Date: Fri 22-May-1998
Date: Fri 22-May-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: JUDYC
Quick Words:
GreatAmerican
Full Text:
Great Amer Spectacular
(W/5 CUTS) - SS
CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- By self-admission, antiques dealer Joan Johnson of Andover,
N.Y., is a "KOOKS" and proud of it. In fact, she wore a KOOKS T-shirt to
advertise that to those who stopped by her Kitchen Cupboard Antiques booth at
the Great American Antiques Spectacular on April 1-5 at the Metrolina Expo.
KOOKS is an acronym for Kollectors of Old Kitchen Stuff, an organization
established in 1993 just for people who love old eggbeaters, potato mashers
and other kitchen utensils. Johnson said KOOKS currently has about 300 members
from every state, and they attend a KOOKS convention every other year. She
offered dozens of old kitchen utensils, all attractively displayed on
blue-and-white-striped cloth.
"I have old kitchen tools from $25 up to $375, for a Dover eggbeater," said
Johnson, who owns the business with her husband, Warner. Since Beat This, The
Eggbeater Chronicles book by Don Thornton came out, prices for eggbeaters have
tripled!"
Johnson was just one of approximately 6,000 dealers of antique furniture,
glassware, pottery, primitives, textiles, paintings, books, and collectibles
who came out for this huge spring show. She also carried several old metal
nutmeg graters, including one from Ohio priced at $650 and another made by
Skillin & Reed Company in Portland, Maine, for sale for $725. She also had a
good variety of old baskets, including a rare oak basket with a B.G. Higgins
label on the bottom for $375, a rustic clam basket with a weathered handle for
$265 and a buttocks basket for $335.
One of the youngest dealers was 24-year-old Todd Calhoun of Greenwood, S.C. He
owns Southern Antiques by Todd and specializes in selling Empire furniture.
"My grandfather was in this business for years," said Calhoun, a tall, lanky
man with a Southern accent. "My grandparents would buy stuff for the house. I
just got interested in the business from being around them. None of my friends
do this."
Calhoun's highest priced item was an Empire secretary in flame mahogany from
Massachusetts. It was big, more than seven feet tall, dated from the 1830s and
was $4,800. An Empire chest made of mahogany, circa 1830s, with a simple,
rectangular design and backsplash, was priced $895.
Calhoun, who also works in a pallet and crate building business with his
father, had a refinished Sheraton chest, circa 1810, made of mahogany and
cherry with brass hardware for $1,800. "I like Empire style," said Calhoun,
who buys from wholesalers in New England and at auctions. "We have a lot of
requests for it. Empire sells well in Atlanta."
The look of early New England antiques filled dealer Donna East's booth. She
specializes in "any type" of New England furniture from 1700 to 1800 and
smalls from the same period. Quite a few customers were interested in East's
carnival dancing man from Onson, Mass., circa 1920s. This unusual folk art
piece had a metal slot for collecting nickels. For five cents, the black doll
with green pants and cap would "dance." East said a similar dancing figure
sold at auction for $7,000. The price for her dancing man was $3,500.
Other interesting items in East's booth were a 46-star US flag for $195. A
black iron kettle with a handle in very good condition and a gate mark at $150
were in her booth as well as a framed needlework sampler, circa 1822, by
Martha Small, in good condition, $1,400. It featured a "pious verse, trees,
flowers and birds with a stylized floral border."
Dealers Richard and Veronica Thompson said they left their home in Baltimore
that week with "a little of everything, a general selection" of collectibles.
They sell mostly old trains, cast-iron toys, old books and comic books. The
Thompsons had a Popeye puppet made by Gund Manufacturing Company in New York
City, circa 1950s, for $125, and a Minnie Mouse bank handmade of papier mache
and painted, very good condition, for $60.
In a display case, the Thompsons had an unusual Baltimore Colts cigarette
lighter with a music box inside for $125. It was from 1958, a championship
year "when they started this sudden death thing," Richard Thompson explained.
Among their old books was an 1887 Masonic book from the Grand Lodge of MD in
good condition for $125, and E.S. Creasy's The 15 Decisive Battles of the
World, printed in the 1850s, very good condition, for $25.
"When we come here we bring a lot of good books," said Richard Thompson, a
Navy veteran. "I've sold a lot of books with steel engravings. Civil War books
sell well. At home, I specialize in World War II books." He delighted in
showing customers his collection of old comic books, especially a Gene Autry
edition dated September, 1951, in excellent condition, for $50. (The original
book sold for only a dime.) He also had a Tom Mix western comic book, dated
November, 1950, in excellent condition for $75.
Shoppers who were looking for Northern Chinese pieces could find them in
dealer Michael Bauer's booth. Bauer, who owns Michael Bauer Antiques and
Appraisals in Lexington, Ky., had an impressive Nineteenth Century herbal
medicine chest from the Hebei Province, in very good condition, for $1,450. He
also had a pair of Nineteenth Century Chinese carved panels, also in very good
condition, for $850.
"My tastes run very eclectic, but period, from French to Italian to period
American. I like it all! I mix it at home. I prefer to handle Eighteenth and
early Nineteenth Century Italian pieces but can't find enough of that," said
Bauer, who is in his fourth year showing at Metrolina.
Among Bauer's other offerings were a miniature Hepplewhite chest, circa 1940,
made of cherry, in very good condition, for $800. He also had a pair of bronze
and black marble urns, circa 1860, in excellent condition for $3,000, and a
Victorian style English gentleman's chest with mahogany drawers and bun feet,
circa 1860, $2,250.
Collectors of black memorabilia found a selection in Ken and Mara Suvatey's
booth. They own New England Antiques in Queensbury, N.Y. One of their best
pieces was a rare "Washtub Mammy" cookie jar by Metlox. The piece, in very
good condition, was $2,970. The Suvateys also had a Mammy sugar bowl by
Marunon in very good condition for $820. "Any piece of Marunon ware is rare,"
said Ken Suvatey. Two unusual "googley-eyed" Mammy cracker jars were for sale
for $1,495 and $1,475, respectively. The third, and smallest of the three
jars, had already been sold.
The Suvateys also offered a pair of Little Black Sambo batter and syrup
pitchers from Sambo's restaurants, circa 1950s. Suvatey said only the Sambos
in Florida used these pitchers. The price for the pair was $925. Other Little
Black Sambo items were a paperback book from 1942 with "great color" in very
good condition for $160, and a 45 rpm record, circa 1971, in very good
condition for $45. "Upscale black memorabilia is our specialty," said Suvatey,
and very few dealers carry it."
The Suvateys also had a rare Howdy Doody bust bank, circa 1950, in excellent
condition for $1,250. "This bank is one of the top collectors' pieces," said
Suvatey. "We just got it on the way back from California. I've only seen two
others like it, and they were not in as good condition. It's a real rare
piece."
Another husband-and-wife team showing was Joe and Jayne Eliopoulos of Keyport,
N.J. They do 40 shows a year in 11 states. April marked their fourth year,
which Joe called "one of the best shows we do." Jayne Eliopoulos specializes
in glassware, porcelain and pottery, including such recognizable names as
Cambridge, Royal Doulton, Heisey, Morgantown, Roseville, Weller, Van Briggle
and figurines made in Czechoslovakia. One of her Staffordshire painted mugs
was a portly boy with his hands in his pockets and with a frowning English
bulldog beside him. The undated piece, excellent condition, was $75.
Joe said he specializes in old toys, furniture, advertising and architectural
pieces. He had a #410 Smith-Miller fire truck with an aerial ladder in very
good condition for $595. "The truck would be worth $1,200 if mint," he said.
Other collectible toys available were a green Marx utility vehicle, circa
1940, for $15, and a green Tonka horse trailer, $95. His collection of Western
cap guns ranged in price from $22 up to $295 for a Gene Autry gun signed
Kenton USA. "This is not a sideline or hobby for us," said Joe Eliopoulos. "We
have a lot of dealers who buy from us. We prefer to buy the contents from
entire estates."
Colorful stained glass windows from English cottages attracted many customers
to dealer John Payne's outdoor booth. Payne, whose business card states he is
"Britain's largest dealer in stained glass doors and windows," said he has
been in business 25 years. His wife, Cathryn, assisted him. They live in
Nottingham, England. "Stained glass is scarcer to find now," said Payne, who
brought about 500 windows to show. "I'm looking in 20 different cities for it
now. People ring me up when they have something to sell to me."
Most of Payne's windows contained textured clear glass panes and simple
stained glass designs in various geometric and floral shapes. Most customers,
he said, like to hang his old windows up "for decorative purposes." Payne's
windows range in price from $30 to $1,000 and date from the 1930s.
For more information, 800/824-3770. The next Great American Spectacular will
be June 3-7.
