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In this issue, Han Solo’s blaster sells for $200K, vintage hats, valuing your sports cards and more.
Citation preview
AntiquingMarch 2014Southeastern
and Collecting Magazine
Do you Fancy Vintage Hats?
Large Guangxu famille rose porcelain
fish bowl
Angel Botello bronze sculpture, Nina Peinandose (3/6)
Chinese carved ivory Emperor and Empress
figures, 41”
14kt white gold mounted jadeite and diamond ring
Now Accepting Consignments for our
April 13th Decorative Arts Sale!
Fine Chinese Carvings & Works of ArtMarch 15th at 1pm Eastern
Fine Decorative Arts & Asian worksMarch 16th at 1pm Eastern
Bid In-House, Online or by Phone!www.EliteAuction.com
Location: 1034 Gateway Blvd. Ste. 106-108Boynton Beach, FL 33426
Phone: (561) 200-0893 • Toll Free: 800-991-3340Previews: Friday, March 14 11am-5pm
Saturday March 15 11am-1pm • Sunday 11-1Auction House & Gallery
Willem de Kooning oil on paper, titled Abstraction
Chinese made Duralumin HN-3 rocket strut
Chinese carved lavender jadeite Guanyin group
�When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
Big hat to accommodate lots of hair, c. 1904.
Silk velvet hat with feather trim, c. 1914.
Small brim hat with minimal trimming, c. 1925.
Continued on Page 4
The author, age 4, c. 1950s.
� When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
March 2014
Southeastern Antiquing and Collecting
PO Box 510, Acworth, GA 30101-0510 Phone: 770-974-6495 Toll Free: 1-888-388-7827
Fax: 770-975-7286 Toll Free Fax: 1-877-218-4139 Editorial Email: [email protected] Advertising Email: [email protected]
Published by McElreath Printing and Publishing Inc.
Jim McElreath, Publisher Mike McLeod, Editor
Advertising Sales & Editorial
Ken Hall ...................Advertising & Contributing Writer Mike McLeod ...........Advertising & Contributing Writer
Graphic Design & Art Direction Jessica Nelson ...........Graphic Designer & Art Director
Website
www.antiquingmagazine.com ©2014 by McElreath Printing and Publishing, Inc.,
Publishers of Southeastern Antiquing and Collecting. All rights reserved.
No portion of this publication may be reprinted or reproduced without express permission of the publisher.
This MonTh’s Cover sTory:
Vol.18 www.antiquingmagazine.com No.3
Hat Fancy: Collecting Vintage Hats by Sue Nightingale ................................. p. 1
Collecting Glass Canning Jars By Lori Verderame ............................... p.14
How to Value Your Old Sports Card/Memorabilia Collection By Michael Osacky ............................... p.28
DePArTMenTs
FeATures
Antique Shop and Mall Directory ..................................... 43 Auction Calendar ................................................................ 25 Civil War Collector ............................................................. 29 Classifieds............................................................................. 48 Dr. Lori ................................................................................ 14 Gavels & Paddles .................................................................. 9 Ken’s Korner ....................................................................... 12 Lew Larason .......................................................................... 6 Name This Famous Antique................................................ 38 Name This Famous Person ................................................. 16 News ................................................................................ 40-42 Robert Reed ......................................................................... 39 Show Calendar .................................................................... 18 What's Selling on eBay? ..................................................... 33
Have you seen a steeplecab train car?
SoutheAStern Antiquing And ColleCting MAgAzine
Page 13
Page 34
Sue Nightingale is the author of Decades of Hats: 1900s To The 1970s and the author of this month’s cover story. Take a trip through the history of hats with her as your guide. On the cover is a classic hat
from the 1921 Sears, Roebuck & Co. catalog featuring a demure blue sheer fabric wide brim with
floral and matching satin bow trim and pleated crown over a wire frame.
The Force was strong in the sale of Han Solo's blaster
www.antiquingmagazine.com
�When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
March 2014
southeastern Antiquing & Collecting Display Ad Directory
Also see shop and Mall Directory for other listings
ALABAMAAlexander City Longleaf Antique Mall .....................34Gardendale Gardendale Flea Mall & Antiques ....37Heflin Midway Sales ...................................36Leeds Bama Flea Mall & Antique Center ...37Montgomery Eastbrook Flea Mkt. .........................33 The Antique Store and More. ...........33Oneonta Nickels’ Place ...................................38Opelika Angels Antique & Flea Mall ............35Prattville Memories Flea An’tique Mall ..........38 Prattville Pickers ...............................34Valley Timeless Antiques .............................35Wetumpka Wetumpka Flea Market & Antiques .36
FLORIDABellaire Bluffs Collum Antiques .................................6Daytona Beach Shops of Daytona Beach ....................9DeLand Shops of DeLand ................................8Jacksonville Avonlea ...............................................9Leesburg Morning Glori Antique Mall ..............9Manatee County Shops of Manatee County ..................8Micanopy Smiley’s Antique Mall .......................6Punta Gorda Shops of Punta Gorda .........................4Sarasota Shops of Sarasota ...............................5St. Petersburg Shops of St. Petersburg.......................7
GEORGIAAlpharetta Queen of Hearts ...... Inside Back CoverAustell 4th Time Around ..............................14 Deja-Vous .........................................14
Bolingbroke Antiques at Bolingbroke ...................11 Buford Queen of Hearts ...... Inside Back CoverCanton Antique Village Mall ........................12Clarkesville Shops of Clarkesville ........................13Commerce Shops of Commerce ........................15 Conyers Ben's Antiques ..................................11Covington Church Street ....................................15Douglasville Ben's Antiques ..................................11 Duluth Ben's Antiques ..................................11Fayetteville Ben's Antiques ..................................11Gainsville Ben's Antiques ..................................11Greensboro Pinch of the Past ...............................16Griffin South of Atlanta Shops .....................16Jasper/Talking Rock Shops of North Georgia ....................12Lake Park Farmhouse Antiques .........................15Lawrenceville Memory Lane / Red Hat Lane ..........12Madison Pinch of the Past ...............................16Marietta Queen of Hearts ...... Inside Back CoverMcDonough Peachtree Antique Centre .................13Savannah Jere’s Antiques .................................17 Habersham Antique Mall .................17 Pinch of the Past ...............................16Senoia Shops of Senoia ..................................8
KENTUKCYGlasgow Robbin's Nest ....................................48Russellville McCormick Place .............................48
MISSISSIPPIBay St. Louis Antique Maison ................................38
North Carolina ICA Metrolina Show ........................23 Knight Southeastern Doll Show .........................................24Pennsylvania International Perfume Bottle Association .. Inside Back CoverSouth Carolina Artisans & Antiques at Habersham ........................................21 Knight Southeastern Doll Show .......24Tennessee Mile Long Yard Sale ........................19 Knight Southeastern Doll Show .......24 Smoky Mountain Pedal Car Show ..........................................19Texas Coles Antique Show ....................... Inside Back Cover LaBahia Antique Show .....................22 Lizzie's Attic .....................................22 The Original Round Top Show ........23Virginia All-Heisey Glass Show .....................22 Shenandoah/Fisherville ....................20
AUCTIONSBoynton Beach, FL Elite Decorative Arts. ........................Inside Front CoverAtlanta, GA Ahlers & Ogletree ..............Back Cover Commerce, GA Rockabilly Auction Co. ....................25 Jasper, GA Jeff Dobson & Assoc. Auctions ......26 Lakeland, GA Zenith ................................................26Fairfield, ME James Julia Auctions ..................25, 26 Castle Hayne, NC A. Kleins Auction .............................26
SUPPLIERS, INFO& SERVICES
ACNA ...................................................48Asheford Institute ..................................35Deborah Abernethy ...............................48Mark Thompson Coins .........................32 R.S. Goldberg Sterling Flatware ...........31 SE School of Auctioneering ..................26 Silver Queen ..........................................48 Table Settings Shopping Mall ...............48
NORTH CAROLINAFranklin Whistle Stop Antiques Mall ....... 39Sylva Old School Antique Mall ........... 39
SOUTH CAROLINAGreenwood Shops of Greenwood ........................28Aiken Shops of Aiken .................................28Charleston Terrace Oaks Antique Mall ..............32
TENNESSEECookeville, Mount Pleasant, Watertown Shops of Middle Tennessee ..............30Bolivar, Jackson Shops of West Tennessee .................31Kingsport Kingsport CVB .................................29Pigeon Forge Yesterdays Antiques & Collectibles .31South Pittsburg South Pittsburg Antiques ..................31
VIRGINIANorfolk A Touch of Mystery .........................40Strasburg Strasburg Emporium Antiques .........40Williamsburg Williamsburg Antique Mall ..............40
SHOWS & EVENTSAlabama Knight Southeastern Doll Show .......24Florida Deland Antiques Show .....................24 Flea Across Florida ...........................21 Pineapple Antique Show ..................20Georgia Braselton Antiques & Garden Festival .................................20 GA Jugfest & Old Knoxville Days .................................21 Lakewood 400 Antiques Market ......21 Scott’s Antique Market .....................18Louisiana Ponchatoula ......................................19Michigan Michigan Antique Festival ..................Inside Front Cover
� When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
�When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
Sarasota Shope_GRP_3.14_SEA
SarasotaSarasota just may be the ulti-
mate beach town, with its sun-kissed location on the Gulf of Mexico, more than 200 sunny days a year and an average year-round tem-perature of 71 degrees. But there are other reasons why Sarasota was named Best Small City to Live by Money Magazine. Sarasota County -- which includes Venice, Northport, Longboat and Siesta Keys -- is alive with culture, sports, affordable homes, a brisk job market and great schools.
Oh,anddidwementionit’sahaven for antique lovers? There are 44 shops, and all of them are conve-nient to one another. Clustered along streets with names like Coconut, Pineapple and Palm, these stores make Sarasota a must-visit destina-tion for antiquers just looking for thatnextgreat“find.”The Fruitville district is especially worth checking out.
The Shops Of
Sarasota’s Most Unique Antique MallSavantiques
SPARCC’sTreasure
Chest1426 Fruitville Rd.
Sarasota, FL 34236
941-953-7800Best buys on fine consignment fur-
niture, antiques & collectibles, plus a treasure chest of browser goodies!
Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10 am-4 pmSales support the Safe Place & Rape Crisis
Center (SPARCC).
SARASOTAARCHITECTURAL SALVAGE
1093 CENTRAL AVESarasota, Fl 34236
"Florida Retail federation's Florida Retailer of the Year"
Store hours: Mon. -Fri. 9-5Jesse White, Owner
(941) 362-0803www.sarasotasalvage.com
30Dealers•8,500sq.ft.Antiques•Collectibles113 Tamiami Trail
Osprey, Florida1 Block South of Spanish Point
Look for the orange and green buildings!
941-966-9800Hours:Mon.-Sat.10-5,Sun.11-5
WHY PAY MORE?
SHOP AT
RAYMOND’SSECOND HAND WORLD inc.
(941) 925-7253 5624 Swift Rd • Sarasota, FL 34231
FURNITURE & ANTIQUES BUY and SELL ESTATES
ONE OF SARASOTA'S LARGEST ~ 7800 sq. ft.
The Pineapple Antique Show: March 21-23 (Thurs. 5-8; Fri. 10-5:30; Sat. 10-4:30)Sarasota Municipal Auditorium, 801 N. Tamiami Trail, Sarasota Info: www.sarasotasunrise.com
� When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
Over 200 Shops
(352) 466-0707
HUGE!
www.smileysantiques.com
Open Daily 10-6
Voted Florida’s Finest...Larger Than a Football Field
Call or Visit us Today!
Over 200 Shops
ANTIQUE MALLMicanopy, Florida
• I-75, Exit 374• 8 Mi. S. of Gainesville, FL
• Clean Restrooms• Friendly Staff• RV & Bus Parking
ANTIQUE MALL
CIVIL WARGUNS, SWORDS
AND BOWIEKNIVES, MEDICAL,
NAUTICAL AND SCIENTIFIC
INSTRUMENTS,AMERICAN
FURNITURE,DECOYS, QUILTS
COLLUMANTIQUES
Located at580A Indian Rocks Rd.
Belleair BluffsFlorida 33770
(727) 581-6585or Eve. 442-9969E-mail: [email protected]
Collum Ants.10.2009_SEA
When buying antique furniture, it’s important to decide what you feel is an antique. How old does an item need to be for you to consider it truly antique? For some, as long as the piece is older than they are, it’s “vintage”. There are those who feel vintage is antique. Others use the 100-year criterion. This was established in the 1930s by Congress. At that time, anything 100 years old could be imported without incurring excise tax. It was fine in
the 1930s. One hundred years at that time meant an antique had been made before 1830. For me and many other serious antiques collectors and dealers, the cut-off date should be before 1850, preferably before 1830. However, what really matters is what you are comfortable with. It’s your money when you buy, and, you’ll be living with the item. After you decide what age period you like, next familiarize yourself with what the pieces at that time should look like. Learn the difference between hand- and machine-cut dovetails. Then you’ll have an idea of the age of a case piece with dovetailed drawers. Machine dovetails were being used by the mid- to late-1800s. Acquaint yourself with the marks certain tools make, especially power tools. Then remember when they
Fakes I’ve Met By Lew Larason
�When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
Shops of St. Petersburg...“The Jewel of Florida’s Gulf Coast”
•We buy and sell• Over 4,000 sq. ft.
• 35 of the best dealers2400 Dr. MLK St. No.
(9th Street No.)st. Petersburg, fl 33704
(727) 821-2206 • (727) 560-8568OPen 7 days 10-5
visit us on facebook!
andrea & friendsantIque Mall
MultI-dealer shOPWith wide variety and great reviews!
There's an old saying about St. Petersburg, Fla.; People who live there love it; businesses that located there stay; and visitors who go there to shop and play want to come back again and again. How true! St. Petersburg and Pinellas Coun-ty offer an unequaled environment for work and play. Wonderful weather and miles of sandy beaches make it a magnet for people worldwide.
St. Petersburg's two strongest selling points are sunshine and shopping. The former can be enjoyed virtually year-round; the latter comes in the form of malls, factory outlet stores, discount chains, specialty shops, membership warehouses, and —oh, yes— a cavalcade of wonderful antiques and collectibles stores. The advertisers on this page offer a taste of what we mean.
Getting to St. Petersburg isn't hard to do. The city's major thoroughfare is I-275, which runs north and south and connects to the Sunshine Skyway Bridge and Man-atee County (another mecca for shoppers on the antique trail). I-275 also connects with 1-4 going east to Orlando from Tampa and I-75 heading north. U.S. 19 is an important north-south link that runs the length of the county.
A visit to St. Petersburg will leave you wanting more, no matter how long you stay. And it's easy to fan out and explore. Tampa — a city with it's own identity, cultural pulse and antiques and collectibles shops—is right next door. And Orlando, with its many theme parks, is a short drive away. Don't you think it's time to visit, vacation and shop in St. Petersburg? It's truly the Jewel of Florida's Gulf Coast!
Jan 25/26Feb 22/23Mar 22/23Apr 26/27May 17/18June 21/22
sss
AuctionSchedule2014
July 19/20Aug 23/24Sept 20/21Oct 18/19Nov 15/16Dec 6/7
came into use. Also, be aware that country pieces might look older than urban-made items because the city furniture makers often had the latest new tools and equipment. Country-made items often look 20 years older than they actually are. This is when you look at hardware and see some designs that don’t quite work together. A country woodworker could have been trying to create something he had seen in the city but didn’t have the right tools or the correct details. He might have come up with a very strange combination. Always look for the latest design on an item in order to date it. Along with designs and tool marks, know your woods. This can save you money and mistakes. For instance, I recently saw a late 1800s English Windsor chair for sale in a co-op. But, the tag said, “American Windsor, made in Pennsylvania, dated 1915,” along with a rather high price. The dealer showing it had no other furniture in her booth. I don’t know where she had gotten the information that was written on the tag. First, the seat was the “usual” English Yew wood—here’s where knowing what woods ought to be used really pays off. The stretcher arrangement was typically English. It was a brace-back, bowback from about 1880-1890. On the underside of the seat was a series of numbers. I’m not sure how she came up with the 1915 date. I didn’t see those numbers. There were the remnants of a label on the underside. It wasn’t possible to read anything from it. However, the size and so on made me think of a shipping label, possibly when it was shipped from England. These chairs are very comfortable. I know several people who use them in their eat-in kitchens. This chair didn’t have arms, although many do. As long as you knew what this chair really was, it could have been a nice addition to a home full of country furniture. But it wasn’t what the tag indicated. That’s why you, as a buyer, need to know what you’re examining when antiquing.
I was asked to look at an Empire table that needed a little work. When I saw it, I felt bad for the owner. She was told it was a period Empire stand. Actually, it was from the mid-1900s, not the early 1800s. The owner had bought it at a co-op. She likes it for its design, color and size. But she thought she was buying an antique because she was told it was. This isn’t a person who is going to be collecting antiques. However, as she said, when she buys something, she wants to know the truth. As I explained to her, there’s a good chance the seller didn’t know what it was. She asked how to protect herself when buying furniture. I suggested that if she wanted antiques, she should hire someone who knows to advise her on buying trips. When she asked me how I knew it wasn’t an Empire period piece, I showed her several things. The shape of the top was oval. Although it was only about 36 inches long by 20 inches wide, there were two heavy pedestals. Attached to these were strange-looking “feet”. Even though many Empire pieces are rather bulky, the designs usually work together. This top looked like it had been put on the wrong base. I looked closely. The top and base had been made together. This should have been a red flag for her, only because it simply did not look right. The wood was maple, a wood I wouldn’t expect to see used for an Empire stand. The top was made from three pieces. If this had been a period stand, the top should have been one piece of wood, at most two. Another red flag was this stand was 24 inches high. This seemed too low for a stand, but too high for a coffee table. Anyway, there were no coffee tables during the Empire period, since that period in America was in the early 1800s up to about 1840 in some areas. This piece was sort of an Empire-style item. I removed the drawer to show her several things that “told” me it was a 20th century creation. The bottom was one-quarter inch plywood. The corner joints were modern machine-made,
� When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
not dovetails. Except for the plywood, all of the drawer wood was maple. If this had been a period drawer, the sides and back would have been made from an inexpensive wood such as pine or poplar. And, of course, the bottom would not have been plywood! She said she now knows about her stand. She just hopes she’ll look more closely the next time. I was asked to examine some things at a local auction house. One piece was listed as a child’s desk. It was cute and indeed looked like a child could use it as a desk. However, it was not as listed. Originally, it had been a small counter desk. The lid was hinged about three inches in from the rear. With a cross light, I could see hundreds of letters and numbers indented into the soft pine lid. There was a low gallery at the rear and a short piece of gallery on each side. The case had been built with a slant. It was a typical counter desk. At some point, a sawbuck-type base had been added. It was made from maple, while the desk itself was pine. The base was held together by modern nails and secured to the desk with modern screws. The corners of the desk body were joined together by hand cut dovetails, while the bottom was held in place with cut nails from the early 1800s. Also, the bottom showed lots of wear. This wouldn’t have happened if the desk originally had been built with a base. Someone had added the base. Now, it was being offered as a child’s desk. It didn’t take much to see what this really was. I’m surprised it was being offered at that auction house. Someone didn’t look very closely when he listed the items to be sold. In the past year, I’ve looked at four small, hanging corner cupboards. I’ve seen only one that was “right”. Recently, I examined another. It was being sold as a “small cherry corner cupboard, circa 1800.” This piece had been made from wood
that wasn’t even a tree in 1800, probably not even in 1900! I don’t know where some people get the dates of the items they want to sell. The wood in this small cupboard had no flaws. The back was plywood. The inside had been painted a soft light blue. The exterior was a very shiny “natural” cherry color. The wood was cherry, but everything had been stained, even the back. The turn knob used to keep the door closed showed no wear. I don’t know how old this piece truly was. However, it looked like it had been made very recently. When looking at any of the above items, one of the most important things is the details. But in my case, with over 50 years of looking at antique furniture, learning to know what you should see when you examine something is a big help. The more you know, the better off you should be when looking at antiques. Be careful. Sometimes, a little knowledge can get you in a lot of trouble. Never take anything for granted, and don’t assume anything. If you aren’t sure about what you’re looking for, get someone to help you. When buying, always get a detailed sales slip. Have all of the information written down on the slip. Then, if you find the information is wrong, you probably will have some recourse. However, it’s better to avoid pieces that aren’t “right”. So, look at all of the details, and either know what you’re looking for or get help. -------------------- Lew Larason is the author of: Buying Antique Furniture; Baskets – Baskets – Baskets: An Advisory for Collectors; and The Basket Collector’s Book.
�When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
Santa Claus carving, $875,000, Sotheby’s
A 1923 carving of Santa Claus by Samuel Robb sold for $875,000 at a sale of American folk art from the collection of Ralph Esmerian held Jan. 25 by Sotheby’s in New York City. Also, Ruth Whittier and Samuel Addison Shute’s Portrait of Jeremiah H. Emerson (made circa 1832) brought $665,000; The Carver Limner (circa 1835) made $521,000; a carved pine pheasant weather vane, probably made in Connecticut circa 1875, garnered
$449,000; and John and Caterina Bickel, by Jacob Maentel (circa 1815) brought $401,000. Prices include 20% bp. Continental document, $912,500, Keno Auctions A document titled, Letter From the Twelve United States Colonies, from the colonial delegates in the Continental Congress to the inhabitants of Great Britain, penned by Robert R. Livingston and printed in July 1775, sold for $912,500 at an auction held Jan. 26 by Keno
Our Old StuffAntique MAll
Twenty plus dealers in 8,000 sq. ft. of unique antiques and collectibles, including 50s and 60s mid-century
modern, furniture and loads of Florida art plus a courtyard full of patio stuff.Open 10-5, Closed SundayPlenty of parking on 10th Street
1005 Ridgewood Ave. • Holly Hill, FL386-238-7207
CarouselAntiques
386-255-11326,000 sq. ft. • Fine Antique Furniture
• Glassware • Primitives • Persian Rugs• Old Clocks • Watches • Depression Pieces
• Carnival Glass • Open Mon.-Sat. 9:30-6, Sun. 12-5
110 North Beach StreetDaytona Beach, Florida
BACHMAN’SAntiques • Used Furniture
• CollectiblesBuy • Sell • Trade
Consignments, Single Items or Complete Estates • Furniture Restoration
& Lamp Repair
2360 E. Moody Blvd.Bunnell, FL 32110
(4 miles west of I-95 on Rt. 100)
386-437-6206
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Located just East & North of DeLand, on the Beautiful Atlantic Ocean
JTHE SHOPS OF DAYTONA BEACH, BUNNELL & HOLLY HILL, FLOrIDA
Daytona Shops_Grp.01.10_SEA
Avonlea Ant Mall.BC.10.2009_SEA
The Region’s Largest and Busiest Antique Mall8101 Philips Highway • Jacksonville, FL 32256
904-636-8785www.avonleamall.com
Exit 341 at Baymeadows, west one mile to Philips - northeast corner of Philips and Baymeadows
Avonlea Antique Mall
Mall Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10-6, Sunday 12-6Visit Our Olde Florida Cafe for Lunch Mon.-Sat. 11:00-2:30
40,000 SQUARE FEET
Over 200 Dealers
Morning Glory.Qrt. 3.14_SEA
Over 60 Dealers!
Antique Mall
8000 sq. ft. ofNostalgic Comfort
WE BUY ONE ITEM OR ENTIRE ESTATESHours: Mon. - Sat. 10 am - 5:00 pm - Closed Sundays
www.morninggloryantiquemall.com
1111 So. 14th St., Hwy. 27 • Leesburg, FL
(352) 365-997720 min. from Mt. Dora; 25 min. from I-75; 45 min. from Orlando
Come In And Find Your Lucky Charm
Auctions in New York City. The letter, written before the United States officially broke away from England and formed its own country, was a final plea for peace by the Continental Congress to the people of Great Britain, to avoid a revolution. The price includes the buyer’s premium.
Recent Auction Results From Near & Far
Gavels & Paddles
By Ken Hall
�0 When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
Pair of Chinese carved tusks, $45,000, Ahlers & Ogletree A pair of exquisitely carved and detailed Chinese antique ivory tusk figures on fitted bases with scrolled feet sold as one lot for $45,000 at a multi-estate auction held Jan. 4-5 by Ahlers & Ogletree in Atlanta, Ga. Also, a dazzling ladies’ diamond necklace featuring two vibrant blue tanzanite stones went for $18,000; an antique hand-woven serapi rug, made circa 1900 (9 by 14 feet) realized $15,000; and a 1921 Steinway & Sons Music Room Model A baby grand piano in an ebonized satinwood case earned $12,000. Prices are hammer, exclusive of a buyer’s premium. Tiffany Studios table lamp, $118,500, James D. Julia A Tiffany Studios table lamp with an arrangement of seven dragonflies against a striated translucent green and blue background sold for $118,500 at a Lamp & Glass Auction held Nov. 20-21 by James D. Julia, Inc., in Fairfield, Me. Also, a Tiffany Nasturtium chandelier with flowers of green, amber and yellow confetti glass with shaded blue edge panes illuminated the room for $91,125; and a Duffner & Kimberly peony floor lamp with brilliant pink and red flowers went to a determined bidder for $26,070. Prices include 18.5% bp.
The Shops of Historic Senoia, GeorgiaSenoia, Georgia was honored to host the Southern Living Idea
House in 2010 and is excited to announce Senoia will be the site of the 2012 Southern Living Idea House beginning in June. Senoia is also the backdrop for over 25 feature films, including Fried Green Tomatoes and Driving Miss Daisy, as well as popular television series such as Drop Dead Diva and the second season of Walking Dead. Named for Princess Senoyah, mother of the Chief of the Creek Indian Nation (William McIntosh), Senoia is home to a historic district filled with over 110 historic homes and churches. Main Street features well established antique shops, two bed-and-breakfast inns and an eclectic selection of one-of-a-kind gift shops.
Conveniently located 35 miles south of Atlanta, Senoia features restaurants that offer casual to fine dining. Take I-85 South to exit #61(Fairburn/Peachtree City) and turn left onto Hwy 74. Stay on Hwy. 74 for about 18 miles, crossing over Hwy. 54, passing The Avenue shops on your right. Continue several miles on Hwy. 74, passing a Publix and a Chick-fil-A on your left. Turn right at the traffic light onto Rockaway Rd., which becomes Main Street as one comes upon the historic district. Shop, stay and dine in this unique historic town. To learn more about Senoia, become a fan on Facebook at “enjoy Senoia, Georgia”.
Senoia is conveniently located 35 miles south of Atlanta, not far off Exit 61 (Hwy. 74) off I-85
Gail's Antiques22 Main Street
Senoia, GA 30276GWTW Collectibles • China • Furniture
• Antique Dolls • Glassware • QuiltsHand-made clothes for American Girl dolls!
Open Mon.-Sat. 11-5:30, Sun. 1-5770-599-9155 • 770-378-6627
Carriage Hou#e Antique# & Cu#tom FramingAntiques, Collectibles & Custom Frames in an
Authentic Carriage House
7412 E. Hwy. 16 • Senoia, Georgia 30276
770-599-6321Hours: Fri. & Sat.10-5 • Sun.1-5
Monumental ‘Sputnik’ chandelier, $38,400, Palm Beach Modern Auctions A “Sputnik” chandelier with Murano spikes sold for $38,400 at an auction titled, Tiziani: Lagerfeld + Liz Archive, held Jan. 11 by Palm Beach Modern Auctions in West Palm Beach, Fla. Also, a Paul Evans faceted, chromed metal and mica Cityscape cabinet realized
$36,000; a metal and marble sculpture attributed to Ernest Trova hit $10,800; a signed Vladimir Kagan upholstery and chrome sofa garnered $9,000; and a 1968 photo of Elizabeth Taylor signed to Evan “Buddy” Richards (Tiziani) made $4,800. Prices include 20% bp.
Russian icon of Jesus, $19,520, Crescent City A circa-1910 Russian icon of Jesus by Khlebnikov, with enameled silver riza and the imperial double-headed eagle mark for Moscow, 5.25 by 4.25 inches, sold for $19,520 at an auction held Dec. 7-8 by Crescent City Auction Gallery in New Orleans, La. Also, three Mardi Gras Rex Ducal badges (1881, 1927, 1886) fetched $12,078; a French provincial
carved oak Louis XV-style “wedding” armoire, mid-19th century, made $4,270; and an American Gothic Revival carved oak half tester bed brought $6,100. Prices include 18.5% bp.
��When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
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Signed Beatles album, $175,000, RR Auction A Beatles signed Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band album, a U.K. Parlophone Records first issue mono pressing from 1967, signed by all four band members, sold for $175,000 in an auction held Jan. 15 by RR Auction in Amherst, N.H. Also, an original 8mm silent home movie of Lee Harvey Oswald and his family celebrating Thanksgiving on Nov. 22, 1962 fetched $43,320; a 1-page document signed by Emperor Hirohito of Japan in 1940 hit $32,530; and a George Washington-signed manuscript made $21,952. Prices include 20% bp. Peanuts daily strip, $26,450, Philip Weiss
An original Peanuts daily comic strip drawn by the late illustrator Charles Schulz and dated Oct. 21, 1966, showing Linus, Peppermint Patty and Snoopy (wearing flight goggles), with a baseball reference, sold for $26,450 at a multi-estate auction held Jan. 18 by Philip Weiss Auctions in Lynbrook, N.
Y. Also, a Lladro piece depicting Cinderella’s arrival at the ball, 25.5 by 45.5 inches, realized $14,950, and a sculpture and porcelain creation by cartoonist Carl Barks, both relating to Donald Duck, each hit $13,800. Prices included 15% bp. Russian officer’s helmet, $19,050, Mohawk Arms An Imperial Russian Garde du Corps officer’s helmet, made circa 1900-1917, sold for $17,050 in an internet and catalog Auction #70 that went online early November and ended Dec. 6-7 by Mohawk Arms (MilitaryRelics.com) in Bouckville, N.Y. Also, a Confederate-used M1860 Army Colt revolver with well-worn period holster hit the mark for $1,550; a circa 16th century German swept hilt sword rose to $1,700; and an informal pattern silver gravy ladle used by Adolf Hitler, with “AH” monogram, made $1,900. Prices include a sliding-scale buyer’s premium.
Continued on Page 36
�� When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
515 5
Hours: Mon. - Sat. 10-6Sunday 1-5
Great Treasure Hunting Fun!
The Antiques & Treasures Shop
Jewelry, Gifts, Pottery, Glassware, Collectibles, Primitives, Used Furniture, Nascar
706-253-7467Across from the Jasper Hospital
1227 B. East Church St. • Jasper, GA 30143
Hollyhocks of Talking Rock
19 Talonah St. • Talking Rock, GA 30175706-253-6000
Hours: Thurs.-Sat. 10-5 • Sun 12-5
• Antique Furniture • Glass, Pottery • Tools
• Collectibles • Children’s Items • Timberlake Throws
• Gourmet Foods • Decorative Accessories From Around the World
The Shoppes of North Georgia
Jasper • Talking Rock
N. Ga_Jasper_Group_09.12_SEA
Antiques, Collectibles, Art, Depression Glass, Goebel products, Rugs, Jewelry, and on and on. . .Ask for larger discounts on quantity purchases.
Open Monday – Saturday, 10 -5:30Memory Lane/Red Hat Lane 165 N. Perry Street, Lawrenceville, GATake Hwy. 136 to the Lawerenceville-Duluth exit and turn right. We’re across from the old courthouse in Historic Downtown Lawrenceville.
770-338-2165
2013 a busy year for Norman Rockwell This past year was a busy one for Norman Rockwell (1894-1978), the iconic artist whose heartwarming depictions of everyday American life graced the cover of The Saturday Evening Post more than 300 times. First came the news that Rockwell’s 1951 painting Saying Grace had sold at Sotheby’s for a staggering $46 million. It was the most ever paid for a work by the artist. Two other Rockwells also did well in the auction: The Gossips, done in 1948 ($8.45 million) and Walking to Church, from 1953 ($3.245 million). But another piece of news wasn’t so celebratory. In
November, a biography of Rockwell, written by Deborah Solomon and titled, American Mirror: The Life and Art of Norman Rockwell, was released. In the book, Solomon suggested that Rockwell was lonely, moody, depressed and a closeted homosexual. In a retaliatory statement, the Rockwell Family Agency said it had found at least 96 factual errors in the book. But the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, Mass. (the artist’s hometown) officially endorsed the book. USPS issues an ‘uninverted’ Jenny Probably the most famous stamp error in U.S. history is the1918 24-cent Curtiss Jenny airmail stamp that depicted an airplane flying upside down. One sheet of 100 stamps was sold to the public and examples are so rare and valuable that a single stamp sold in 2007 for $977,500. Around holiday season, the United States Postal Service, in an effort to draw more people into stamp collecting, randomly inserted 100 “un-inverted” Jenny stamp sheets among a reissue of 2.2 million inverted Jenny stamp sheets distributed nationwide. Unique to the $2 stamp issuance, all of the sheets were individually wrapped in sealed envelopes, to recreate the excitement of finding an inverted Jenny (and to avoid the possibility of discovering a corrected Jenny prior to purchase). So far, three of the sheets are known to have been sold. One was to Art Van Rijn, who walked into the Waverly (N.Y.) post office and asked to buy five sheets. The clerk, Betty Gable, suggested he buy up all they had – 45 sheets – and that’s what he did. The very last sheet in the pile was the prize.
��When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."Clarkesville Grp.12.11_SEA
HOUSE
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511 Grant StreetClarkesville, GA 30523
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100+ vendors in a 1/2 acre of a 7 acre, former textile mill - filled with:art • antiques • vintage furniture
books • old farm equipment & more.706-839-7500
583 Grant St. • Clarkesville, GAwww.oldclarkesvillemill.com
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PeachtreeAntiqueCentre"South Atlanta's
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jewelry, clothing and much more.
Also visit the adjacentflea market with over
400 dealers!Saturday and Sunday Only
HOURSMon.-Tues. 11-6Thurs.-Fri. 11-6
Sat. 9-6, Sun. 10-6Closed Wednesdays
All of Elvis’s acoustic guitars being rehabbed All of the acoustic guitars in Elvis Presley’s collection – around 20 instruments – are about to be repaired, restored and documented. The guitars are all at Graceland, in Memphis, and the man chosen for the rehab work is Scott Baxendale of Athens, Ga. Baxendale has experience maintaining Roy Acuff’s guitar collection and has converted many antique 1940s Harmony guitars for Nashville musicians. He was selected by Michael Lockwood, who has been married to Lisa Marie Presley, Elvis’s daughter, since 2006. How valuable is the collection? Consider this: Bob Dylan’s Newport Folk Festival sunburst Fender Stratocaster recently sold at auction for just under $1 million, and Baxendale thinks Elvis’s 1956 Gibson J200 – the one The King played in King Creole and other movies – could easily fetch ten times that amount. And that’s just one guitar. Baxendale will be doing all of the rehabbing on-site, at Graceland. A work station has been set up in a warehouse for that purpose. The work will take up a good bit of 2014.
Han Solo’s blaster gun brings $200,000
A battered prop blaster used in two of the original Star Wars movies – Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi – sold for $200,000 at an auction held by California-based Profiles in History. The pistol isn’t the one Harrison Ford used in A New Hope (no one knows where that gun even is). Rather, it’s the one from the scene where Han Solo shot at Darth Vader in Cloud City, only to have Vader deflect the blasts and grab the blaster from a distance. Profiles in History had hoped the prop would realize $300,000. The pistol (like many weapon props in the Star Wars films) was modeled after a World War II-era original. In this case, the blaster was based on a German Mauser C96 semi-automatic pistol (only without the shoulder stock). Profiles in History said it wasn’t sure, but it thought the gun might have been the blaster used (albeit briefly) by Mark Hamill, as Luke Skywalker, in the scene where he enters Cloud City. In 2005, some of the light saber props used in the earlier Star Wars films sold for a quite reasonable $60,000 each. Beanie Babies founder sentenced to probation Ty Warner, the 69-year-old founder of Beanie Babies, the collectible plush toys, has been sentenced in federal court to two years of probation and ordered to pay a civil penalty of almost $53.6
Continued on Page 32
�� When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
��When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
Farmhouse AntiquesMulti-Dealer Mall
With a wide variety of vintage pottery, antiquarian books& ephemera, fishing collectibles, estate jewelry & more.
Open Sunday-Saturday 10-6
Lake Park, Georgia, I-75, Exit 5E, Behind Hardee’s
229-559-0199
Farmhouse.12.2013_SEA
Lake Park, Georgia, I-75, Exit 5
With a wide variety of glass, furniture, vintage pottery, old books, fishing collectibles, estate jewelry & more.
Open 7 days, 10-6
Church Street Antique MarketA New Antique Market on the Historic Covington Square
Antique & Collectibles Market • Antiques & FurnishingsAlways Looking for Quality Dealers
Mon.-Thurs. 10-6, Fri. & Sat. 10-7
1115 Church St. • Covington, GA770-385-0452
email: [email protected]
Church St. Ants.8th.10.2009_SEA
�� When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
Architectural Antiques, Salvage, and Restoration. 25 years in
the business. We buy, sell, and consult on quality Antiques,
Hardware, Lighting, Ironwork, Glass, Mantles, Plumbing
Fixtures, Plaster, Statuary & Garden Pieces.
Stores in Savannah/ Greensboro/Madison, Georgia
Savannah (912) 232-55632603 Whitaker St.
Greensboro, GA (912) 656-4290
1270 North East St.
Madison, GA (912) 656-4290At Madison Market
Name This Famous Person: Carl Sandberg By Mike McLeod
Remember Carl Sandberg from English class at school? The poet Carl Sandberg was identified by: Julie Kimbrell of the Old School Antique Mall in Sylva, N.C.; Jim Pruett of Eastbrook Flea Market in Montgomery, Ala.; Teresa P. Bland; Scott and Carolyn Brown of Memories Flea An’Tique Mall in Prattville, Ala.; Ted Carlton of Utah; Maureen Ouellette; Gene Sorbo of St. Petersburg, Fla. (no relation to Kevin “Hercules” Sorbo); Randy Chase of The Antique Chasers. On Jan. 6, 1878 in Galesburg, Ill., Carl Sandberg could have been born with the name of Carl Johnson, but his emigrant Swedish parents, August and Clara Johnson, previously changed their names to Sandberg. August felt there were too many Johnsons in his railroading profession so he changed the family name to avoid confusion. Young Carl was only educated through the eighth grade before he had to leave school and go to work. He never graduated from college, although he attended, but he did receive three honorary degrees from colleges during his lifetime. In addition, he had several
schools named after him. Carl worked as a shoeshine boy, porter, milk wagon driver, bricklayer, hotel servant, coal heaver, hired hand on a wheat farm, ice harvester and a salesman of pictures for stereoscopes. He served briefly in the army in the Spanish-American War in Puerto Rico but never saw battle. He was also a hobo for a while, riding the rails and collecting stories and songs. Some of those folksongs ended up in his book, The American Songbag, published in 1927, and Sandberg performed them while playing the guitar or banjo at recitals or lectures. There is an eagle in me that wants to soar, and there is a hippopotamus in me that wants to wallow in the mud. Despite his formal 8th grade education, in his lifetime, Sandberg won three Pulitzer Prizes and a Grammy. Two of his Pulitzers were for poetry (The Complete Poems of Carl Sandburg and Corn Huskers), and the third was in 1940 for his four-volume book, Abraham Lincoln: The War Years. (This was preceded by his two-volume book, Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years.) The Grammy was awarded to him in 1959 for Best Performance of Spoken Word for reading Lincoln Portrait by Aaron Copland. Life is like an onion. You peel it off one layer at a time, and sometimes you weep. Due to his travels around the country and seeing the plight of the poor and laborers, Sandburg joined the Social Democratic Party, and he also wrote brochures, articles, and speeches for the International Workers World. He met his future wife Lilian Steichen at a Social Democratic Party office in 1907, and they later had three daughters together. A politician should have three hats. One for throwing into the ring, one for talking through, and one for pulling rabbits out of if elected. Carl Sandberg’s non-rhyming, meter-less, free-verse style of poetry was unsettling to many initially. Was it a story, or was it poetry? In the essay, “The Music of Poetry,” poet T.S. Eliot once wrote: “No verse is free for the man who
Carl Sandberg, 1955 (Photo: Library of Congress; Al Ravenna, World Telegram staff photographer.)
Fog The fog comes
on little cat feet.
It sits looking over harbor and city on silent haunches and then moves on.
��When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
Since 1976, Jere’s Antiques has catered to, and sold to, a wholesale trade of antiques dealers, designers and auction houses.We maintain our own warehouse in England and buy throughout all of
Britain and on the continent, in Belgium, Holland and France.We continue to import a 40-foot container of furniture every 10-12 days. We
inventory an incredible range of furniture, in all ages, styles and woods, in our33,000 square foot warehouse in Savannah.
All of our merchandise is truly priced for the wholesale trade. Whether you seek a period linen press or an Art Deco Vanity, we have it all. Looking for a
home or commercial bar? We have it all. Whether you deal in oak, mahogany, walnut or pine,
we have it all.There are very few importers left and even fewer still who can sell at a
true wholesale price. And not many maintain a large inventory of good, clean, saleable merchandise. There are very few that have a large turn-over of merchandise. There are very few that unload on a regular basis.
There is no one like Jere’s Antiques.
JERE’S ANTIQUES9 North Jefferson Street • Savannah, GA 31401
(912) 236-2815
Come see why we set the standard for importers of fine European furniture.www.jeresantiques.com
Fax: (912) 236-0274 • Email: [email protected]
There’sNO PLACE
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since1976
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wants to do a good job.” Even so, Carl Sandberg won over the hearts and minds of most people, and he is regarded as an American treasure. In 1945, he and his family moved to a farm in Flat Rock, N.C., so his wife could better raise her prize-winning milk goats. He created much of his literary legacy there, and he passed away on July 22, 1967 of natural causes.
-----------
Can you name this famous person?
If so, call 888-388-7827 or email [email protected] and win 15 seconds of fame in the next issue.
“I collect antiques. Why? Because they’re
beautiful.”
—Broderick Crawford
(1911-1986), star of Highway Patrol,
1955-1959.
�� When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
SCOTT ANTIQUE MARKETSAmerica’s Favorite Treasure Hunt!
For more information, visit us at: www.scottantiquemarkets.com Scott Antique Markets P.O. Box 60, Bremen, OH 43107 ~ Fax: 740.569.7595
TM
Ohio Expo Center - Columbus, OH
Thurs. 12:45pm-6pm, Fri. & Sat. 9am-6pm, Sun. 10am-4pm
3 miles East of Atlanta Airport, I-285 at Exit 55 (3650 & 3850 Jonesboro Rd.)
Sat. 9am-6pm, Sun. 10am-4pm
I-71 Exit 111 (17th Ave.) to Ohio Expo Center
Atlanta Expo Centers - Atlanta, GA
Monthly, Nov. thru March!
UPCOMING SHOWS:
UPCOMING SHOWS:
MAY 8, 9, 10 & 11JUNE 12, 13, 14 & 15
MAR 6, 7, 8 & 9APR 10, 11, 12 & 13
MARCH 22 & 23NOVEMBER 29 & 30
3,500 Booths!
MARCH Pioneer Park Days Feb. 26-Mar. 3 • Zolfo Springs, FL Hardee County’s 46th annual event, featuring an Antique Engine & Car Show, Flea Market, antique tractors and entertainment. Over 400 vendor spaces in the flea market area. Admission: $2 daily. To be held at Pioneer Park, corner of State Rd. 64 & U.S. Hwy. 17. Info: call Jane Long, 863-773-2161. Metrolina Expo Marketplace Feb. 27-Mar. 2 • Charlotte, NC The biggest shows in the Carolinas, held the first weekend of every month. Located at 7100 Statesville Rd. Free Wi-Fi, hi-tech security, free parking, great food, dog-friendly. Best booth prices in the Southeast. Call to reserve space: 704-714-7909. Info: www.ICAshows.com. Antiques, Collectibles & Crafts Extravaganza Feb. 28-Mar. 1 • Ormond Beach, FL Sponsored by Dunn’s Attic & Auction House, located at 136 W. Granada Blvd. Come and shop independent vendors selling a variety of unique treasures. Rain or shine, inside and outside the store! Hours: 9-6. Food from Rosie’s Cafe. Info: 386-673-0044, www.DunnsAttic.com. Antiques & Collectibles Show Feb. 28-Mar. 2 • Palmetto, FL The 49th annual show, at the Bradenton Area Convention Center in Palmetto. Sponsored by the Service Club of Manatee. Antique appraisals by the Kennedy Brothers, Saturday from 10-3. Over 50 dealers. Friday preview reception 5-9:30 p.m. Info: 941-747- 4855, www.ManateeServiceClub.com. Trade Days & Arts-Crafts Fair Feb. 28-Mar. 2 • Ponchatoula, LA Antiques and collectibles, fine arts and crafts, food, live music, etc. Toy Train Show on Saturday, March 1, 9-4. Come to Ponchatoula – America’s Antique City! Spend the day or the weekend browsing our antique, specialty shops and art galleries. Info: 800-617-4502, www.ponchatoulachamber.com. Antique Gun Show Mar. 1-2 • Plymouth Meeting, PA The Pennsylvania Antique Gun Collectors Association 75th annual event, at the Lulu Shrine Center, 5140 Butler Pike. Antique guns, powder horns, accouterments. 200 exhibitors. Admission $7 (kids under 18 free). Info: 610-767-0356, www.pagca.
com for table application, info. DC Big Flea Market Mar. 1-2 • Chantilly, VA The Mid-Atlantic’s largest antique event. An amazing treasure hunt, millions of decorative antiques and collectibles. Hours: Sat. 9-6, Sun. 11-5. Free parking. Admission: $8, shop all weekend; at the Dulles Expo Center, 4320 Chantilly Shopping Center. Info: www.damorepromotions.com or 757-961-3988.
Dunedin Antiques Fair Mar. 1 • Dunedin, FL Presented by the City of Dunedin Parks & Rec. Dept. From 8:30-3, at Edgewater Park, 51 Main St. Includes a Classic Car & Truck Show on Broadway Ave. & Main St. Car & truck vendors call Bill Coleman at 727-433-2300. Antique vendors wanted; call 727-298-3299.
Poor Jim's Almanac of Shows
��When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."Watertown.03.14_SEA
April 26th, 2014SPRING
MILE LONG YARD SALE!
Rain or shine!Sun-up ‘til ???
H 200+ Vendors HAntiques and Junk
For Information or Exhibition Application call:
615-237-1777www.watertowntn.com
Shop Til You Drop in Watertown, Tennessee
www.tennesseeantiquetrail.com
Smoky MountainAntique Toy
& Pedal Car Show!
May 14 -17, 2014 9 AM - 6 PM Daily
Free Admission & Parking
Country CasCades HotelPigeon Forge, Tenn.
1-800-523-3919Toys, Pedal Cars,
& Petrolia
Contact: Dennis [email protected]
828-231-7442smokymountainpedalcar
show.com
Scott Antique Markets Mar. 6-9 • Atlanta, GA Now open Thursday 12:45 pm-6 pm. At the Atlanta Expo Center, 3,300+ booths. Two buildings filled with exquisite antiques, collectibles and treasures from around the world. Located on Jonesboro Road, just off I-285 at Exit 55. Open: Thurs., 12:45-6; Fri. and Sat., 9-6; and Sun., 10-4. Folk to Fine Arts Festival & Expo Mar. 7-9 • Commerce, GA To be held at the Commerce Civic Center in downtown Commerce. Now accepting artist applications! Mar. 7: Meet the Artist Reception, 5-10 p.m. (admission $15, good for all 3 days). Mar. 8-9: Festival is open to the public, from 10-5 (admission $7, kids under 10 free). Info: www.Folk-Finearts.com. Milton’s Antique Show & Sale Mar. 7-9 • Milton, FL The 27th annual event at the Santa Rosa County Auditorium, 4530 Spike’s Way (Old Bagdad Hwy.). Quality exhibitors of silver, furniture, Depression glass, linens, primitives, jewelry, books, prints, more. Fri.-Sat., 10-5, Sun. 11-5. $4 admission. Info: 850-390-2604 or 850-390-1132. Sunshine City Antiques Show Mar. 7-9 St. Petersburg, FL The beautiful historic coliseum at 535 4th Ave. North fills with antiques for every interest; Sat. and Sun. appraisal clinic in the balcony. Show hours: Fri., 5-8; Sat. and Sun., 10-5. Admission: $7. Info: www.sunshinecityantiqueshow.com, 239-877-2830.
Stuart Antiques Show Mar. 8-9 • Stuart, FL The 29th year, at the Martin County Fairgrounds, 2616 SE Dixie Hwy. All inside, 100 dealers. Hours: Sat. 9-5, Sun. 10-4. Admission $6 both days. Held by Puchstein Promotions (Bill and Kay). Info: 941-697-7272, www.FloridaAntiqueShows.com. Antique Alley Antique Show & Sale Mar. 9 • Belleair Bluffs, FL Antique Alley’s semi-annual event (the other being in the fall). Hours: 9-4. Rain date: Sun., Mar. 16. Free parking, food and fun. Located at 580 No. Indian Rocks Rd. Get your space early! Call 727-581-6585 or Laura at [email protected]. Charleston Art & Antiques Forum March 12-16 • Charleston, SC Marking the 300th anniversary of the Georgian Period in art and design. This year’s keynote speaker is Tim Knox of the Fitzwilliam Museum in England. His talk is titled, “Architecture for Animals.” Held at the Old Courtroom at the Confederate Home & College. Info: www.charlestonantiquesforum.org. Florida Antiquarian Book Fair Mar. 14-16 • St. Petersburg, FL More than 100 national and international book dealers all in one place offering rare books, paper collectibles, Americana, Civil War, Floridiana, mysteries, trade catalogues, autographed editions, illustrated books, first editions, autographs and more. Hours: Fri. 5-9; Sat. 10-5; Sun. 11-4. Presented at The Coliseum, 535 Fourth Avenue N, St. Sponsored by Florida Antiquarian Booksellers Association, co-sponsored by WUSF
Poor Jim's Almanac of Shows
�0 When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
Radio and Bright House Networks. Info: [email protected], 727-234-7759, FloridaBooksellers.com. Admission: Fri. $10 (good all days), Sat./Sun. $6, kids under 12 and students with ID, free.
FISHERSVILLE ANTIQUES EXPO One of the Greatest Gatherings of Dealersand Collectors in the Mid-Atlantic. 300+ Exhibitors, Great Americana.Good Dealers, Good Antiques, Good Prices!Prime Location on I-64 & I-81 (2 Miles) Easy AccessI-64 (Exit 91) in the Valley of Virginia near Waynesboro,Staunton - Convenient to PA, MD, VA, WVA, TN, and NC.
SHENANDOAH VALLEY IN VIRGINIA Augusta Expoland
54th
Set-up Shoppers: Enter During Set-up Friday, Pay $10.00 Each. Set-Up starts at 9 A.M.
www.heritagepromotions.net
RESERVATION REQUEST
______Outdoor Space
______Indoor Space Expo Hall
______Indoor Space Sheepbarn
______Indoor Space New Barn
______Table Rental Indoor Only
______Electricity ($10.00; inside)
Send Check to: HERITAGE PROMOTIONS
Name_____________________________________________________Trading as _________________________________________________Street_____________________________________________________City ______________________________________________________State_______________________ Zip ___________________________Phone______________ Dealer Tax # ___________________________Type of Goods Sold____________________________________________________________________________________________________How many show cards? _______
VIRGINIA’S MOST EXCITING ANTIQUES EVENT!SATURDAYMAY ‘14
FRI.
99AM - 6PM
SAT.
108AM - 5PM
38th
SARASOTA MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM801 N. Tamiami Trail, Sarasota
For more information, go to www.sarasotasunrise.com
March 21, 22 & 23, 2014 Preview ReceptionMusic & Hors d’ oeuvresMarch 21 - Friday, 5 - 8 PMAdmission$15/person (ticket good entire show) Show DatesMarch 22 - Saturday, 10 AM - 5:30 PMMarch 23 - Sunday, 10 AM - 4:30 PMAdmission$6/person ($5 with this ad) SHOW & SALE
Over 40 Quality Dealers
ANTIQUES
SHOW DATES
Annual
A Rotary Club of Sarasota Sunrise Benefit for Local Charities.2013 Recipients included: Alta Vista Eagle Academy ~ Children First
Mothers Helping Mothers ~ Resurrection House ~ YMCA Schoolhouse Link
Lakewood 400 Antiques Mkt. Mar. 14-16 • Cumming GA More than 500 spaces. Located at 1321 Atlanta Hwy See our ad for directions. Hours: Fri. 9-5, Sat. 9-6, Sun. 10-5. Info: 770-889-3400 or www.lakewoodantiques.com. Info: 770-279-9899.
All-Heisey Glass Show Mar. 15-16 • Annandale, VA The National Capital Heisey Collector’s Club presents its 41st annual show and sale at the AVFD Ossian Hall at 7128 Columbia Turnpike with proceeds benefitting the study of Heisey glass. Info: www.natcapheisey.org. Admission: $7 or $6 with ad. Knight Southeastern Doll Shows March 15 • Rocky Mount, NC To be held at the Double Tree Gateway Centre in Rocky Mount. Info: 803-783-8049, or log on to www.knightshows.com. Spring Fling Garden Social Mar. 20-24 • Alpharetta, Buford, Marietta, GA Join us in welcoming spring! Demonstrations, drawings, refreshments and great spring merchandise. In Alpharetta at 670 N. Main, 678-297-7571; in Marietta at 2745 Sandy Plains Rd., 678-453-0600; in Buford at 4125 Ga. Hwy. 20, 678-714-0643. Follow us on Facebook. Info: queenofheartsantiques-interiors.com. Pineapple Antiques Show & Sale Mar. 21-23 • Sarasota, FL The 2014 show celebrates 38 years of giving to the Sarasota community with 40+ quality antique dealers featuring American, English and French antiques, fine art, fine jewelry, china, collectibles, crystal, elegant glassware, linens, porcelains, pottery, primitives, toys and more at the Sarasota Municipal Auditorium, 801 N. Tamiami Trail. Hours: Fri. 5-8, preview party, admission $15; Sat. 10-5:30, Sun. 10-4:30; admission $6; $1 discount with ad. Presented by a Rotary Club of Sarasota Sunrise. Info: www.sarasotasunrise.com.
11th Semi-AnnualBraselton Antique & Garden Festival
Countryside ants Braselton Ant & Garden _8th_03.14
April 25-27, 2014Downtown Braselton Park
Fri. 12-7, Sat. 9-6 & Sun 10-5Free Admission • Good Food & Fun • Booth Space Available
706-824-7204I-85 to Exit 129, East on Hwy. 53, follow the signs
��When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
www.thefleaacrossflorida.com • call 850-290-3766 for information.
April11-12, 2014
358 MILES - FROM JACKSONVILLE TO PENSACOLA
LAKEWOO D400
ANTIQUES MARKET3rd weekend Of every mOnth
Over 500 dealer spaces
march 14-16april 18-20 • may 16-18
• New 75,000 sq. ft. climate-controlled building• Located in the heart of Atlanta’s most affluent region on GA 400
• Full service restaurant • Inside Booths 8 x 10...$125• Permanent Inside Spaces $2 per sq. ft.
• Outside covered shed spaces 10 x 20...$90HOURS: Fri. 9-5; Sat. 9-6; Sun.10-5
fOr BOOkinG:ph: (770) 889-3400 • fax: (770) 889-2985Mailing Address: 1321 Atlanta Hwy., Cumming, GA 30040
www.lakewoodantiques.com
Directions: Take Ga. 400, exit 13 west, next right on Highway 9.Located @ 1321 Atlanta Highway, Cumming, GA 30040
Lakewood 400.Qrt.3.14_SEA
2nd Annual Artisans &Antiques at Habersham
Habersham Marketplace
(440) 503-8414
Deland Antiques Show March 22-23 • DeLand, FL The 32nd year. At the Volusia County Fairgrounds, 3150 E. New York Ave. Antiques, art, jewelry, collectibles, sterling silver, postcards, pottery, china, vintage clothing, furniture, more. Info: www.delandantiqueshow.com, [email protected]. Free parking. Great food. Vintage Glass, Antiques & Collectibles Sale Mar. 22-23 • Kenner, La. The 38th annual event sponsored by the Crescent City Depression Glass Society featuring Depression Era
glass, pottery and elegant glass, vintage jewelry, furniture, china, silverware, etc. Hours: Sat. 10-5 and Sun. 11-4. Held at the Pontchartrain Center. Info: www.crescentcityglass.org. A Silver Chest Promotions Mar. 27-29 • Myrtle Beach, SC To be held at the Greek Orthodox Church on 17 Bypass in Myrtle Beach. Contact: A Silver Chest, Pete Clapp, P.O. Box 291021, Tampa, FL 33687; 813-228-0038. Cole’s Antiques &
Collectibles Show Mar. 27-Apr. 5 • Warrenton, TX Shop for top-of-the-line antiques and collectibles: American primitives, country linens, flow blue, china, Victorian and American oak furniture, glassware, silver, toys, rare clocks, lamps, rugs and more; 200 dealers in 63,000 sq.ft. One of the most popular semi-annual shows in Texas. Free admission and free parking. Free wine
tasting Apr. 1, 5 pm-8 pm. Info: 281-961-5092 or www.colesantiqueshow.com. LaBahia Antique Show Mar. 28-Apr.56 • Burton, TX Our 21st annual show, offering a variety of 80+ select dealers from across the nation. Free admission. Porcelain restoration, free parking, home cooking food, including a great country breakfast. At LaBahia Hall on Hwy. 237. Info: 979-289-2684, info@GA Jug Fest_BC_03.14_SEA
Georgia JugFest & Old Knoxville DaysSaturday May 17th
Knoxville / Roberta, GACall 478-836-3825 for information.
Come join us in celebrating Georgia’s Folk Pottery Tradition.
For The Love Of MudLearn more at: www.georgiajugfestival.com
Knoxville is 15 miles west of Macon on Hwy. 80/ 15 miles west of Byron on Hwy. 42.
10thAnniversary
�� When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
labahiaantiques.com, or www.labahia.com. Knight Southeastern Doll Shows March 29 • Birmingham, AL To be held at the Trussville Civic Center in Birmingham. Info: 803-783-8049, or log on to www.knightshows.com. APRIL Metrolina Expo Marketplace April 2-6 • Charlotte, NC The biggest shows in the Carolinas, held the first weekend of every month.
La Bahia antique Show & SaLe March 28 - April 5 • 8 am
La Bahia haLL • Burton, texaS • 80+ Dealerswww.labahiaantiques.com
Country Cooking all day • Free Admission • ATM • Fall Show: Sept. 26 - Oct. 4, 2014
La Bahia Ants_3.14_SEA
TX 237 290 West
290 West
La Bahia Hall
LaGrange
WarrentonRound Top
Burton Brenham
Houston
Austin•
••
•
••
•
★290W/TX237
290W
PorcelainRestoration At The Show
21st
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Located at 7100 Statesville Road in Charlotte. Free Wi-Fi, high-tech security, free parking, great food, dog-friendly. Best booth prices in the Southeast. Call to reserve space: 704-714-7909. Info: www.ICAshows.com. Original Round Top Antiques Fair Apr. 2-5 • Round Top, TX Celebrating its 46th year with an irresistible array of very early Americana, Texas primitives, Continental furniture and accessories. Info: 512-237-4747 or www.RoundTopTexasAntiques.com.
Folk to Fine Arts Festival & Expo Apr. 10-13 • Commerce, GA To be held at the Commerce Civic Center in downtown Commerce. Now accepting artist applications! Mar. 7: Meet the Artist Reception, 5-10 p.m. (admission $15, good for all 3 days). Mar. 8-9: Festival is open to the public, from 10-5 (admission $7, kids under 10 free). Info: www.Folk-Finearts.com. Scott Antique Markets Apr. 10-13 • Atlanta, GA Now open Thursday 12:45
pm-6 pm. At the Atlanta Expo Center, 3,300+ booths. Two buildings filled with exquisite antiques, collectibles and treasures from around the world. Located on Jonesboro Road, just off I-285 at Exit 55. Open: Thurs., 12:45-6; Fri. and Sat., 9-6; and Sun., 10-4. Flea Across Florida April 11-14 • Florida A massive yard sale and flea market extending from Jacksonville to Pensacola, sponsored by the Live Oak Partnership. Info: 850-290-3766, www.thefleaacrossflorida.com. Ponchatoula Strawberry Festival April 11-13 • Ponchatoula, LA Come to Ponchatoula – America’s Antique City! Spend the day or the weekend browsing our antique, specialty shops and art galleries. Info: 800-617-4502, www.ponchatoulachamber.com. Artisans & Antiques at Habersham April 12 • Beaufort, SC Antiques, pottery, linens, vintage, artists, jewelry, furniture, folk art, nautical, baskets, clothing, silver, honey, flowers, bakery and more, all at Habersham Marketplace, 7 Market Street in Beaufort. Hours: 10-4. Free admission. Info: 440-503-8414, www.ArtisansandAntiquesSC.com. Knight Southeastern Doll Shows April 12 • Santee, SC To be held at the Holiday Inn in Santee. Info: 803-783-8049, or log on to www.knightshows.com. Deja-Vous Outside Sale April 15 • Austell, GA To be held at Deja-Vous, Deja-Vous II and Deja-Vous III, all at 2785 Jefferson Street in Austell, the biggest little city in all of Georgia and the friendliest, too. Hours: 10-4. Call Laura Lee for free set-up, at 770-944-3033. Lakewood 400 Antiques Mkt. Apr. 18-20 • Cumming GA More than 500 spaces. Located at 1321 Atlanta Hwy See our ad for directions. Hours: Fri. 9-5, Sat. 9-6, Sun. 10-5. Info: 770-889-3400 or www.lakewoodantiques.com. Info: 770-279-9899. 11th Semi-Annual Braselton Antique & Garden Festival Apr. 25-27 • Braselton, GA 100+ dealers set up in downtown Braselton selling their best antiques, collectibles, local artwork, outdoor
��When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
gardening, ironworks, statuaries, primitives, advertising, pottery, wood working, folk art, jewelry, glassware, textiles, rustics, re-purposed/up-cycled pieces, turn of the century furniture and more. Enjoy the festival then visit A Flea Antique, Braselton Antique Mall, Countryside Antiques, and Braselton Gallery while you’re downtown. Rain or shine; Fri. 12-7, Sat. 9-6, Sun. 10-5. Info: 706-824-7204. Antique Street Fair Apr. 26 • Mullica Hill, NJ Over 40 Mullica Hill Merchants along with antique and vintage vendors from the Tri State will be hosting their Sixth Annual Antiques Street Fair. Appraisals noon-3; bring two items or pictures. Food-Fun-Treasures. Info: 856-478-6556 or [email protected]. Located on the Main Street in Historic Mullica Hill Village. Hours: 10-5. Mile Long Yard Sale April 26 •Watertown, TN Over 200 vendors, selling everything from fine antiques to junk. Shop ‘til you drop, rain or shine. From sun-up to whenever, come to Historic Watertown. For an exhibition application, call 615-237-1777 or logon
�� When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
to www.watertowntn.com or www.tennesseeantiquetrail.com. MAY International Perfume Bottle Association May 1-4 • Pittsburgh, PA The 26th annual convention, to be held at the Wyndham Grand Pittsburgh Downtown. The Perfume Bottle Show & Sale is May 3-4; the Perfume Bottle Auction is May 3; and the Luncheon & Keynote Speaker ($65 per person) is May 3. Info: [email protected], www.PerfumeBottles.org.
rd
NEW! 2 DAYS ONLYSaturday 9-5Sunday 10-4
Admission $6 Each Day
(904) 755-2586
A Pleasant Cove, Inc., Box 321957, Jacksonville, FL 32235
March 22-23, 2014
Metrolina Expo Marketplace May 1-4 • Charlotte, NC The biggest shows in the Carolinas, held the first weekend of every month. Located at 7100 Statesville Road in Charlotte. Free Wi-Fi, high-tech security, free parking, great food, dog-friendly. Best booth prices in the Southeast. Call to reserve space: 704-714-7909. Info: www.ICAshows.com. DC Big Flea Market May 3-4 • Chantilly, VA The Mid-Atlantic’s largest antique event. An amazing treasure hunt, millions of decorative antiques and collectibles. Hours: Sat. 9-6, Sun. 11-5. Free parking. Admission: $8, shop all weekend;
at the Dulles Expo Center, 4320 Chantilly Shopping Center. Info: www.damorepromotions.com or 757-961-3988. Michigan Antique Festivals May 3-4 • Davisburg, MI Held at Springfield Oaks County Park, 12451 Andersonville Rd. Michigan’s largest antique and vintage market. Home décor and eclectic furniture, jewelry, Americana, primitives, shabby chic, classic car show. Admission: $6 per person. Info: 989-687-9001, www.MiAntiqueFestival.com. Michigan Antique Festivals May 31-June 1 • Midland, MI Held at the Midland County Fairgrounds, at 6905 Eastman Ave. Michigan’s largest antique and vintage market. Home décor and eclectic furniture, jewelry, Americana, primitives, shabby chic, classic car show. Admission: $6 per person. Info: 989-687-9001, www.MiAntiqueFestival.com.
For complete show listings for the next months, visit www.antiquingmagazine.
com; click on “Poor Jim’s Show & Auction Almanac.”
��When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
You have a choice when it comes to quality auctioneers. Our sterling reputation for honest and fair dealing sets us apart and you can rest assured we will do everything we say we’re going to do. No one offers more competitive terms or will get you a greater net return. And
in addition to top shelf presentation of your consigned treasures, Julia’s features one of the most expansive marketing programs available including some of the finest catalogs in the industry. For nearly 45 years, Julia’s has been at the forefront of the auction world, regularly handling quality estates and collections with tremendous success. Julia’s recent Toy, Doll & Advertising auction showed strong results in nearly every category. The auction boasted a stellar offering of fresh merchandise that ranged from early American tin to clockwork automotive toys, fine French & German dolls, antique advertising, salesman samples, patent models, coin-operated machinery, music machines, and much more. We are now accepting quality consignments for our Spring Toy, Doll & Advertising auction. Whether you have one item or an entire collection, please contact us today for a free, no-obligation consultation. Below is just a small sample of items already consigned to this exciting auction.
Come see our representatives at the following shows:
Gaithersburg: Mar. 1-2Atlantic City: Mar. 8-9Indy Ad Show: Mar. 14-15Chicago-Coin-Op: Apr. 4-6Chicago-Toy: Apr. 26-27
Contact Andrew Truman or Julie Killam Tel: (207) 453-7125 Email: [email protected] | Consultants: Jay Lowe, Rick Saxman, Dorothy McGonagleFairfield, Maine | Woburn, Massachusetts | www.jamesdjulia.com | Lic#: ME: AR83 / MA: AU1406 / NH: 2511
Consignments WantedImportant Advertising, Toy & Doll Auction - June 2014
Schonner “Aviso Greif ” steamer Outstanding Marklin “Priscilla” live steam ship
DeposeTete Jumeau automaton
17-1/2” Steiner bebe
Salesman sample Mosler safe w/ carrying case
Scarce cast iron beehive bankRare Kyser & Rex Roller Skating bank
20” 1920s Steiff Happy Teddy Bear (Chuck & Cathy Steffes Coll.)
Exceedingly rare and important 12” Steiff Titanic mourning bear (Chuck & Cathy Steffes Coll.)
16” 1904 Steiff “Rod” bear (Chuck & Cathy Steffes Coll.)
Rare clockwork see-saw toy
Early American tin carousel toy Ives clockwork “Carrie” rowboat
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MARCH Richard D. Hatch & Assoc. Feb. 28-Mar. 1 • Flat Rock, NC A superb two-day antique auction featuring over 1,500 lots, to include a lifetime amberina collection, fine estate jewelry, Oriental rugs, an outstanding Oriental collection, a Civil War collection and much more. Located at 913 Upward Road in Flat Rock. Info: 828-696-3440, www.richardhatchauctions.com. A Kleins Auction, LLC Every other Friday • Castle Hayne, NC Auctions every other Friday evening starting at 6:30 p.m. Donna Klein, Auctioneer (NCAL #8190). Info: 910-675-8450, [email protected], www.KleinsAuction.com. Rockabilly Auctions March 8 • Commerce, GA Auctions every 2nd and 4th Saturday of the month, at 409 Pottery Factory Drive in Commerce, just north of Atlanta. Info: 770-652-8075, [email protected], www.RockabillyAuction.com.
Zenith Auctions March 8 • Lakeland, GA Antiques and collectibles. Auction starts at 6 p.m. at 30 Murray Blvd. Info: 229-482-2116. Visit www.zenithauctions.com or auctionzip.com, ID #4282, for more information and photos. Antique and collectible auctions the second Saturday of every month at 6 pm. James D. Julia Auctions March 10-12 • Fairfield, ME A plethora of spectacular firearms with extraordinary appeal for all collectors, including: a pistol made for Napoleon’s brother; the William Gerber Family Collection of impeccable Colts; Dr.
Poor Jim's Almanac of Auctions
�� When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
Leff collection of rare Colts; the iconic Norm Flayderman collection; and the world-famous Dr. Sturgess Collection (of Zurich, Switzerland). Lavish color catalogs: $39. For more information, contact: Wes Dillon or Josh Loewensteiner, [email protected], 207-453-7125 or www.jamesdjulia.com. Ahlers & Ogletree March 15-16 • Atlanta, GA An outstanding estates auction, featuring the Walter Glenn Collection of Mid-Century Modern, Asian antiques, furniture (French, English, American), fine art, Oriental rugs, jewelry, lamps, lighting, more. At 715 Miami Circle, Ste. 210, in Atlanta, at 11 a.m. Info: 404-869-2478, www.AandOauctions.com. Elite Decorative Arts March 15-16 • Boynton Beach, FL The March 15 session will feature fine Chinese carvings and
works of art. The March 16 session will boast fine decorative arts and Asian works. At the Quantum Town Center, 1034 Gateway Blvd., Ste. 106-108. Starts 1 p.m. both days. Info: 561-200-0893, www.EliteAuction.com. Burchard Galleries March 22-23 • St. Petersburg, FL Florida’s foremost estate auction sale room, with quality auctions held each month throughout the year. Burchard Galleries buys, sells, auctions and appraises antiques and fine art. Located at 2528 30th Ave. North in St. Petersburg. Info: 727-821-1167, www.burchardgalleries.com.
Sirkin collection of rare Kentucky rifles and high-art European arms; the Fank Sujansky collection of Kentucky arms and pistols; the extraordinary Robert H. Haskell III estate collection of Imperial military helmets and rare firearms; the Michael
Every 4th Saturdayat 5 pm
700+ lots of Antique Furniture, Glassware, Smalls & So Much More!
796 Canton Rd. (Old Hwy. 5) • Jasper, GA770-735-7653 • www.jeffdobson.com
I-575, exit onto GA372 then left, 2.5 mi. to our 10,000 sq. ft. building.10% BP, cash, check, major credit cards. GAL#2290
Jeff Dobson & Associates Auction
Jeff Dobson.8th.10.2009_SEA
SE.Schoolofauction.eighth_bc.3.14_SEA
SOUTHEASTERN SCHOOL OF AUCTIONEERING“A Professional Auctioneering School of Distinction”•Fourexciting,motivationaltermsper year–taughtbytheexperts!•Dynamicauctioneer trainingatitsbest!•Approvedinmoststates!
1-800-689-5654 www.SSAuctioneering.info
Email: [email protected] Eastview Rd. • Pelzer, SC 29669
2014AuctionClasses:May3-10(GA Students May 1-10)
Aug.2-9(GA students July 31-Aug 9)Nov.1-8(GA Students Oct 30-Nov8)
Now Accepting Consignments Lamp & Glass Auction - June 2014
Tiffany Studios Dragonfly Table Lamp(Est: $70,000 - $90,000)
Sold for $118,500
Mt. Washington Pink Lava Glass Toothpick(Est: $1,000 - $1,500)
Sold for $10,072Contact Mike Fredericks or Julie Killam Email: [email protected]
Tel: (207) 453-7125 | www.jamesdjulia.com | Fairfield, ME Woburn, MA Lic#: ME: AR83 | MA: AU1406 | NH: 2511
The November 2013 Rare Glass and Lamp auction proved to be another resounding success at $2.4 Million in sales, with positive results across many categories. With strong interest and positive results, we hope to continue the momentum into the June 2014 auction. If you have a single item or an entire collection, we encourage you to contact us today!
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aZenith Auction& Realty
30 Murray Blvd., Lakeland, GA229-482-2116
www.zenithauctions.comAuction Zip ID #4282
Donald Patten, CAI, GAL #1294
Antiques & Collectibles
March 8 at 6 pmat 30 Murray Blvd.,
Lakeland, GA2nd Sat. of every month
Estate SaleMarch 29 at 10 am
Valdosta, GACall for details. Nice early
furniture, real estate & contents of house to be sold
Complete Details on Auctionzip.com #4282
��When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
A two-day auction featuring an impressive single-owner collection of Mid-Century Modern, plus wonderful Asian antiques, fine art from names such as Louis Icart and Andy Warhol, many pieces of highly collectible Frankart and even a woolly mammoth tusk will be held March 15th-16th by Ahlers & Ogletree, at 715 Miami Circle (Suite 210) in Atlanta, Ga. The March 15 session will focus primarily on Mid-Century Modern, highlighted by the lifetime personal collection of Walter Glenn. Pieces will include chairs made for Herman Miller by Charles and Ray Eames and a signed, oval glass-top cocktail table with steel brass and frame by Tommy Anton Parzinger (1903-1981). The March 16 session will feature traditional antiques. The woolly mammoth ivory tusk, just recently consigned, is a six-foot-long complete example from Siberia that is expected to realize $15,000-$20,000. Other items in the sale will
include: a large collection of vintage toy robots (prized by collectors); a fine selection of vintage chrome and bronze automotive hood ornaments and car mascots; French, English and American furniture items; and Chinese and other Asian porcelains, including vases, teapots and ginger jars. For those unable to attend live, online bidding will be facilitated by LiveAuctioneers.com and Invaluable.com (formerly Artfact.com). Start times will be 11 a.m. (EST) both auction days. Previews will be held Wednesday-Friday (March 12-14), with a wine and cheese party planned for Thursday, March 13, from 5-9 p.m. Previews may also be scheduled by appointment for those who can’t attend the regular previews. To make an appointment, call 404-869-2478. To learn more about Ahlers & Ogletree and the upcoming March 15-16 auction, please logon to www.AandOauctions.com.
Rockabilly Auctions March 22 • Commerce, GA Auctions every 2nd and 4th Saturday of the month, at 409 Pottery Factory Drive in Commerce, just north of Atlanta. Info: 770-652-8075, [email protected], www.RockabillyAuction.com. Zenith Auctions March 29 • Valdosta, GA Nice early furniture, contents of house and real estate will be sold. Auction starts at 10 a.m. Call 229-482-2116 for details. Visit www.zenithauctions.com or auctionzip.com, ID #4282, for more information and photos. MAY Southeastern School of Auctioneering May 3-10 • Pelzer, SC Dynamic auctioneer training at its best. Approved in most states. Four exciting, motivational terms per year taught by experts. Join our next session. (Georgia students attend May 1-10.) Info: 800-689-5654, www.SSAuctioneering.info or [email protected]. JUNE James D. Julia Lamp Auction June 2014 • Fairfield, ME Consignments wanted for Rare Lamp and Glass Auction, June 2014. The November 2013 Rare Glass and Lamp auction proved to be another resounding success at $2.4 million in sales. If you have a single item or an entire collection, contact us today! Mike Fredericks or Julie Killam at [email protected], 207-453-7125 or www.jamesdjulia.com. James D. Julia Advertising, Toy and Doll Auction June 2014 • Fairfield, ME Now accepting quality consignments for our Spring Toy, Doll
& Advertising auction. Whether you have one item or an entire collection, please contact us today for a free, no-obligation consultation. The recent Toy, Doll & Advertising auction showed strong results in nearly every category, including: early American tin to clockwork automotive toys, fine French & German dolls, antique advertising, salesman samples, patent models, coin-operated machinery, music machines and more. Contact Andrew Truman or Julie Killam at 207-453-7125 or [email protected]. Weekly & Monthly Auctions American Bottle Auctions Discover the beauty of early American glass. We pay top dollar for quality bottles and glass. Free appraisals. Call or e-mail for dates. Info: 800-806-7722, [email protected], www.americanbottle.com. Jeff Dobson Auction 4th Sat. • Jasper, GA At 5 pm at 796 Canton Rd. (Old Hwy. 5). Always 700+ lots of antique furniture, glassware, smalls & more. Info: 770-735-7653 or jeffdobson.com. Robert Edward Auctions Watchung, NJ Baseball collectibles wanted: cards, Babe Ruth items, tobacco cards, uniforms, buttons, autographs, gum cards, posters, photographs, World Series items and more. Info: 800-766-9324 or www.robertedwardauctions.com. Zenith Auctions 2nd Saturdays • Lakeland, GA Antiques and collectibles. Auction starts at 6 p.m. at 30 Murray Blvd. Info: 229-482-2116. Visit www.zenithauctions.com or auctionzip.com, ID #4282, for more information and photos.
Mid-Century Modern, Asian Antiques, Frankart Pieces, more at Ahlers & Ogletree, March 15-16
French gilt bronze bracket clock with hand-
painted decoration.
�� When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
Aiken, South Carolina....“It’s good to be here.”
Aiken Antique MallLarge Selection of English & American
Antiques, Collectibles & GiftsHours: Mon.-Sat. 10-6, Sun. 1:30-6
112 Laurens St • Aiken, SC
(803) 648-6700
York CottageAntiques
OpenMon.-Sat. 10-5
Antiques & AccessoriesSterling Silver & Old Plate
409 Hayne Ave. • Aiken, SC(803) 642-9524
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HUGE VARIETY • REAsonAblE PRIcEsPrimitives • Victorian • Country • Shabby Chic
Custom Children's Clothing • Glass • Pottery • BooksoPEn 7 DAYs...WE Do EsTATE sAlEs!
640 E. Pine Log • Aiken, SC
www.antiquesandmoreaiken.com
36Dealers
6,000Sq. F.t.(803) 644-1060
The Shops of Greenwood , S.C.
“Find your Treasure at the Rainbo”
Antiques • Jewelry • Furniture Collectibles • Glass • Gifts
2720 Hwy. 25 South • Greenwood, SC.864-227-1921
Specializing in period furniture
Treasures InnAntiques, Furniture, Glassware,
Cast Iron, Books & MoreBuy, Sell or Trade
Mon.-Fri. 10-5 • Sat. 10-32002 Hwy. 72-221 EastGreenwood, SC 29649
864-223-8931
Condition, Condition, Condition: How to Value Your Old Sports Card/Memorabilia Collection by Michael Osacky
We have heard it so many times when buying a home: location, location, location. Similar verbiage applies when valuing that vintage memorabilia collection from your childhood days. Unfortunately, sentimental value does not increase the value, but it does make for a good story. I always look for collections that have a story to tell because these
stories’ are quickly leaving us. One of my favorite stories came from an older gentleman whose father played for the Yankees several decades ago. The house was being sold and all the artifacts were being unearthed from the attic. The man wanted an appraisal value for the items, which included player rings from the World Series, team-signed photographs and baseball cards. Listed below is the advice I provided to him. 1. Autographs: Need to have a trusted third party authenticate the items. (I provided him with three of the best so he could make the correct decision.) I also advised him that the quality and darkness of the autographs were very important. Signatures tend to fade if left in sunlight, which will affect value. Generally, autographs on baseballs, bats and jerseys are worth more than autographs on cards or baseballs. 2. Rings: I use a loupe to look at the diamond, gold and overall condition of the ring. Be on the lookout for diamonds being switched out for cubic zirconias. In this specific case, the diamond was authentic, and rings were rarely worn. The player didn’t like to wear rings. He only wore them on VIP occasions such as Hall of Fame Museum visits, charity fundraisers and family dinners. Rings that don’t show lots of wear are worth more because they have fewer scratches on them. 3. Cards: Are the cards trimmed? Many people trim cards to have sharp corners. I measured every card from every year to make sure the cards were genuine. Many more important factors must be looked at to determine the ultimate value of the card:
a. Paper loss? b. Rookie card? c. Centering d. Creasing e. Year of the card (Most cards from 1970-present are virtually worthless.) A qualified sports card/memorabilia expert will be able to advise an exact dollar amount, but the ideas above can provide you with an approximate range (low, medium, high). ---------- Michael Osacky is a regular contributor to Parade Magazine, and he has written for or contributed to Huffington Post and the New York Times. He is the founder of baseballintheattic.com and is dedicated to unearthing vintage sports cards and memorabilia buried in attics, garages and barns. If you have a vintage sports card or memorabilia collection, contact him at baseballintheattic.com or 312-379-9090.
Even Honus Wagner cards worth hundreds of thousands of dollars have been trimmed to increase
their value. Pictured is a 1909 T206.
��When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
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I live in central Virginia and recently found a Boyle, Gamble and McAfee bayonet handle. The blade is missing. I was wondering if I could possibly get some additional information about the handle. JS: What a rare and interesting relic you dug up. This brass Bowie-bayonet handle with the cast name of the firm “Boyle, Gamble & MacFee Richmond VA” is the second excavated handle I have seen. There is another in the George Ray collection now owned by the Atlanta History Center. Boyle, Gamble & MacFee patented a brass bayonet adapter in 1861 that saw wide use during the Civil War, and they also made a few saber bayonets and Bowie bayonets, both utilizing the brass handle you found. Pictured here is a complete Bowie-bayonet in my book, Confederate Bowie Knives, with my co-authors Jack Melton and Josh Phillips. There are probably less than 10 complete examples of either version of the Boyle, Gamble & MacFee, Richmond, VA, bayonet. These products, along with other edged weapons made by this Richmond, Virginia, firm, and a detailed history of the firm can be found either in Bill Albaugh’s books on Confederate swords or in my book on Bowie knives mentioned above.
Complete versions of this knife or bayonet sell for around $10,000. Your relic handle is missing the muzzle ring, but the markings are still very good, and I would guess it would still sell for $500-$1,000.
A Bowie bayonet handle from Boyle, Gamble &
MacFee of Richmond, Va., $500-$1,000.
A book page showing complete Bowie bayonets.
By John Sexton
Civil WarThe
COLLECTOR
�0 When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
Just wondering if these items have much value. JS: Your buttons, I hate to tell you, all appear to be 20th century reproductions, though apparently aged to look dug up. If original, there are several rare examples that sell for several thousand dollars each, but facsimiles are only valued at a few dollars each.
I’ve enclosed a picture of some Civil War items I have. I would like to know what they are and their value. The holster is stamped “Rock Island Arsenal.” It has a copper or brass shield at the top of it. The small cutter has the name J. English and Wm Dodds. The draw knife is brass and has the names AG Bacheloer and JW Stone and J Burghard. I assume that these
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50 Dealers
Quality antique Mall
Featuring:Period Furniture • Sterling Silver,
RS Prussia • PrimitivesFine Art Glass • Early Pattern Glass
Depression Glass
(615) 895-31832303 S. Church St. (i-24 exit 81b)
Murfreesboro, tN. 37130www.AntiquesUnlimitedofMurfreesboro.com
205 North Main StreetMount Pleasant, Tennessee
Hours: Thurs. through Saturday10 A.M. to 5 P.M. and by appointment
Cell: 931-619-0784
The Shops of Middle Tennessee
H WatertownH Cookeville
H Mount Pleasant
HomespunAntiques
14 South Cedar • Cookeville, TN 38501(931) 260-1873
• Furniture• Quilts• [email protected]
Middle Tennessee is a veritable haven for antiques shoppers.Watertown is home to Jim’sAntiques, at 312 Public Square, plus sixother antiques shops. Jim’s shop now features a retired Santa sleigh,old lunch boxes from the ‘50s and ‘60s, crocks, toys, advertisingboxes and much more. Come visit! Antiques Unlimited, at 2303 South Church Street in nearbyMurfeesboro is packed with period furniture, sterling silver, RSPrussia, primitives, fine art glass, early pattern glass and Depression glass.
GasLamp Antiques in Nashville is expanding! The city’sbest mall for antiques and unique furnishings recently opened asecond shop: GasLamp Too. Breckenridge House Antiques, at 205 North Main Streetin Mount Pleasant, is located inside a lovely circa-1815 home.Store hours are Thursday thru Saturday from 10-5, or byappointment. And Homespun Antiques, at 14 South Cedarin Cookeville, is the place to visit for furniture, quilts andcollectibles. You can reach them via e-mail at [email protected].
H MurfreesboroNashville H
are the individuals’ names that used them. The ball flask is 2 1/2 lbs. and has 1 and 1 1/4 stamped in the snout. It has a hunting scene on it. Possibly could have been made by the Flask and Cap Company. I can’t find any identification on it. The pistol grip is a leather cutter and is stamped “Crawford Newark NJ.” The other brass flask I assume is a powder flask. It has no markings. The leather bucket I assume is a water bucket or feed bucket for a horse. It is stamped “US Cav.” Finally, there is a small pair of pliers with no markings. Your help
Not Civil War items, but some Indian Wars, including leather bucket and saddle holster; also pictured are shot and powder
flasks and leatherworking tools.
Reproduction buttons faked to look old and valuable.
��When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
2213Highway 70
EastJackson,
Tennessee38305
731-421-8128
The Shops of West Tennessee
Old County Store Restaurant - buffet served daily
• 1890’s Ice Cream Parlor & Fudge Shop • Gift and Confectionery Shop • Old County Store
56 Casey Jones Lane, Jackson, TN 38305800-748-9588.
www.caseyjones.com
Over 15,000 Southern antiques on display
Discover the life, legend and song of Casey Jones Home& Railroad Museum
H JacksonH Bolivar
The antique shops of West Tennesseeare a must for serious collectors on theantique trail. Jackson alone is a virtualmecca for antique shoppers. While you’rein town, be sure to pay a visit to Butler’sAntique Mall, at 2213 Highway 70 East.It’s loaded with quality antiques andcollectibles.
On The Square Gallery and Gifts109 North Main - Bolivar, TN 38008
Phone: 731-403-0002Email: [email protected]: Tuesday-Sat. 10am-5pm
Antiques, art from local and regional artists, pottery, glassware, painted
furniture, and hand-turnedwooden bowls
Visit our 100+ year old building on the historic courthouse square in
Bolivar, TN.
And don’t forget Casey Jones Village,one of Tennessee’s top capital 10 travelattractions, where you’ll discover the life,legend and song of Casey Jones at hisHome and Railroad Museum Over 15,000Southern antiques are also on display. InBolivar, not far away, is On the Square
Gallery and Gifts, at 109 North Main.Their 100+ year old building on thehistoric courthouse square is filled with antiques, art from local and regionalartists, pottery, glassware and muchmore.
would be greatly appreciated. JS: Well, nothing in this group is Civil War, but the two leather items are from the American Indian Wars. The leather bucket marked “US CAV” was for either grain or water to feed a horse. The holster marked “Allegheny Arsenal” was attached to a saddle to secure a 45-70 carbine, circa 1875. Both of these items appear in nice, complete, sound condition and are typically priced in the market for about $200-$250 each. The two shotgun or fowler flasks are for powder (brass one) and shot (leather body) and were made from about 1850 through the 1870s, “American Flask & Cap Company” was possibly the maker. In solid very good condition as shown, this pair will typically be priced in the market for about $100 or so. The four tools appear to be leatherworking tools, if the maker marks you show are the makers. English & Dodd and Crawford are both well-known Newark, New Jersey, toolmakers, but I am not familiar with Bachelor, Stone and
Burkhard. The Crawford marked pistol-gripped tool is known as a “draw gauge,” and they typically sell for about $50 apiece. The two-handled brass tool I’m sure is a similar value, if not more. These two brass tools date to circa 1860. I believe Crawford was out of business prior to the Civil War. Antique tools are a very specialized market with their own group of dealers and auctions and probably should be researched more in depth if you are interested in them. _____________ John Sexton is an independent appraiser and expert of Civil War memorabilia. He is an accredited member of various appraiser organizations. He can be contacted at 770-329-4984 or www.CivilWarDealer.com. If you have a Civil War item for him to appraise, email a photo and a description to [email protected].
STERLING FLATWARE• Bought and Sold •
Hundreds of patterns in stockBefore you buy or sell call us.Toll Free 1-800-252-6655
Web: RSGoldberg.com E-mail: [email protected]
R.S. Goldberg67 Beverly Road, Hawthorne, NJ 07506
RS. Goldberg.8th.12.08_SEA
�� When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
million after pleading guilty to income tax evasion. The self-made billionaire, who came from a humble background and dropped out of college, was also ordered to perform 500 hours of community service, mentoring students at Leo High School in a poor neighborhood of Chicago. Warner has a listed net worth of about $2.6 billion. Beanie Babies made a big splash when they burst on the scene around 20 years ago. By the late 1990s, the small plush toys that were sold for $5-$7 each became wildly popular, with some collectors paying hundreds and even thousands of dollars for a rare character on the resale market. In 2000, a Peanut the Elephant Beanie Baby sold for a reported $3,000. But then the bottom fell out as the market became saturated with the toys. Today, Beanie Babies are often sold at auction in multiple lots for just a few dollars. Most silent films are gone forever The Library of Congress has released a report regarding the early days of movies, and the news isn’t good. Of the nearly 11,000 silent feature films made and distributed throughout the U.S. between 1912 and 1929, about 3,300 exist today, the report said. Of those 3,300, half are either incomplete or exist only in foreign versions or lower-quality formats (such as 16mm or
Ken's Korner Continued from Page 13
Terrace Oaks Ant Mall. 06.10_SEA
• First and finest antique mall in the Charleston areaEst. 1988.
• 90+ booths operating under one roof in an 11,000 sq. ft. climate-controlled mall.
• Featuring American, European, country & formal furniture, sterling, old bronzes, glassware, china, old prints, jewelry, old books and Indian artifacts.
www.terraceoaksantiques.com
PAYING CASH FOR YOUR OLD COINS AND
CURRENCY! We BUY • SELL • APPRAISE
Mark G. Thompson 770-579-5794Life Member ANA, BRNA, FUN, GNA,
MNA, SCNA & TSNS
28mm). The study was titled, The Survival of American Silent Feature Films: 1912-1929. It was commissioned by the National Film Preservation Board. How could this have happened? Several factors are to blame: the deterioration of volatile nitrate stock, fire, the destruction of prints and negatives and simple negligence are a few. Films lost forever include: London After Midnight (1927),
starring Lon Chaney; The Great Gatsby (1926), starring Warner Baxter; and all four Clara Bow features made in 1928. The study found that of the 3,300 surviving films, about one-quarter was located outside the U.S. The country with the largest collection: the Czech Republic.
Judge orders Renoir returned to museum An original painting by the French artist Renoir purchased at a West Virginia flea market for $7 by Marcia Fuqua has been ordered returned to a museum. A judge has ruled that the painting – a
diminutive work, just 5.5 inches by 9 inches and titled, Paysage Bords de Seine, or Landscape on the Banks of the Seine – must be returned to the Baltimore Museum of Art, which reported it stolen in 1951. An auction of the painting, at the Potomack Company in Virginia, was called off. The history of the painting is as intriguing as the work itself. Renoir rendered it in the 1880s for his mistress, art historians believe. It was later purchased by the Paris art gallery Bernheim-Jeune, which sold it to a Renoir collector named Herbert May in 1926. Eleven years later, May’s ex-wife, Sadie May, loaned the painting to the Baltimore Museum of Art. After its theft in 1951, its whereabouts remained a mystery until Ms. Fuqua bought it at the flea market. Or did she? Her own brother has disputed her story.
For more Ken's Korner, visit www.antiquingmagazine.com
��When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
The Antique Store & MORE
(across from Eastbrook Flea Market & Antique Mall)
We buy, sell & trade Antiques, Coins, Gold,Silver & Collectibles440 Coliseum Blvd.,
Montgomery, AL 36109(334) 233-0690
Mon-Fri 10-6 Sat 9-4
Ants Store and More_BC_10.1
By Mike McLeod and Deborah Abernethy $13,350 (35 bids): Beatles 1962 “Love Me Do” Parlophone 45 Signed by all Four Beatles! Very historic and beautiful signed original first issue “Love Me Do” red label, UK 45 signed on the label by all four Beatles on Oct. 6, 1962, exactly one day after the record was released. All have signed in dark blue ballpoint pen. Signed at Dawson’s Music Shop in
Widnes, England. Check out the image and note the difference between the signatures of their early career and just a few months later when they polished them up. Condition of the label is near mint. Vinyl is scuffy and about VG-, but that’s not that important with this one. No chips, no warps, no cracks. Please note that most all known signed examples of this 45 experienced lightened ink issues in the silver areas of the label. The ink did not take well and appears much lighter in those areas than the rest of the label. This particular example has had some enhancement professionally done only on the silver areas of Ringo’s signature and a minor part of John’s last name. Also the tip of one of Paul’s letters in his name. No other restoration has been performed at all to the rest of the label or any of the remaining signed script, which is about 80% of the autographs. This was done to enhance the visual impact of the autographs that were affected by the silver areas. Also note, the affected areas were still legible lightly, so it is not like they were blank there. I show this record before and after. I did not have the work performed; I simply took the record in and obtained all the proper information before listing it. This item will come with a letter of authenticity by Frank Caiazzo, the world’s leading autograph authority. It will also come with my letter of authenticity. (Photo: eBay seller perrydcox.) DBA: WOW, this is probably the one and only one of these. It is difficult to say if this was a good deal for the seller or a good deal for the buyer because there are no identical and few similar objects. This is the first record released by the Beatles, and with the signatures, it is extremely rare. The only way I can imagine that this would be worth less money is if our economy is so bad that almost nothing is holding value (or maybe after all Baby Boomers are dead!).
�� When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
$2,761 (53 bids): Voltamp B&O Steeple Cab. Appears to be complete; wires are frayed and disconnected. Gears and motor turn freely and looks great. (Photo: eBay seller. Updog309.) DBA: These trains are very collectible. Voltamp made the first toy train that operated on ordinary household electricity instead of batteries. These trains were made for the two-inch gauge metal tracks. The actual steeple cab was developed in America and first released around 1900. It offered better crash protection for the crew, along with good visibility. The seller got a very good deal. A Voltamp trolley car was sold on eBay on Dec. 22 for $12,380.
Pratville Pickers.Third.pg..08.11_SEA
The river region’s newesT and largesT anTique mall
Antique, Flea Market, Auction House
• 100,000 square feet• Heated and Cooled
A cAn’t miss while in AlAbAmA
Open 7 days a week Less than 10 minutes off I-65 (Exit 179)
616 hwy. 82 w. • Prattville, Al
334-322-6564
Longleaf Antiqueand Flea Mall Inc.
H 45,000 sq. ft. Heated & Air Conditioned Building
H Ample ParkingH 250+ Dealer Spaces
H Easy Access from U.S. Hwy. 280
Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10-6 • Sun. 1-6
Vendor Space Available
256-234-3492705 Alex City
Shopping CenterAlexander City, AL
• Furniture • Jewelry• China • Porcelain
• Collectibles • Purses• Home Décor Items• Outdoor Furniture
Longleaf.12.08_SEA
$4,494 (60 bids): Barn Find: 1917 “Uncle Same Wants You,” Flagg, unrestored, unhung poster. This iconic WWI poster is an original 1917 Flagg poster that was never restored, mounted or framed. There
is only one tear to the image area: a 1.2 x 1.7 inch on his sleeve with nothing missing. I’ve shown the worst edge wear and tear in close-up pictures, and I’ll describe the damage in detail: 2-inch tear at top center edge; 1.75-inch tear at bottom right center edge; 2-inch tear at bottom left center edge; bottom right corner area tears but only very tiny pieces missing on white area; top right corner area tears but only very tiny pieces of white missing. Overall size is 30 x 40 inches. Small print at bottom center says, “Leslie-Judge Co. N.Y.” Colors are bright and vivid, and paper is not brittle. Very rare to find this poster that has not been restored or mounted. Easy restoration and you will have a fine example for your home or business. I
recently found this poster rolled up with several other original WWI recruitment posters. (Photo: eBay seller smartfinds.) DBA: This is a high price for a WWII poster. Movie posters are the ones that typically sell for the highest sums of money. In checking WWII poster prices, it occurred to me that these posters are sold as reproductions, and many sites sell posters for several hundred dollars each. This may be the intended future use for this poster. Rights to reproduce are typically available for objects of this age so the reproduction rights make this poster a possible money maker in addition to the initial value. For someone with printing equipment and a viable print business, this would definitely be a good buy.
$1,226 (29 bids): Antique Victorian Aesthetic Bohemian Art Glass Gilt Enamel Bugs Dragon Tall Vase. Exquisite antique 19th century Bohemian cranberry or ruby art glass footed vase features a thick enamel allover pattern with insects, butterflies, flowers, a phoenix bird and a dragon. Applied gold gilt foliage and drips along the top covered in tiny hand painted enamel bugs. Vase has one sizable chip to the base, one smaller chip to the base; the
��When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
IT'S HUGE!
Voted Area's Best
Antique Mall
Tour buses welcome! A few booth spaces are still available for quality dealers!
ANGEL'S ANTIQUEand Flea Mall
In Historic Opelika, Alabama• Located just 1 block off I-85 (Exit 62)
• Corner of 431 and Old 280 • Over 65,000 Square Feet...monstrous!• East Alabama's Largest Antique Mall
• Tremendous Tourist, Local & Dealer Trafficopen 7 Days: mon.-sat. 10-7 Cst, sun. 1-5 Cst
(334) 745-3221 • www.angelsmall.info
450+Dealers!
Angels Antiques.qrt.H..10.2009_SEA.indd
IT'S HUGE!
Voted Area's Best
Antique Mall
Tour buses welcome! A few booth spaces are still available for quality dealers!
ANGEL'S ANTIQUEand Flea Mall
In Historic Opelika, Alabama• Located just 1 block off I-85 (Exit 62)
• Corner of 431 and Old 280 • Over 65,000 Square Feet...monstrous!• East Alabama's Largest Antique Mall
• Tremendous Tourist, Local & Dealer Trafficopen 7 Days: mon.-sat. 10-7 Cst, sun. 1-5 Cst
(334) 745-3221 • www.angelsmall.info
450+Dealers!
top has been ground down about one-eighth inch, minor wear to the gilding. Measures about 16 x 6 x 3 inches across top by 5 1/8 inches across base. Fresh out of a fine old estate! (Photo: eBay seller two-cool-dudes.)
DBA: Bohemian glass is considered to be from the area once called Bohemia but now is a part of the Czech Republic. This is very collectible glass. Another very collectible consideration is that the designs are from the Aesthetic Period. With
two or more collectible categories, the possibility for maintaining or increasing in value goes up. Given the decorations on this glass, but also considering the repaired and unrepaired damage, this is probably a more appropriate retail value. $1,777 (21 bids): Fifty Prosthetic Human Glass Eyes in Original Case Early 1900s. These are blue shell right. There are 16 thin and 34 thick. The case locks nicely. (Photo: eBay seller fishinplug.)
DBA: Coming from a decorative design background, I was unaware of collectors of this type of object. I would guess that people with a scientific interest in eye prosthetics would have an interest. I have never seen a collection of eyes in anyone’s home. In doing a little research, I have discovered that most prosthetics today are plastic rather than glass, so these have no use in that way. Further research showed individual glass eyes for use in mannequins are selling for around $200 each, so 50 glass
eyes would retail for around $10,000. So for someone with a use for these, it was a very good buy. ------------ Deborah Abernethy is a certified appraiser with the International Association of Appraisers. She can be contacted at 404-262-2131 or [email protected]. Her website is www.expert-appraisers.com.
�� When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
Carved eagle with gilt trim, $8,100, Tim’s, Inc. Auctions A beautiful carved pine eagle with gold gilt trim, about five feet wide, circa 1950s or ‘60s, sold for $8,100 at a Fall Extravaganza Estates Auction (Nov. 17) and an It’s a Wonderful Life Auction (Dec. 8) held online by Tim’s, Inc. Auctions (www.timsauction.com), based in Bristol, Conn. Also, a carved oak marble-top sideboard attributed to R.J. Horner knocked down at $3,300; a Japanese World War II long sword brought $4,598; and a fishing pole believed to have been made for baseball legend Babe Ruth hit $1,029. Prices include 21% bp. Meeks parlor center table, $33,350, Stevens Auction A rosewood rococo marble turtle-top parlor center table with cluster carved finial, attributed to J. & J. W. Meeks, sold for $33,350 at a multi-estate sale held Jan. 17-18 by Stevens Auction Company in Aberdeen, Miss. Also, a handsome rosewood half tester bed in mint condition, attributed to Mitchell & Rammelsberg and with original mosquito net hardware, achieved $12,650; two rosewood laminated parlor side chairs by J. H. Belter fetched $10,350; and an eight-tier Victorian crystal chandelier gaveled for $3,910. Prices include 15% bp.
Containers Arriving WeeklyOpen Tuesday thru Friday 8-4
Offering a desirable inventory of:Antique Reproductions
Furniture from IndonesiaWrought Iron, trellis, fences and
arbors from MexicoFigural and Ornamental Cast Iron
for Home Decor from China
Find us on Facebook under Midway Sales
531 County Road 457Heflin, AL 36264
256.748.4488
25,000 square feet of antiques and usedmerchandise of all kinds
5266 Hwy. 231 • Wetumpka, AL 36092(334) 567-2666
Monday-Saturday 10:00-6:00; Sunday 1:00-5:00
WetumpkaFlea Market and Antiques, LLC
Wetumpka.eighth.12.08_SEA.indd
Colt Model 1909 pistol, $96,000, Morphy Auctions A Colt production Model 1909 .45 caliber trial pistol, Serial #11 of 22 made, with a Colt letter of authenticity, sold for $96,000 at a Firearms Sale
held Jan. 11 by Morphy Auctions in Denver, Pa. Also, a Colt production Model 1911 .45 caliber pistol, Serial #10, marked “United States Property,” with a Colt letter of authenticity, also rang out at $96,000; a Singer production Model 1911A1 .45 caliber pistol coasted to $78,000; and a New Haven Arms production lever-action .42 caliber Volcanic carbine hit $40,800. Prices include 20% bp. Chippendale tea table, $905,000, Christie’s
A carved Chippendale mahogany scallop-top tea table, probably made by Benjamin Randolph (1737-1791), sold for $905,000 at a sale of American Furniture, Folk Art & Decorative Arts held Jan. 24 by Christie’s in New York City. Also, the Deschler Family Chippendale mahogany side chair with carving attributed to John Pollard
(1740-1787), made in Philadelphia circa 1765-1775, garnered $725,000; and a Chippendale, carved mahogany serpentine-front chest of drawers (New York, circa 1760-1780) hit $569,000. Prices include 20% bp. Rosewood cabinet, $149,000, Bonhams A 19th century rosewood cabinet, inlaid with scenes from the novel Don Quixote, rendered in a Hispano Flemish Baroque style, sold for $149,000 at a Fine American & European Furniture, Silver, Folk and Decorative Arts & Clocks Auction held Jan. 23 by Bonhams in New York. Also, an early 20th century carved custom hall clock breezed to $100,000; and a William IV ivory-mounted sterling silver two-handled oval footed tray made in London in 1836 by Robert Garrard went to a determined bidder for $40,000. Prices include 20% bp.
Gavels & Paddles Continured from Page 11
For more Gavels & Paddles, visit www.antiquingmagazine.com
��When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
Modern Facility • Former Wal-Mart
57,000 Sq. Ft. • 4 Acres of Parking
Large Secured Showcase Gallery
Flea Mall & antique Center
OPEN7DAYS!
1605 Asheville Rd. • Leeds, Alabama 35094400 Dealers • Open 7 Days • 10am-6pm • Easy Access Off I-20
From Birmingham: Take Exit 144-A, make a right, go half a mile andwe are on the left. From Atlanta: Take Exit 144-B
Limited Booth Space Available! (205) 699-2499
BAMA
GARDENDALEFLEA MALL & ANTIQUE CENTER
2405 Decatur Highway • Gardendale(205) 631-7451
www.gardendalefleamall.com
ANTIQUES • COLLECTIBLES • FURNITURE • NEW & USED ITEMS
From I-65 North: Take exit 272 (turn right) Go to 2nd light and turn left onto Hwy. 31 N. We are 1/4 mile on the right.
Over 300 DealersLimited Booth Rental Available
44,000 Square Foot Facility
Fully Stocked Showcase Gallery
Floor Space Packed With Unique and Hard-to-Find Antiques
& Collectibles
Dealer Inquiries Welcome
Air Conditioned, Modern Facility
2 Large Floors
Downstairs Now Open
Indoor Loading & Unloading
Open 7 Days: 10AM-6PM
ALABAMA’S LARGESTTREASURE CHEST!
ALABAMA’S LARGESTTREASURE CHEST!
www.bamafleamall.com
�� When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
Antiques: Furniture, Glassware, Jewelry, Hats.
Glass Eye Studio: hand blown gifts.
Nickels’ Place aNtiques
3615 County Hwy. 36 • Oneonta, AL 35121Open: Fri. & Sat. 9-5
205-590-1207 • 205-529-6251
Memories Flea Antique Mall.05.11_SEA
MemoriesFlea An’Tique Mall
23,000 Square Feet Over 100 Dealers1724-A E. Main St., Prattville, AL 36066
334-491-5800Mon. - Sat. 9-6 • Sunday 1-5
Only 2 Miles West Of Exit 179, I-65Next To Badcock’s On Left
Antique Maison LLC111 No. 2nd StreetBay St. Louis, MS
(228)466-4848 • (228)493-6316Come back to the “Good Old Days” at Antique Maison
featuring the finest in all areas of antiques.Furniture • Linens • Jewelry • China • Gifts
Household Items • Collectibles • Art • PhotographyOriginal oil paintings, photography & jewelry from local artists
Open Mon. - Sat. 10-6, Sun. 12-5www.antiquemaison.com • [email protected]
40Dealers!
Name This Famous Antique by Mike McLeod
Sherry Blanton, Scott and Carolyn Brown of Memories Flea An’Tique Mall in Prattville, Ala., Jim Pruett of Eastbrook Flea Market in Montgomery, Ala., and Ted Carlton of Utah, and Sherron Lawson, Roswell Ga., correctly identified Abraham Lincoln’s hat, a prized possession of the Smithsonian. President Lincoln’s hat size was 7 1/8, and his stovepipe hat added another seven or eight inches to his 6-foot 4-inch height. Even without the hat, he overshadowed the average man of his day by nine or ten inches. With it on, he appeared to be a giant. “Character is like a tree and reputation like a shadow. The shadow is what we think of it; the tree is the real thing.” It is said that Lincoln kept papers in his hat since it was so large. This stovepipe hat held by the Smithsonian is the
one Pres. Lincoln wore to Ford’s Theater on April 14, 1865. It was afterwards given to the War Department and then to the U.S. Patent Office and finally to the Smithsonian. Thinking it might cause an uproar or draw massive crowds if displayed, Smithsonian Secretary Joseph Henry had the President’s hat stored in the basement. There it remained until 1893 when it was loaned out for a Lincoln memorial exhibit. President Lincoln wrapped a mourning band around his hat in memory of his son Willie (William Wallace) who died on Feb. 20, 1862, probably from typhoid after drinking infected water. Their son’s death caused both parents deep sorrow as evidenced by the silk mourning band remaining on the hat for three years until the President’s own death. Willie was the Lincoln’s second son to die young. Eddie died Eddie 12 years before on Feb. 1, 1850, about a month before his fourth birthday. Eddie’s death has been attributed to tuberculosis or thyroid cancer. “Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you want to test a man’s character, give him power.” Abraham Lincoln’s hat became an icon for the President, and it still is today. In fact, it was too recognizable. Once, a would-be assassin shot a stovepipe hat off the President’s head while he was riding a horse across the countryside near the White House. President Abraham Lincoln did not need a stovepipe hat to stand tall in his life, but his has become the symbol of all he stood for. ------------------- Can you name this famous antique?
Win 15 seconds of fame in the next issue by calling 888-388-7827 with the correct answer or sending it to
Abraham Lincoln’s hat worn to Ford’s Theater. (Photo, courtesy of the
Smithsonian.)
The mourning band on the President’s hat was in memory of his son Willie
who died at 12.
��When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
Whistle Stop.11.12_SEA
SpacesNow
Available for Quality
Dealers
Located Near Asheville
& Knoxville, Just South of the Smokies
60,000 Sq. Ft. of Antiques and Over 400 DealersCome See the Full-Sized Caboose, Vintage Antique Cars and Train Engine
1281 Georgia Rd. • Franklin, NC 28734 • 828-349-1600 • Fax 828-369-0981
ANTIQUES
Book of Women’s Hats Is Happy Parade of Them
by Robert Reed The newly published book about women’s vintage hats turns out to be a happy parade of them, covering nearly a century. Decades of Hats: 1900s To The 1970s by Sue Nightingale is
as delightful as it is resourceful. Packed in the pages are all manner of berets, bonnets, caps, derbies, sailor-types, and even turbans. Because all of the well-reproduced illustrations were first published in vintage magazines and mail-order catalogs, there are some interesting retail prices. In 1910, for example, ladies could purchase a Mexican palm hat for 50 cents or a “genuine” Panama coarse-weave hat for one dollar. “This book was put together as visual eye candy for the hat lover, as well as to provide an invaluable resource for costumers and collectors,” wrote the author Sue Nightingale. “It is presented chronologically with commentary to include the reader’s own conclusions as to fads, fancies, construction, and dating.”
Consequently, the book is rich in contemporary resources like the early issues of Sears, Roebuck and Company catalogs, Montgomery Ward catalogs, fetching issues of Modern Priscilla Magazine and similar long-ago publications. Chapters in this rewarding volume are divided into historical areas as noted. They include the 1870s through 1919, the 1920s, 1930s, 1940s, 1950s, and finally the 1960s and early 1970s. Also included is an index of women’s hat styles. All together, the book features a couple of thousand ladies fashionable bonnets and such which have adorned charming female heads for at least 100 years. It is a true value in the world of fashion collectibles today. Nightingale has been a collector, dealer, researcher and sort of women’s hat detective for many years. Decades of Hats: 1900s To the 1970s by Sue Nightingale, soft cover, 302 illustrated advertisements, 144 pages, $29.99 plus shipping from Schiffer Publishing, www.schifferbooks.com. ---------- Book reviews by Robert Reed, Antique and Collectible News Service, P.O. Box 204, Knightstown, IN 46148.
�0 When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
• 45,000 sq. ft. one-story facility • 300+ dealers • La Petite Tearoom• Located near the Pottery Factory and the outlet centers
500 Lightfoot Road • Williamsburg, VA 23188From I-64 take exit 234 east onto 199, exit at Mooretown Road West. Turn left at stop light onto Lightfoot Road,
500 feet to mall on left. (From Route 60, turn at Casey Toyota onto Lightfoot Road, 1/2 mile to mall on right). Look for our white picket fences Open 7 days a week (closed
Christmas, Thanksgiving & Easter) Mon.-Sat. 10-6, Sun. 12-5
Spend an hour or a day at one of the Best Antique Malls in the Country
www.antiqueswilliamsburg.com757-565-3422
Williamsburg.06.11_SEA
The Strasburg Emporium160 No. Massanutten. St • Strasburg, VA 22657
(540) 465-3711Open Sun. - Thurs. 10-5 • Fri. & Sat. 10-6
*Like Us on Facebook!*Exciting dealers, old and new!
Mr. B’s Room Now Open!Free parking in back
Exit 298 off I-81, 2 miles to downtown Strasburg.www.thestrasburgemporium.com
Strasburg Emporium_10.13_SEA
The Heisey Boudoir and Bath Essentials: Feel Like Royalty
Metrolina’s Spring Spectacular Slated for April 2-6 in Charlotte Once again, the International Collectibles and Antiques
Show at Metrolina Expo in Charlotte, N.C., survived Mother Nature and her wintry blast for February. Dealers who were able to set up their treasures were rewarded with many shoppers over the weekend. Luckily, Metrolina has over 125,000 square feet of covered shopping space and is there—whether rain, snow, sun or wind—with thousands of items for purchase. March is the month of transition but always with the Luck of the Irish. Metrolina is the longest-running monthly antiques show in the Southeast. The event brings the best dealers from near and far. Many have been exhibiting for 20 years or more. The show boasts great food, wi-fi, free parking and pets are welcome. Admission is $5 for all four days. Metrolina has a supportive staff, hi-tech security, easy set-up and fair pricing. Call now to book your space, and don’t forget the Spring Spectacular, slated for April 2-6. With more than a little luck, you will find what makes you happy—for yourself or that special someone. Hours are 9-5 Thursday through Saturday and 10-4 on Sunday. Metrolina is located at 7100 Statesville Road in Charlotte., N.C. For info, call 704-714-7909 or log on to www.ICAShows.com.
From royalty to Downtown Abbey, to the Augustus Heisey mansion, to the homes of many Americans, centuries of beautiful glass items have been produced for men and women to use and enjoy in their bedrooms and bath. Gentlemen started their day with a shaving brush lathered in a handled mug, a soap dish for washing, and that just-right size toothbrush holder for that all-important item. He often had a water jug or pitcher with a tumbler set on a tray nearby. Depending on his status, he could have a cologne bottle, a covered cigar jar or cigarette holder, matchbox and candlestick on another tray in his dressing room. Ladies continued to be much more fashionable in their boudoir arrangements. A tray with tumbler, water tankard, matchbox and candleholder were essential bedside items. However, it was the boudoir dressing table where beauty took center stage. Perfumes, colognes and lavender jars were stunning ways to display her favorite fragrances. Puff boxes, ring holders, trinket boxes and a hair receiver might round out
another tray. A vase or handled basket held her favorite flowers. Molded, patterned, cut or etched and occasionally in color, many of these pieces will bestow the royal treatment you so deserve. When all is said and done, your home is your sanctuary. When preparing for any event inside or outside your home, one must have essential items in their boudoir and bath to proceed with their day. Ladies have always found a way to present themselves in the best way possible, and gentlemen have followed suit. Shouldn’t you treat yourself to the luxury of beautiful, antique glassware to showcase your requisite and indispensable products? And what about entertaining? What a great time to set the most welcoming table for your guests. A lovely table can start conversations and inquiries of “Where did you get this?” Also, food always looks better when served with beautiful glassware. Everyone appreciates that little extra effort we put forth, for ourselves and for our family and friends. No matter the reason nor the occasion, you deserve to start feeling great right away. Heisey glassware can bring sparkles to your eyes! “Feel Like Royalty,” and pick up your favorites at the 41st Annual All-Heisey Glass Show and Sale, Sat. March 15, 10 am-5 pm and Sun. March 16, 11 am-4 pm at the Annandale Volunteer Fire Dept./Ossian Hall, 7128 Columbia Pike, Annandale, Va. Visit www.natcapheisey.org for a discount show card and more information.
��When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
Shenandoah Antiques Expo: A Big Treasure Hunt
The chance to discover a rare collectible, a fine piece of furniture or an original work of art will draw thousands of collectors to The Shenandoah Antiques Expo show and sale on May 9th and 10th. Celebrating its 54th Show and Sale, this popular antiques event features the combined inventory of some 300 dealers from throughout the US. “Authenticity and variety are our focus,” explains organizer, Martha Stokes, who ensures that the show and sale will be a memorable event for attendees with merchandise prices at every level from $5 to $15,000. Exhibitors display in exhibition halls, barns, tents and outside. The Taylors of Richmond specialize in period American furniture, art, stoneware and decorative accessories and use their double space in Barn I to create an inviting display. As with most of the exhibitors, the Taylors are seasoned dealers who take great pride in offering quality merchandise. Print dealer Kurt Kromenhoek offers an extensive collection of fine period prints covering varied subjects. The Weavers of New York are one of many exhibitors in the Expo Hall who offer a beautiful selection of American Country and painted furniture and early decorative accessories. Another exhibitor, the Brills of Virginia display American and English formal and country furnishings, early brass, paintings and
porcelain. Maryland dealer Pamela Watson-Walker, one of ten antique and estate jewelers who exhibit, offers an exquisite collection of gold objects, pearls, and estate pieces. For some, the real treasure and bargain hunting begins with the 150 outside exhibitors who set up on the field between the Expo Hall and the Barns. Here, one can find just about anything from 18th century furniture to mid-century modern collectibles. All exhibitors at the Shenandoah Antiques Expo are registered dealers in their respective states and have reputations for honesty and integrity. The show organizer, Heritage Promotions, seeks to offer customers a fun antiquing experience in a friendly, relaxed shopping environment.
The show opens Friday at 9 a.m. with Early Shopping while dealers are setting up their displays. Show hours are: Friday, May 9, 9-6, and Saturday May 10, 8-5. The May show has no Sunday hours. Admission is $10 on Friday and $5 on Saturday. The Augusta Expoland facility is located at exit 91 on I-64 at Fishersville, Va., near Staunton and Waynesboro, just east of I-81. Fishersville is 25 miles west of Charlottesville. For detailed information on the event and accommodations go to www.heritagepromotions.net or email [email protected] or call 434-846-7452. During the event, call 540-337-2552.
Antiques & Collectibles National Association Announces Educational Seminar & Trade Show for 2014 The Antiques & Collectibles National Association owners Mike and Angie Becker have announced the scheduling of the Association’s next educational seminar and trade show in Austin, Texas, on Sept. 28-30, 2014, for antiques and collectibles- related shop owners, mall owners, mall and show dealers, estate sale dealers, auctioneers, show promoters and individual collectors. The Holiday Inn Austin Midtown will be used as home base. Two full days based on the theme “What’s Next?” will be packed with educational classes, networking opportunities, and a trade show. The keynote will be delivered by Sherre L. DeMao, founder of SLD Unlimited Biz Growth, Inc., a full-service marketing, branding and operational strategy firm. Breakout sessions will be led by: Eric Bradley – PR at Heritage Auctions; Randy and Debbie Coe – Coe’s Mercantile; Julie Hall – The Estate Lady, LLC & ASEL; Wayne Jordan – auctioneer, certified property appraiser and accredited business broker; Bill and Carol Kearney and Christine Saltzman – Cover Your Assets; Sherre DeMao; Shannon Quimby – DIYer, designer and television personality; and Diana Sanders Cinamon – personal property appraiser, educator and gemologist. The event will close on Tuesday evening with a dinner followed by the always popular auction. Attendees are asked to bring an antique and/or collectible to be donated for the auction. (A receipt for tax purposes will be provided). It is always interesting and fun to see new items and learn a bit more history.
These dates and Austin were chosen due to the proximity to the world renowned 20+ antique shows in Round Top, Texas. For those dealers who have never had a chance to check out the Round Top shows, this is a way they can make one trip and do two worthwhile events. The ACNA was formed in 1991 as the Antiques & Collectibles Dealer Association and has evolved to the ACNA to provide personalized services for shop owners, mall owners, show promoters and private collectors, as well as all levels of dealers. The Association offers an array of services/benefit programs to its members, including its most popular benefit—property and liability insurance coverages for shop owners, mall owners, mall dealers, show dealers, auctioneers, estate sale dealers, show promoters and individual collectors. The Association also has educational seminars, a quarterly newsletter, discounted home study program through Ashford Institute of Antiques, credit card processing and an online sales platform through GoAntiques.com, hotel discounts, and numerous other discounts on trade advertising, shipping, travel, dealer supplies and security. Registration forms for the Convention and cost details as well as membership benefits and details are available on the Association website at www.acna.us or by calling the ACNA office, 800-287-7127 (where the phone is always answered by a live person). Both Association members and non-members are welcome. Early registration is encouraged since discounts are given prior to April 30, 2014.
�� When you go, tell them, "I saw your ad in Southeastern Antiquing Magazine."
Miami National Antique Show and The Armory Antique Show Both Report Record Sales U.S. Antique Shows, the world’s leading producer of indoor antique shows, recently hosted the inaugural year of two fantastic antique shows: the Miami National Antique Show in Miami and The Armory Antique Show in New York City, the weekend of Jan. 24-26. “This year’s shows both reported stellar sales, both between dealers and attendees that travelled far and wide to come. With the first year producing these events behind us, we’ve discovered ways to grow and improve for the upcoming years. The attendee experience is always at the forefront of our minds, and we plan to explore many efforts that will enhance their time at our shows,” says Fair Development Director Andrea Canady. The Miami National Antique Show is one of the longest-running antique events in south Florida during the winter season. Held at the Miami Airport Convention Center, the event presented more than 100 well-established dealers with a wide array of art, furnishings, home décor and jewelry. U.S. Antique Shows acquired the show from Dolphin Promotions in early 2013. Stephen Schwartz of Stephen’s Antiques, whose been doing business at the Miami National Antique Show for over a decade, is excited U.S. Antique Shows is now at the helm of this well recognized Miami-based show. “We’re extremely pleased that U.S. Antique Shows now produces the Miami National Antique Show. We feel it needs a fresh start with the new, fantastic promotional efforts this
company brings to every event. As producers of the largest indoor antique show, The Original Miami Beach Antique Show, it serves as a clear advantage for the Miami National Antique Show.” Schwartz continues, “For us, this two-week show combination in Miami and Miami Beach is a major portion of our year’s revenue. We believe it’s truly the hub of antique business in America and brings together dealers from all over the world. It’s very exciting. There’s nothing else like it!” Also running concurrently that same weekend was The Armory Antique Show at the 69th Regiment Armory. Held during the 2014 New York City’s Antiques Week, the show highlighted compelling and affordable collections from distinguished dealers with 20-plus years’ experience selling antiques. U.S. Antique Shows acquired the show in May 2013 from Stella Show Management. “We had our best Armory show we’ve ever had, “says Christopher English of Antediluvian Antiques & Curiosities. “I really like The Armory Antique Show in particular because it’s a smaller show with high quality dealers and price points that are attractive to a wide variety of shoppers. Its eclectic merchandise brings returning attendees back year after year and it’s a perfect size for three days.” U.S. Antique Shows now produces nine shows nationally. The next shows scheduled are the LA Antique Jewelry & Watch Show, March 21-23 at the Hyatt Regency, and the Pier Antique Show, March 29-30 at Pier 94.
Fine Art and Chinese Antiques Headline Elite Decorative Arts Auction, March 15-16
Original works by major listed artists such as Willem de Kooning, Chaim Soutine and Angel Botello, plus Chinese carved ivory pieces and other Asian antiques, will headline a 550-lot auction planned for March 15-16 by Elite Decorative Arts, at the firm’s gallery in the Quantum Town Center, located at 1034 Gateway Boulevard (Stes. 106-109) in Boynton Beach, Fla. The Saturday, March 15 session, comprising 311 lots, will feature fine Chinese carvings and works of art. The Sunday, March 16 session (240 lots) will contain fine decorative arts and Asian works. Start times both days will be 1 p.m. (EST). Internet bidding will be facilitated by LiveAuctioneers.com and Invaluable.com. Telephone and absentee bids will also be accepted. An original oil painting on cardstock board by the Russian-born French painter Chaim Soutine (1893-1943) titled, Road to the Village, is expected to hit $60,000-$80,000. The signed painting, depicting a village scene, measures 24 inches by 18
inches and is mounted in a wood frame. Soutine made major contributions to the Expressionist movement while living in Paris. Certain to challenge the Soutine work for top lot of the sale is an oil-on-paper painting by the Dutch-American artist Willem de Kooning (1904-1997). The diminutive abstract oil (titled, fitting enough, Abstraction) is 9.75 inches by 12.75 inches. It is signed and framed and should sell for $50,000-$70,000. De Kooning was an Abstract Expressionist and New York School painter. Auction previews will be held on Friday, March 14, from 11-5; Saturday, March 15, from 11 a.m. until the first gavel falls at 1 p.m.; and Sunday, March 16, also from 11 a.m.-1.p.m. Elite Decorative Arts is currently accepting consignments for its April 13th Decorative Arts Auction. To learn more about upcoming March 15-16 auction, please log on to www.eliteauction.com.
Chinese carved ivory tusks depicting an Emperor and
Empress (est. $10,000-$15,000).
49 These LisTings Are On The inTerneT: www.antiquingmagazine.com 43
1. BrundidgeMemories Present & Past
127 South Main Street, Brundidge, AL 36010, is one of several antique and collectibles shops located in Brundidge. Specializing in glassware, collectibles, lamps and more. Located about 55 miles from Montgomery on Hwy. 231 South, Brundidge is 8 miles south of Troy. To get to Main Street in Brundidge, turn at Hardee’s, into downtown, right at light onto Main Street. Open Fri. & Sat. 10-2, Tues. & Wed. 10-4. Closed Sunday. 334-300-8282. (P/M-M)
2. Birmingham/IrondaleOne Man’s Trash
2520 Crestwood Blvd/Hwy 78, Irondale/Birmingham, 35210, just off I-20 on the eastern edge of Birmingham, near Golden Rule BBQ. Antiques, collectibles, architectural salvage and custom home décor.Something for everyone including furniture, antique mantles and doors, glassware and sterling, vintage linens, collectibles, local artist original works, cus-tom furnishings made from reclaimed architectural pieces and much, much more. Great new items added weekly. Open Tues-Sat 10-6 and Sun 11-5. Cash, check or credit cards accepted. Like us on Facebook at “One man’s Trash”. Info: [email protected], 205-209-0480. Come by and see us soon! (P/M-M)
3. DecaturMemories Antiques and Gifts
2406 Old Moulton Rd., SW, Decatur, AL 35603. Located 2/10 of a mile west of the Beltline on Old Moulton Road, Memories carries a variety of antiques, gift lines and collectibles. We are a Fenton Showcase Dealer. Open Thursday, Friday and Saturday 10am to 4pm. Phone (256) 355-
6805 or (256) 350-5351. Email dotn2406 @charter.net. (P5/13-K)
4. DothanVintage Chic
140 N. Foster St., Dothan, AL 36303. Located in historic downtown Do-than. Vintage shopping the way it used to be. Small local shop where we get to know our customers. You never know what you’ll find here be-cause every day provides a different experience. Open Tuesday-Friday from 10 to 4 and Saturday from 10:30 to 2:30. Info: 334-792-0280, [email protected], www.VintageChicOfDothan.com. (P 7/14-PA)
Antique Attic 5037 Fortner St; Dothan, AL 36305. Area’s Largest & Oldest Antique Store. Voted Best Antique Shop in Dothan the past 15 years. In the same location since 1969, daily buying and selling antiques, importing antiques and treasures from all over the world. We have expanded to16,000 sq.ft. of showrooms filled with American and European antique furniture, paint-ings, tapestries, bronze and marble statuary and fountains. Three gen-erations of our family are waiting to serve you and share our years of knowledge and experience. We stand behind every item we sell. Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10-5. Info: 334-792-5040 or www.antiqueatticdothan.com. (P6/14-PA)
5. OpelikaAngel’s Antique and Flea Mall
900 Columbus Pkwy., Opelika, Al. 36801. Located 1 block off I-85 (exit 62) between Atlanta and Montgomery, in Historic Opelika. At 68,000 sq. ft. and over 400 dealers, Angel’s is HUGE! We’ve separated the antiques alley (old stuff) from tag sale heaven (old & new). Prices are low because dealers pay low rent and no commissions. Come buy where the Pickers Pick! Open every day, 10-7 (CST) and Sun. 1-5 CST. Call 334-745-3221, or visit www.angelsantiquemall.com or “Angels” on Facebook. (P/M-K)
6. PrattvilleMemories Flea An’Tique Mall
1724-A E. Main St., 2.3 miles off I-65 (Exit 179), located between Bad-cocks Furniture and Big Lots. 23,000 sq. ft. of shopping for antiques, col-lectibles, glassware, books, records, coins, jewelry, furniture and more. Open 9-6 Mon.- Sat. and 1-5 Sun. Phone 334-491-5800. (P 4/14-PA)
7. Valley Timeless Antiques & Flea Market
2918 20th Ave., Valley, AL 36854. Come see the shop everybody’s talk-ing about! Conveniently located off exit 79 of I-85, with offerings and features too numerous to list here. Visit us online at www.timelessan-tiques.us, then beat a path to our door. Ph: (334) 768-8463. (K-P/M)
8. Alexandria Valley Antiques & Collectibles
6312 US Hwy 431, Alexandria, AL 36250. Hours: Mon-Sat. 10:00-5:00 pm, Sun 1:00-5:00 pm. We have 4,500 square feet of everything from black powder long guns, vintage jewelry, artwork, clothing, hats, furni-ture, chandeliers, rugs, coins, knives, NASCAR as well as collectibles and gifts. Don’t miss our Mark Down corner. We are located halfway between I-59 and I-20 on US Hwy 431 at mile marker 240. Great mer-chandise at affordable prices. (256) 820-0025. (P12/14 -M)
9. WetumpkaWetumpka Flea Market and Antiques
5266 Hwy. 231, Wetumpka, AL 36092. In the Winn-Dixie Shopping Cen-ter across from Ruby Tuesdays. 25,000 sq. ft. of air-conditioned antiques, collectibles, and neat stuff of all kinds. Low rent to draw only the finest dealers. Hours:Mon-Sat. 10-6, Sun. 1-5. Info: 334-567-2666.on
(P 4/14-PA)
ANTIQUE SHOP AND MALL DIRECTORY
Antiquing ALABAMA
Vicinity Map
The map will show the general vicinity of shops and malls listed. If you need exact directions, call the shop or mall during business hours, and they
will be happy to provide the information.
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Advertise in the Antique Shop and Mall directory
Only $30/MonthCall 1-888-388-7827
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Miami
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1. EllentonFeed Store Antique Mall Inc.,
4407 Hwy. 301, Ellenton, Fla. 34222. 50 quality dealers showing lots of furniture, china, glassware, primitives, jewelry & some-thing for just about everybody. It’s a soup-to-nuts mall, located less than a half-mile off I-75, exit 224. Just take 301 South to the mall. We’ll see you there! Open Mon.-Sat. 10-5, Sun. 12-5. Call 941-729-1379. (C/A-K)
2. OCALAWagon Wheel Antique Mall
3130 NW Bonnie Heath Blvd. (Hwy. 27), Ocala, FL 34475. Located just a half-mile south off exit 354 of I-75. Open 7 days a week. Over 40 quality dealers, selling antiques, vintage, primi-tives, shabby chic, glassware, collectibles, Civil War items, hand-made collectors’ knives and more. Still a few spots open for quality dealers. Like us on Facebook (WagonWheel-AntiqueMall). Ph: (352-351-0684. (P/M-K).
These LisTings Are On The inTerneT: www.antiquingmagazine.com 44
Antiquing FLoridA
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1. COLLINSThe Galleria
3487 Hwy. 495, Collins, MS 39428. Featuring fine antiques, collectibles, gifts and children’s boutique. Open mon.-Sat. 9-5. Ph: (601) 765-1527 or (601) 765-6977. www.thegalleria-ms.com (P/M-K)
Antiquing Mississippi
1. ClArkSvilleOut of the Past Antiques and Collectibles
436 Boillin Lane, Clarksville, TN 37040. Located just south of Crossland Ave. in Historic Clarks-ville. Furniture, jewelry, silver, crystal & glass-ware, books, vintage clothing & much, much more! Hours: Monday-Occasionally; Tuesday - Saturday 9-5. Phone 931-645-5612. (P/M-K)
2. MAnCheSter MAdeline’S AntiqueS
6107 Murfreesboro Hwy., Manchester, TN 37355. Fine antiques, vintage collectibles, an-
tique furnishings, vintage clothing, home acces-sories, accent pieces, toys, advertising, primi-tives, glassware. Open 7 days a week 10-5. Phone (931) 723-8013. (P12/12-K)
3. PigeOn FOrgeYeSterdAYS AntiqueS And COlleCtiBleS921 Wears Valley Rd., Pigeon Forge, TN 37863. Come find a great treasure! We are open daily from 10 to 4. Visit www.rubylane.com/shops/yesterdays. Call us at 865-908-6271.(P/M-M)
4. SOuth PittSBurg SOuth PittSBurg AntiqueS
224 S. Cedar Ave., is located in the Tennessee River Valley where I-24 meets Hwy. 72. We offer a wonderful collection of exquisite antiques from around the world. Choose from American and European furniture, chandeliers, lamps, china, pottery, glassware, Oriental rugs, door hardware, architectural antiques, collectibles and vintage jewelry. We have a massive fine art selection. I-24 exit 152, right 2 miles. In historic downtown South Pittsburg, 20 min. west of Chattanooga, Open 7 days a week. 423-837-5439; www.southpittsburgantiques.com. (P/M-M)
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These LisTings Are On The inTerneT: www.antiquingmagazine.com 45
Commerce
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Antiquing GEorGiAANTIQUE SHOP AND
MALL DIRECTORY
Vicinity Map The map will show the general
vicinity of shops and malls listed. If you need exact directions, call
the shop or mall during busi-ness hours and they will
be happy to provide the information.
●12 Conyers
St. Marys●22
Savannah
●18 Perry
4. BOlingBrOke Antiques of Bolingbroke
8083 Rivoli Rd. (Hwy. 41). I-75 N., Exit 175, I-475, Exit 15; right in the fork of I-75 & I-475. Three buildings full of period/ 1930s furniture and accessories, American, English & French. Open Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30. Call us at 478-994-9353 and stop by today! (P/M-M)
5. BuFOrdQueen of Hearts - Buford
4125 Ga. Hwy. 20, Buford, GA 30518. Located across from the Home Depot. 175+ dealers and 33,000 sq. ft. of fine quality antiques and interi-ors. Open 7 days a week, Mon.-Sat. 10am-6pm; Thurs. 10-8 Sun. 12pm-6pm. Come by and see us soon! Info: 678-714-0643. (P/M-M)
Further Down the Rabbit HoleSpecializing in Primitives, Antiques, Vintage and Cottage. We are located in historic downtown Buford at 15 Scott Street, Buford, GA 30518. Phone: 770-831-5040. Our winter hours are Thursday, Friday and Saturday 10-4 and Sun-day 12 noon to 4. Visit us on the web at www.furtherdowntherabbithole.net, and visit us on Facebook! (P/M-M)
6. BrOOklet67 Antique Mall
6700 Ga. Hwy 67, 1/4 mile North of Exit 127 on I-16. 10 miles South of Statesboro and GSU, also only 35 minutes from downtown Savannah. Located just off I-16; Exit 127, one of the area’s cleanest, biggest and best antique malls. 12,000 sq.ft., 100 booths; offering a wide variety of stained glass, antiques, sports memorabilia, coins, collectibles and so much more for you to enjoy. Join us in our 1950s-style snack bar for
an ice cold Coke. Our gift shop sells locally-made candy, syrup, jams, etc. We love our cus-tomers! Open M-F 10-5, Sat. 10-5, Sun 1-5 and closed on Tuesday. 912-839-2167, 67antique-mall.com. (P 5-14/M)
7. CAlhOun Calhoun Antique Mall & Calhoun Auction
Estate Sales, LLCAntique Mall, Open daily - 9 to 6pm Monday thru Saturday, 1 to 5pm Sunday. Up to 80 deal-ers set up with quality antiques, fine furniture, dep. glass, pottery, fossils, coins, records, books. Only 150 ft from I-75 exit 315, 1503 Red Bud Rd., Calhoun, GA. Phone 706-625-2767.The Calhoun Auction & Estate Sales LLC, is now taking calls for complete Estate Liquidations, Turn Key operations, set-up and display, research and advertising. Licensed, Bonded, Insured. All personal property, 20 years experience wholesale and retail sales and liquidations. Reasonable rates and professional staff. Call David Falls 706-506-8014. GL. #3707. www.calhounestatesales.com (P/M-K)
8. ChAMBleeAntique Row of Chamblee
Conveniently located in North Atlanta, just in-side I-285 on Broad Street & Peachtree Rd. in Old Chamblee. Chamblee’s Antique Row is the largest and most distinctive antiques destina-tion in the Southeast. Visitors enjoy browsing 20 shops with over 250,000 sq. ft. of antiques and col-lectibles including an outstanding selection of American & European furniture, advertising, Americana, painting, prints, pottery, glassware, toys, dolls, early medical & scientific instruments, clocks, watches, Art Deco & ‘50’s Modern, vintage clothing, linens, rare books, post cards, ephemera, costume & estate jewel-ry, radios, telephones, restaurant decor & prop rentals, coin-ops, silver, Black Americana, old sporting collectibles & more. www.AntiqueRow.com. 770-458-6316. (P/M-K)
9. ClArkeSvilleOld Clarkesville Mill Art & Antique Mall
583 Grant Street, Clarkesville, GA. 100+ vendors have filled 1/2 acre of this former textile mill with art, antiques, art supplies, vintage fur-niture, costume jewelry, ladies clothing, books, collectible dolls, rustic decor, old farm imple-ments and more. Be sure to check the birding supplies, bird houses, hummingbird feeder sand all the great trees, shrubs, annual and perenni-als in our Garden Center. Call 706-839-7500 or visit www.oldclarkesvillemill.com. (P/M-M)
10. ClevelAndYonah Treasures
2047-C Helen Hwy., Cleveland, GA 30528. Art, pottery, folk pottery, wood creations, cabin de-cor, custom picture framing, jewelry and fashion accessories. Hours: Wed.-Fri. 10-6, Sat. 10-4. Next to the Yonah Burger, 2 miles north of Cleve-land. Call 706-348-8236 for more info.(P/M-M)
11. COMMerCeOur Town Antiques
1671 S. Elm St., Commerce, GA 30529. Located in historic downtown Commerce. Antique mall with 16 dealers offering something for everyone. Come browse our large selection of quality an-tique furniture and glassware, as well as our col-lections of Roseville, Hull and Weller pottery,
1. AlPhArettAQueen of Hearts
670 N. Main St., Alpharetta, GA 30009. 200+ dealers and 33,000 sq. ft. of fine quality antiques and interiors, located just one block south of Windward Parkway and 3/4 mi. N of downtown on Hwy. 9. Open 7 days a week, Mon.-Sat. 10-6; Thurs. 10-8; Sun. 12-6. Come by and see us. 678-297-7571. (P/M-M)
2. BArneSvilleAntiques on Atlanta
100 Atlanta Street, Barnesville, GA 30204. Come shop the area’s newest antique mall located in historic downtown Barnesville, Ga., just south of Atlanta and only 12 miles off I-75 at exit #201. Built in 1898 and used by the Franklin Buggy Company, our restored facility now offers a fresh, relaxing environment to shop for your fa-vorite antiques, collectables and oddities that will please almost every shopper. Make us your destination and take time to stroll through our beautiful historic downtown area, located just 1 block from our shop. Open 7 days a week: Mon.-Sat. 10– 6; Sun. 1–6. Be sure to visit us on Facebook. Drive safe, and we’ll see you soon! 470-592-2033. (P/M-M)
3. BOwMAnThe Shops of Bowman
NE Georgia’s antique destination. Six unique an-tique stores, all located on the historic square. Stop in for a visit & enjoy our relaxed small town charm. Lots of variety & the best prices around. From country primitive to 50s modern. Multiple restaurants & a great little coffee shop. Plan to spend the day. All stores open Thursday-Sun-day, many open Wed. too. We are at the inter-section of GA Hwy. 17 & 172 in Elbert County, GA. Check out bowmanga.net for store info, hours, directions. See you soon! (P/M-K)
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Antiquing KENTucKy1. BOwling green
Vette City Antiques & Collectibles778 Interstate Drive, Bowling Green, KY 2101. 250 booths of climate-controlled shop-ping. Antiques, primitives and collectibles of all kinds. Don’t miss us! (Exit 28 on I-65) Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-5, Sat. -Sun. 9-6. Phone 270-393-9500. P/M-K)
2. FrAnklinStrictly County Antique Mall
31-W North, 5945 Bowling Green Rd., Franklin, KY 42134 is located on a working farm approx. 5 miles north of Franklin, KY . The original farm-house, built in the 1840s, is occupied by the mall’s owners. The home and farm are listed on the National Register of Historic Places be-cause it is one of the few homesteads in S.Cen-
tral KY., which still has the original outbuildings intact. Don’t let the name fool you. Strictly Country offers antiques from various periods and styles. Visitors are welcome year round, ex-cluding Easter, Thanksgiving day and Christ-mas day. Open 10am to 5pm, Mon. thru Sat., closed Sunday. Phone (270) 586-3978. (PM/K)
3. MAdiSOnvilleKesterson’s Korner
502 Hall Street, Madisonville, KY 42431. Come experience 40 years of antiquing packed into a
1915 building. We’ve got antiques, fine furni-ture, silver, collectibles, cut glass and more. Light fixture restoration, burners, wicks. Come see our large oil lamp collection. Open Mon.-Sat, from 10-4:30. E-mail us for info at [email protected], or call (270) 821-7311. (P/M-K)
Antiquing GEorGiA...Continued
railroad items, military dinnerware, wall pockets and primitives. We also carry a large selection of folk art, including paintings by “Corn bread” An-derson, R.A. Miller and Marie Elam, as well as folk pottery by the Meaders family, Charlie West and Huey and Anne Wheeler. Mon.-Sat. 10-5, Sun. 1-5. 706-335-8065. Visit us on the web at www.ourtownantiques.com and visit us on Facebook! Email: [email protected] (P/M-K)
12. COnYerSLingering Memories Antiques and Collectables1403 Old McDonough Hwy., SE, Conyers, GA 30094. A multi-dealer mall with 12,500 sq.ft. of merchandise that changes daily. Come see our huge Elvis collection, and it is for sale! Movies are filmed here. We have antiques, collectibles, glassware, kitchenware, new and old furniture, home décor, unique items, record albums, new and old items. New dealer space available, and we accept furniture consignments. Open: Mon.-Sat. 10-6. Call 770-761-3486. Like us on Face-book. (P/M-M)
13. lAgrAngeBradley’s Antiques & More
127 Main Street-Historic Downtown, LaGrange, GA 30240. Open: Daily 11-5; closed Wednes-day & Sunday. Visit us on facebook or www.bradleyantiques.com; 30+ consignors – We conduct estate/tag sales. 5,000 sq. ft. full of an-tiques, painted furniture, garden iron, pottery, sterling & costume jewelry, pictures, lamps, mir-rors. Info: 706-837-4888. (P5/14-M)
14. lAke PArkFarm House Antiques
I-75, exit 5 , Lake Park, GA (behind Taco Bell). Multi-dealer mall with a wide variety of glass, furniture, vintage pottery, old books , fishing col-lectibles, estate jewelry and more. Open 7 days 10-6, 229-559-0199 (P/M-M)
15. lexingtOn Lexington Antique Mall
102 E. Main St., Lexington, GA 30648. Located just 15 miles east of Athens on Hwy. 78 (across from the Oglethorpe County Courthouse), this
lovely antique mall features lots of period Amer-ican furniture, primitives, smalls and something for just about everybody. Well worth the week-end side trip while you’re on the Antique Trail! Open Wed.& Thurs. by appointment, Fri. 11-5, Sat. 10-5, Sun. 1-5. Log on to www.Lexing-tonAntiqueMall.com or e-mail us at [email protected]. Ph: (706) 743-5575 (P/M-K)
16. lilBurnAntiques in Old Town
93 Main St., Lilburn Ga. 30047 Open Mon.-Sat. 10-5, closed Sunday...Gone to church. Visit us at Antiquesinoldtown.blogspot.com. Great pric-es...dealers love us ! Unique display and selec-tion. Small-town atmosphere, big-time invento-ry. 18 years selling great antiques, vintage and seasonal items. Come on by...6,000 square feet of treasures await you! Ph: (770) 279-1300. [email protected]. (P/M-K)
17. MCdOnOughPlanters Walk Antique Mall
42 Keys Ferry St., McDonough, GA 30253. Housed in an 18th century cotton warehouse, in about 15,000 sq, ft. of space, on the Downtown Square in downtown McDonough. Over 40 dealers, offering a little bit of everything: primi-tives, glassware, pottery, paintings, and much more. Located 3 miles off exit 221 of I-75. Open Tues.-Sat. 10-5, closed Sun. & Mon. 678-432-5250. [email protected]. (P/M-K)
18. PerrYAntique Theatre
806 Commerce St., Perry, GA 31069. I-75, Exit 136, 1 mile into town then turn right. Located in Perry’s historic Muse Theatre are 2 stories filled with fine antiques, vintage furniture, linens, chi-na, glassware, collectibles, books, jewelry, homemade items, artwork, and more. Show Times are Tues.-Sat. 10-6 and Sun. 1-5. Call 478-224-6873 or visit www.perryantiquethe-atre.com for more info. See you soon! (P8-14/M)
19. PlAinSCountry Charm Antiques & Gifts
(Plains, home of President Jimmy Carter) Located at Plains Historic Inn (early 1900) and Antique Market, 106 Main St., open 7 days a week. We have a wide selection of antique
furniture, pottery, crystal, china, books by Jimmy Carter and gifts for all occasions and much more. Over 25 dealers, call for Inn reserva-tions or the Market at 229-824-4517. (P/M-M)
20. MAriettAQueen of Hearts
2745 Sandy plains Road, Marietta, GA 30066, at the intersection of Post Oak Tritt and Sandy Plains Rd. 175+ dealers and 24,000 sq. ft. of fine quality antiques and interiors. open 7 days a week. Hours: 10-6 Monday-Saturday; 10-8 Thursday; 12-6 Sunday. Come by and see our new store soon! Info: 678-453-0600. (P/M-M)
21. SenOiASenoia is hometo well established antique shops, bed and breakfast inns and an ecletic selection of one-of-a-kind gift shops. To learn more about Senoia, visit www.toursenoia.com, www.enjoysenoia.com, www.senoia.com, or become a fan on Facebook at ExploreSenoia. Conveniently located 35 miles south of Atlanta. Take Interstate 85 to Exit #61 (Hwy.74) which leads to Rockaway Road and turn right. Rocka-way becomes Main Street as one comes upon the historic district. (CA/K)
22. St. MArYS St. Mary’s Antique Mall
921 Osborne Rd., St. Marys, GA 31558. Locat-ed in beautiful St. Marys, Ga., the 2nd oldest city in America. Come browse our 7,000 square feet of climate-controlled space, packed with antiques and collectibles, including Civil War relics and vintage furniture. Open 7 days a week, from 11-6. We’re located not far off exit 1 of I-95. Ph: (912) 673-8884. (PM/K)
23. tYrOneSpoon Sisters Tiques & Treasures
843 Senoia Rd., Tyrone, GA 30290. Antiques, gifts, advertising items. Explore the best selec-tion of gifts and one-of-a-kind treasures. Garden area now open. We take consignments. Open Thurs.-Sat. 10-6. info: 770-487-0052 or www.spoonsisterstiques.com (P/M-M)
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1. denMArkThe Caroline Collection Fine Antiques
One of the Southeast’s finest & largest private collections of quality antiques displayed in vi-gnette settings on three spacious floors of the historic AT&T building, also, The Mayfield House and The Old Commissary. Denmark, SC, at the intersection of Hwy. 321 & Hwy. 78. Open Mon.-Sat. 10-5, closed Sun. Anytime by appointment. 803-793-4739. (PM-M)
2. SuMterThe Southern Cross
202 Broad St., Sumter, SC 29150. Worldwide antiquities in a veritable museum, where every-thing’s for sale! See, feel, hear and touch histo-ry: dinosaurs, meteorites, U.S. and Confederate money and more. Immerse yourself in the natu-ral and man-made arts of all ages – European, African, Asian, Hispanic, Native American, Christian, Buddhist and Islamic jewelry, sea-
Antiquing N. cAroLiNA1. ChArlOtte
Metrolina Expo Marketplace7100 Statesville Rd., Charlotte, N.C. Held the first weekend of every month! Four days of shopping just $5! (5 days for $10 for April and November Extravaganza). Come find great treasures and gifts at the Metrolina Market-place from antique to shabby chic and every-thing in between. Collectibles and antiques to Market Street: home decor, fine antiques, fur-niture, collectibles, antique guns, art, jewelry, rugs, crafts, vintage toys and games, silver, pottery, china, coins, ephemera, salvage items, outdoor decor, vintage instruments, fresh pro-duce and more. Exit 16A off I-77. (P/M-K).
2. COnCOrdWhite Owl Antique Mall & Design Center
455 Spring St. NW, Concord, NC 28025. Not far off exit 58 of I-85 (use the Concord ramp). White Owl is a Cabarrus County “don’t miss” shopping experience, with 66,000 square feet and tons of dealers selling antiques, collect-ibles, vintage items, new and vintage art, furni-ture, pottery, handmade soaps, designer cloth-ing, gifts, jewelry, crafts and more. Upstairs is now open to the public. Community Yard Sales held the first and third Saturday of each month, auctions every Friday night from 7-10 p.m. (by ActAuction). Wine bar coming soon, with out-
Antiquing s. cAroLiNA
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Williamsburg Antique Mall500 Light Foot Road, Williamsburg, VA 23188. Spend an hour or a day at one of the best antique malls in the country! 45,000 sq. ft. with 300+ dealers specializing in quality antiques and collectibles. The one-story facility is climate controlled, handicap accessible and has La Petite Tearoom serving gourmet lunches and desserts. From I-64 take Exit 234 east onto 199. Exit at Mooretown Road west then turn left at
the stop light onto Light foot Road. 500 feet to mall on left. Look for our white picket fences. Mon.-Sat. 10-6; Sun. 12-5. Phone 757-565-3422. Email: [email protected]. Website: www.antiqueswilliamsburg.com. (P/M-K)
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shells and sculptures. Open Wed.-Sat. from 10-5 (except January to April, when we trav-el the world to find the new, the unusual and the historic to put into our museum-shop). Located off exit 135 (378W) or 122 (521N) of I-95. Ph: (803) 774-3475, www.cannofsiam.com. (P/M-K).
Exit 211. Hours: on.-Wed. 10-6, Thurs.-Sat. 10-8, Sunday 1-6. For more info visit www.triadan-tiques.com or call 336-662-0544. (P/M-M)
5. SYlvA The Old School Antique Mall
4704 U.S. Hwy. 441 South, Sylva, NC 28779. 12,000 sq. ft. of quality antiques in over 100 show-cases and booths. Open year-round, 7 days: Mon.-Sat. 10-5, Sun. 12-5. Celebrating over 30 years as one of the finest antique malls in the South, with something for every budget and taste. We’re 5 miles south of Dillsboro,15 minutes north of Frank-lin, 15 minutes to Cherokee. Call (828) 586-8097. (P/M-K)
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side seating area. Classes forming soon (quilt-ing, painting, etc.). Got a special event? We can host it in our new Events Center. For reserva-tions, call (704) 795-2657 or e-mail [email protected]. Visit us online at www.whiteowlantiquemall.com. (P/M-K)
3. FrAnklinWhistle Stop Antique Mall
1281 Georgia Road, Franklin, NC 28734. Experi-ence North Carolina’s newest and largest antique mall with over 100,000 sq. ft. housing antiques and other fine shops. There’s a full size caboose right inside the mall, as well as fine antique cars and a train engine. Located in the western corner of the state, just south of the Great Smoky Moun-tains. Mon.-Sat. 10-5; Sun. 1-5. Call (828) 349-0576. (P/M-K)
4. greenSBOrO Antique Market Place
6428 Burnt Poplar Road, Greensboro, NC 27409. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK. Right off I-40 at
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1. POnChAtOulAThe Shops of Ponchatoula
Ponchatoula is nicknamed “Amer-ica’s Antique City.” Over 250,000 sq. ft. of antiques and collectibles shops all within walking distance of one another. Ponchatoula is lo-cated 35 minutes north of New Orleans and 35 minutes east of Baton Rouge. For more informa-tion call 1-800-617-4502 or log on to www.ponchatoulachamber.com. (P/M-K)
Antiquing LouisiANA
Deb.Abernethy.BC_12.08_SEA
Deborah Abernethy Appraisers • Personal property appraisals – antiques, collectibles, artwork, Oriental rugs, textiles and more – for taxes,
insurance, donations, damage claims and legal proceedings.
www.expert-appraisers.comCall us today! 404-262-2131
Deborah B. Abernethy, ISA-CAPP (Certified Appraiser of Personal Property, International Society of appraisers)
Memory Lane/Red Hat Lane, located at 165 North Perry Street in Lawrenceville, Ga., is closing its doors for good in early 2014. Everything is 60% off (larger discounts for quanity purchased)! Antiques, collectibles, art, Depression glass, Goebel products, rugs, jewelry, and on and on. At the end of the sale, all store fixtures will also be sold. Open Mon.-Sat., 10-5:30. Come find your bargain treasure! (770) 338-2165. (P/M-K).
McCormick Place Antiques & Collectibles
141 East 5th St., Russellville, KY • (270) 726-0077
Gordon and Eleanor McCormick welcome you to step inside and step back in time while browsing stunning items from the past, includ-ing lots of beautiful furniture (cherry, mahogany, walnut and oak), handmade Amish furniture, over 20 different dining sets, plus beautiful sofas and love seats. We also have fine china (Noritake, Haviland, Limoges), beds (walnut, cherry, brass and iron), gorgeous chandeliers, very large oval and gold leaf beveled mirrors, glassware, lots of lamps and other unique items. Great for weddings and other special occasions. Take home a print from artists such as C.G. Morehead, Don Enser and Glen Robertson, plus many one-of-a-kind pictures and oil paintings. We have several pieces over 200 years old, including a beautiful walnut corner cupboard, almost 9' tall. We also have an outstanding large wardrobe and a large nativity set. MAJOR STOCK REDUCTION AND INVENTORY SALE NOW UNDERWAY!
Major stock reduction sale underway - come find your valentine's day treasure!
• New Items Arriving All the
Time!
• 200 Year Old Chippendale
Large Highboy
• 3000 Square Feet
• Major stock reduction and inventory sale!
• 35 Miles from Bowling Green, KY
65 Miles From Nashville
• Very Pretty Gold Leaf Oval Beveled Mirror
McCormick Place Ants. 2.14_Banner
Call for an appointment or private viewing. Times may vary.
ANTIQUE HOME STUDY COURSE - For "Profit" and "Pleasure". Become a certified appraiser. You may be a natural for a career that offers tremendous financial and personal rewards. FREE book: Asheford Institute of Antiques, 981
Home Study
Going Out of Business
Dealers Wanted!
Antique dealers and makers and sellers of all handmade items--woodworking, yard art, jewelry, glass, pottery, dolls, stained glass, and so on. New location opening up in Chamblee area, 1 mile inside I-285 off Peachtree Industrial Blvd. Rent space for $2.50 per sq.ft.—any size you want. For info, call 404-574-3555 or email [email protected].(P5/14-M)
International PerfumeBottle Association
26th Annual ConventionMay 1-4, 2014 Pittsburgh, PA
You are invited to attend the following:
Perfume Bottle Show & SaleSat., May 3, 3-6 p.m. * Sun., May 4, 10 a.m. to noon
Admission $5 (or 2-for-1 with this ad)
Perfume Bottle AuctionFri., May 2 @ 5 p.m. * Free Admission
Collecting Perfume Bottles 101A Free Learning Program
Sat., May 3, from 2:15 to 3:15 p.m.Door Prizes * Refreshments * Starter Packet
To register, call or e-mail Deborah Washington:(773) 324-7124 * [email protected]
Luncheon & KeynoteAnne Madarasz, Director & Curator for
“Glass Shattering Notions” Heinz History Ctr.Sat., May 3 * 11:30 a.m. * $65 per person
RSVP: [email protected] by April 15th
WYNDHAM GRAND PITTSBURGH DOWNTOWN600 Commonwealth Place * Pittsburgh, PA 15222
www.PerfumeBottles.org
COLE’SCollectors!
Dealers!Don’t Miss!
BROWSE AND SHOP FOR TOP OF THE LINE ANTIQUES &COLLECTIBLES, FEATURING AMERICAN PRIMITIVES, COUNTRY
LINENS, FLOW BLUE, CHINA, ORIENTAL & PERSIAN RUGS, FIREPLACEITEMS, WESTERN COLLECTIBLES, ARTS & CRAFTS, POTTERY, JEWELRY,VICTORIAN & AMERICAN OAK FURNITURE, FINE ART, GLASSWARE,RARE CLOCKS, LAMPS, SILVER, PAPER GOODS, POSTCARDS, TOYS.
ONE OF THE SEMI-ANNUAL TEXAS,ANTIQUE WEEK’S FINEST AND MOST POPULAR SHOWS!
200 DEALERS IN 63,000 SQ. FT. A/C BUILDING & OUTSIDE TENTS
FOOD & DRINK CONCESSIONS, TOO
EXPERT GLASS REPAIR & GRINDING ON PREMISES
LOCATED AT HWY. 237 & FM 954WARRENTON, TEXAS
FOR INFORMATION AND SPACE RENTAL CALLDIANE COLE 281-961-5092
www.colesantiqueshow.net
THURS., MARCH 27TH thru SAT., APRIL 5TH
Hours: 9am-6pm daily; Sat., Apr. 5, 9am-4pmFREE PARKING! FREE ADMISSION!
FREE WINE TASTING TUES. APRIL 1, 5-8 PM