online antique malls like http://www.rubylane.com/ ; http://www.tias.com/ ; as well as the newer sites, such as: http://www.ecrater.com/ ; http://us.ebid.net/ ; http://www.high-endauctions.com/ ; http://www.bonanzle.com/ . There are tons more small sites, specialty sites, and individual sellers with their own sites.

"Competition is the keen cutting edge of business, always shaving away at
costs" ~ Henry Ford


Even as we complain about the rising costs of doing business with ebay, the costs of doing business elsewhere, on the internet especially, are going down. Small scale individual sellers can have their own domain, set up websites, with shopping cart capability, and take credit cards through google checkout and/or paypal for very low costs.

And that's good for buyers, too, even though they have to slog through more listings. Thank heavens for search engines.

OK-- that was my note. I'll post more when I see the article.
---------------------------------------------------
Monday 11-17-08 -- here's the link to the Smart Money article:
http://www.smartmoney.com/Spending/Rip-offs/EBay-Allure-Going-Going-Gone/

Club Meetings are Fun



Yesterday I went to our bottle club meeting (the Findlay Antique bottle Club). It was a rainy cold day, and I kinda wanted to just stay home, but I'm glad I went. I haven't really been in the collecting mood lately. When I look at my usual searches on eBay I just don't seem to find anything that really speaks to me. And I haven't been in the mood to go out to auctions and antique malls (too busy on the computer).

But it was fun getting together with friends and fellow collectors, and seeing the goodies everyone brought in for show'n'tell. Seeing their eyes light up when they tell the story of where and why they bought the item, and learning about things that might have never caught your attention.

For example, I brought in my beautiful GIN-SENG beverage tray, which I had researched online, but couldn't find any info on the company or product. I found out a club member knows of a neat counter-top display piece that matches it. It's not much, but it's more info than I had, and gives me something to look for...




I know that collector clubs are having a difficult time of it lately. Memberships are dropping off, fewer members have to do more work if the club does a show, and show costs are going up, while attendance is down. One doesn't have to go to a club or a show to buy treasures, thanks to the internet. And the internet activity is 24/7/365.

But really, there's nothing like getting together with people, especially when they speak your particular brand of crazy-- er, I mean collecting. I can't recommend collector clubs enough. If you're not in a club yet, give it a try.

You can find clubs online, or ask around at a local show or mall. If there's not a club in your area, you can still enjoy being with fellow collectors at a show or auction. Don't not go just because you think there won't be anything in your category, or prices are too high. Part of collecting is getting out there, talking to other people, getting to see and touch treasures, and learning more about your category, or getting turned on to a new collecting subject.

If getting out is difficult for you, or there really isn't anything going on in your area, then turning to the internet is certainly better than nothing. You can find goodies to buy on many different websites. It's like a constant antique show. But there are also lots of online clubs, chat groups, forums, and conversation threads that you can read, and participate in, and have some interaction with fellow hobbyists. You might even make some new friends, and then you can meet them when you do attend a show.

Join a club today --- It will make collecting more fun for you.

The Indian Summer of the Administration


I am really enjoying the warm weather this week. Glad I didn't pack the sandals away when we had that cold weather late last month. Indian Summer is always a treat before the real winter comes on.

I was looking up the meaning of Indian Summer, and according to the:


  • American Heritage Dictionary
  • Indian Summer (noun) is:
  • A period of mild weather occurring in late autumn.
  • ALSO
  • A pleasant, tranquil, or flourishing period occurring near the end of something.
  • Example:
  • the Indian summer of the administration.

Their example seems fitting, what with today being VOTING DAY...

Here are a couple of Indian Maiden items from my Autumn Boutique in my Ms Dow Antiques Gift Shop







And here's some items on eBay with INDIAN SUMMER in the titles:

Related Posts with Thumbnails

Silver Necklaces with Vintage Art


See more silver plated necklaces with vintage designs from my Zazzle shop.

Please visit my online shop, Delightfully Vintage -- you'll find all kinds of antiques and vintage treasures from my many & varied collections, now for sale.

Here's My Delightfully Vintage Shoppe - newly listed items:

FinBotClub Blog - Read the Findlay Antique Bottle Club's blog

MS DOW ANTIQUES ~ ON EBAY NOW