Date: Fri 17-Apr-1998
Date: Fri 17-Apr-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: LAURAB
Quick Words:
AtlanticCity
Full Text:
Bigger And Bigger Is Better And Better/Atlantique City Megafair
(with cuts)
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. -- Brace yourself, New York. Atlantique City may be
surpassing the Big Apple reputation's as the place to buy anything, at any
time, for any price.
Atlantique City's sheer variety is reflected in the tantalizing names of some
of its vendors: Single Girls Sin Antiques or Dicker & Dicker, for instance.
Show business is a numbers game, according to Atlantique City's visionary
founder, Norm Schaut. The head of Brimfield Promotions is convinced that
bigger and bigger is better and better. The numbers may indicate he's right.
"The place was so crowded you couldn't fall over," Schaut said of Atlantique
City's 10 am opening on Saturday morning, March 28.
About 14,000 people were packed into the lobby and atrium of the massive new
convention center, where Atlantique City was held for the second time. "It was
shoulder to shoulder," Schaut said of the opening. "The Atlantic City Police
Department told me that the line went all the way around the new 500-room
Sheraton Hotel and snaked nearly to Atlantic Avenue, about six blocks away."
On a weekend crowded with other fairs, including Stella Management's own
megashow, the Triple Pier Expo in New York, Brimfield Associate's success was
indeed phenomenal.
"Advertising pays," explained Schaut, who said attendance exploded at the
recent fair after steadily gaining for the past 14 years. The promoter doesn't
release gate figures. "It gets too close to the financial heart of our
business," he said.
"Advanced ticket sales went through the roof," he continued. "Two-day ticket
sales showed the largest increase. We fill about 14,000-room nights, which
makes the two Atlantique Cities the largest conventions in the state."
At the latest Atlantique City, 1,627 exhibitors from 43 states and 17
countries offered merchandise in the 1,100 categories listed in Brimfield
Associates' compugraphic locator.
Toys, games, ephemera, memorabilia, poster art, photography, ceramics, and
country store material predominate. Schaut said he "owns" these areas, but is
working to build other specialties, such as Americana.
Americana dealers on the floor said they came to buy, but generally sold well,
too. "I've done this show since the beginning," noted Loy Harrell of Hawks
Nest Antiques, Hinesburg, Vt. "I had one of my best shows ever in October. My
customers know I'm here, and I don't have a lot of competition in my
specialty."
Harrell, who also exhibits at decoy events, offered a Wally Algard duck from
the Upper Susquehana River, circa 1935, for $475. Another Americana dealer,
David Thompson of East Middlebury, Vt., featured Nineteenth Century
photography. Enclosed in velvet and leather cases, charming, small-scale
ambrotype portraits, landscapes, and architectural views were attractively
priced at several hundred dollars.
Two leading toy auctioneers, Bill Bertoia of Vineland, N.J., and Noel Barrett
of Carversville, Penn., took stands. "We were there mainly to promote our May
2 sale of the Stanley Sax bank collection and our upcoming June auction,"
Jeanne Bertoia said. "Thanks to the record crowds, we sold more catalogues
than ever before."
Bertoia and Barrett were joined by dozens of leading toy dealers from around
the world. "It was a good show, and just mobbed," Penny Van Wart of Penny
Toys, Leola, Penn., confirmed. A scheduling conflict at New York piers caused
Atlantique City and Triple Pier Expo to coincide, a problem for buyers and
sellers. "It was not a happy thing for anybody," said Van Wart, whose partner
set up in New York while she handled New Jersey. "But the Stella people were
extraordinarily accommodating."
Judging by the number of websites we saw advertised, places with addresses
like "http://www.cuteoldstuff.com," the Internet is on the verge of becoming a
major force in the collectibles business. But although they are developing
websites, many Atlantique City exhibitors told us they'd still rather make
money the old fashion way, by setting up at shows.
"I'm thinking of developing a page on the web, but I can't imagine the
Internet will ever be a substitute for this. I need to see and touch things,"
said Joan Majeune. The Leonia, N.J., dealer specializes in dolls houses.
Highlights of her display were two German turn-of-the-century examples by
Gottschalk.
Brimfield Associates demonstrated its promotional skill by working out the few
glitches that plagued the fall fair, the first one ever in the ultra high-tech
convention center. "There was more and better food, and plenty of seating,"
one exhibitor said happily.
"Every single problem that we knew of was addressed, right down to the big
rolls of paper in the johns," said Schaut. In recognition of Atlantique City's
swelling importance, the railroad added two cars. The Atlantique City
Unlimited hauled 1,400 showgoers on Saturday and 1,100 on Sunday. At night,
the Grand Boulevard Walk was lit up like a Christmas tree to help shoppers
find their way back to the 13,000 parking places within a ten-minute walk of
the show.
