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The most-respected text on manufactured American silver has now
gone one step further. The authors have updated the text and added
photos to now include over 2400 marks illustrated with brief
histories and cross references of more than 1600 manufacturers. The
result is the most comprehensive reference source on the subject.
With more than 2300 marks illustrated and brief histories and
cross-references of more than 1600 manufacturers, this is the most
comprehensive reference source on the subject. To compile the
information presented here, the authors devoted much time
researching numerous sources. These include various editions of
Trademarks of the Jewelry & Kindred Trades, U.S. Patent Office
records, silver and jewelry catalogs of manufacturers, wholesalers
and retailers, records of companies still in business, and pieces
examined in antiques shops all over the country. This fifth edition
includes new trademarks, additional companies, and brings to date
the many changes in company ownership during the last decade.
First published in 1968, this classic work remains the basic
reference book for collectors and fanciers of American spoons. Now
offered in a new edition, it will be a welcome resource in your
library. Spoons themselves originated in prehistoric times, when
shells performed their function for the inhabitants of southern
Europe, but spoons as commemorative items began with the Niagra
Falls Suspension Bridge Spoon patented by Myron H. Kinsley in 1881.
Soon their popularity spread as ideal mementos for practically
every conceivable event, personage, or natural wonder. Ranging from
expensive sterling silver sets to fifteen cent mailorder spoons,
the variety of design, quality and interests reflected in this
richly illustrated book is truly impressive.
The identification and dating of American jewelry heretofore has
been difficult because few pieces bear standard markings and the
references have been diverse, hard to find, and incomplete. Using
old trade journals and their related directories as her primary
sources, the eminent silver historian Dorothy Rainwater has
exhaustively compiled here for the first time a comprehensive
reference of jewelry trademarks and manufacturers in alphabetical
order. She has also written a history of jewelry making in the
United States which explains the framework upon which this enormous
industry was built. The large scale manufacturers which began in
the 1840s form a major portion of this directory. it is surprising
to learn that only in 1961, after years of effort by the Jeweler's
Vigilance Committee and the backing of trade journals, did American
law require makers' marks on new jewelry. Therefore, this reference
should become an important sourcebook for every jeweler, collector,
antique jewelry dealer and manufacturing historian for the
foreseeable future.
In response to popular demand for this classic reference, this
enlarged and renewed edition will be even more valued by historians
and collectors. Long considered the "bible" by silverplate
collectors, it has continued to be the most comprehensive reference
in the silverplate world. This one volume contains a complete
history of silverplating materials, the refining process, and
design changes. Drawn from many sources, this lovely book has color
illustrations as well as over 500 line cuts and black and white
photographs. There is also a chapter on the care and restoration of
silverplate that contains much helpful advice for the collector.
This new edition features--for the first time--a price guide of
current values.
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