Thimble Collecting

Thimble collecting is so popular that collectors even have a special name – digitabulists. The earliest known thimble dates from the Han Dynasty in China, making it 2000 years old, give or take a couple of centuries. Modern collectors are mainly interested in thimbles from the 19th century and the first half of the 20th century. Thimbles come in a huge variety of materials including bone, brass, gold and silver, and especially elaborate examples can even be inlaid with diamonds and other precious stones. Read more [...]

Antique Terms Glossary

– A – Acanthus – Ornament based on the leaves of the acanthus plant. It became popular in the 18th and 19th centuries. Apron – Horizontal piece of wood below a seat, tabletop, or case piece. (skirt) – B – Ball and claw foot – A ball foot with a claw grabbing it. Good form. Baluster Read more [...]

Antique Brass Online Valuations & Appraisals

Antique Brass
Brass is an alloy of two metals, zinc and copper, and the proportions of those two can be varied to give brass different properties. Some brasses also have small amount of a third metal such as lead, manganese or tin in their composition. Forms of brass have been used for millennia and the material was well-known to the Romans, although modern collectors of antique brass concentrate on items from the 19th and 20th centuries. Read more [...]

American Brilliant Cut Glass

American Glass
Cut glass was first produced in America around 1871 by a German immigrant, Henry William Stiegel, at the American Flint Glass Manufactory in Pennsylvania. For the next 60 years or so, there was little to distinguish the cut glass produced in the States from that made in Europe. About 1830, a distinctively American style began to appear. This blossomed into the Brilliant Period, which lasted from the mid-1870s until the outbreak of the Great War. Read more [...]

Caithness Glass Online Valuations & Appraisals

Caithness Glass
In 1968, Caithness Design Limited received "the Royal Warrant," a prestigious honor that recognizes the firm as her Majesty's glassmaker. The warrant, which appears on much of Caithness' printed material, is actually the Coat of Arms of her Majesty Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother. Years later, England's Queen Elizabeth II accepted Caithness glass artist Colin Terris as a Member of the Order of the British Empire for his "outstanding contribution to the glass industry." Read more [...]

Antique Bisque Dolls Online Valuations & Appraisals

Antique Dolls
A one-off doll can be the first doll poured from a mold, providing no other dolls are duplicated from the same mold. Most often, however, the doll is sculpted from a self-hardening clay, molded from cloth, or whittled from wood. A true one-off must have all of its original parts (legs, arms, body) fashioned just for that particular head. In the past, painted eyes and carved/painted hair was favored in lieu of inset eyes and a wig, but that dogma no longer applies, since glass or acrylic eyes and a quality handmade wig enhance the beauty of the artwork and magically bring it to life. Read more [...]

Royal Doulton Online Valuations & Appraisals

The Royal Doulton product line includes pieces to charm everyone from very young collectors to the most sophisticated art aficionados. "We start off with Bunnykins and Beatrix Potter," Doulton explains, and that gets the younger children interested. Boys and girls often are given a figure or character jug for a present, and thus, by the time they become adults, they appreciate Royal Doulton’s works both for their art quality and their investment value. We don’t manufacture pieces as investments, but often within a decade or two our pieces do go up in market price quite a bit." Read more [...]

Arms & Armour Online Valuations & Appraisals

Antique Sword
In the 1970s and '80s there were many old style collectors who would choose a field of collecting, for example British Military swords and collect every possible variation, even as far as buying identical pattern swords by different contracting manufacturers. They may similarly collect Blunderbusses or percussion pistols. The collections they would amass would be in gun rooms or spare bedrooms, racked out and neatly displayed to be shown to interested friends and other collectors. Some people collecting purely for investment would place their collections in bank vaults. Collectors such as this would frequently develop an academic interest in their subject, writing books or submitting articles to magazines. Read more [...]

Keith Murray Wedgwood Online Valuations & Appraisals

Keith Murray
The interwar period in the British pottery industry was fraught with closures, shortages of skilled workers and a lack of pioneering spirit in design matters. Fortunately, several designers created ground breaking patterns and shapes that not only set new standards but also influenced a whole new generation of customers. One of these designers was Keith Murray who, throughout the thirties, produced some of the most outstanding and innovative pottery for Josiah Wedgwood and Sons Ltd. His sculptural forms, decorated with subtle matt glazes, were unlike anything seen on the market before and were very popular with discerning customers who wanted original and modern contemporary pottery. Read more [...]