|
Showing 1 - 10 of
10 matches in All Departments
The most common marks that appear on antique American ceramics in
today's markets are presented in alphabetical order. Pottery
factories from the 1840s to 1930s and beyond are included. Each
hand-drawn mark shown with the factory name, address and date
range.
222 different glass perfume bottles, 81 peg stoppers, and 91
various jars made 1910 to 1925 by Diamond Glass shown in clear
drawings. Includes glass mould numbers, sizes available, weight per
gross, and estimated prices without lables. Original labels on
bottles will bring considerably more.
Rookwood art pottery was made in Cincinnati, Ohio, from 1880 until
1967, producing forms that feature delicate colors fired at low
kiln temperatures. Pieces are eagerly sought by collectors today
and continue to influence contemporary art potters. In this guide
251 color and 166 black and white photographs show hundreds of
vases, plaques, bowls, bookends, lamps, tea tiles, and more, with
estimated price ranges to reflect the art market.
Antique toys and banks continue to fascinate people worldwide. Here
are cherished old toys shown, described, dated and evaluated for
today's market. Made of tin, cast iron and composition, they
include wind-ups, boats, trains, trucks, horse-drawn styles and
bell toys. 100 catalog pages have drawings, full descriptions and
original prices.
Both a cookbook/housekeeping guide and an 1877 catalog of enameled
iron cookware, this unusual book has practical, old fashioned food
recipes as well as images of 99 different antique kitchen vessels
and their value ranges today. With it, you can name, value and know
the intended use for the enameled iron kitchen and toilet goods you
find at antiques markets. Also, you can cook authentic meals (from
soup to dessert) and preserve fresh fruit. This is a basic
household guide your great-great grandmother may have used.
Old Griswold cast iron, aluminum and porcelain cookware is highly
collected today because it still does its primary job well and is
prolific at antiques markets. This guide presents the forms in many
of their variations with approximate values to reflect today's
markets. Lists of the pattern numbers and the duplicate numbers
help to identify items you may find.
The most common marks found on antique ceramics, 1600s to 1900s,
hand-drawn and with identification and dates used. These are the
marks that appear in today's market under ordinary conditions.
Includes America before 1890, Austria, Belgium, Bohemia, China,
England, France, Germany, Holland, Hungary, Italy, Japan, Portugal,
Russia, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland. Short entries give factory
histories with names of relevant people and explanations of date
markings.
Antique household items made from silver, both sterling and plated,
fill these pages in over 1300 engravings from period catalogs.
Detailed descriptions include pattern names and numbers, special
features, and values lists. Many collecitble souvenir spoons are
shown along with table items from ash trays to wine coolers. The
decorative tastes of a hundred years ago are represented in these
images.
Stand-alone kitchen cabinets made of wood were manufactured in the
United States about 1900-1940 by companies in the country's
mid-west area. Boon, Hoosier, Kitchen Maid, McDougall, Napamee,
Sellers and Wilson had catalogs and sales forces to promote their
cabinet styles. This book includes catalog pages and color photos
of existing models with detailed descriptions, dates, model numbers
and values at today's market. Readers will learn to identify these
cabinets and their variations.
Lanterns shown here were designed in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries to light primarily homes, barns, railroad sidings, and
maritime locations. The images shown were compiled from patent
drawings from 1871 and 1872 as well as sales catalogs dating from
1894 to 1922. Today, many people collect and own lanterns without
knowing their history. This book sheds light on their styles,
manufacturers, variations, and value ranges on today's market.
|
|