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Date: Fri 25-Sep-1998

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Date: Fri 25-Sep-1998

Publication: Ant

Author: JUDYC

Quick Words:

Vanity

Full Text:

What Price Vanity?

w/1 cut

By Rita Easton

PORT EWEN, N.Y. -- On August 5, Auctions Unlimited, Inc, distributed

catalogues to its mailing list for examinations preceding an August 26 closing

on its third mail/phone/fax/internet auction of 72 lots of ladies' vanity

items, including compacts, beaded bags, and mesh purses. Forty bidders

resulted, to compete for items ranging from a $700 bag to $10 for a lot of

five 1950s used lipsticks.

The top price of $700 went to a brown velvet 1920s purse in a multi-colored

celluloid frame, the lot measuring approximately 7« inches wide. From the

frame closing of the bag hung a celluloid bird on a chain, which dangled a

third the length of the bag.

A multi-colored 1920s beaded purse with predominant shades of red, blue and

brown, having a sunburst center motif and bead fringe along the bottom, sold

at $160, and powder boxes made for retail compacts averaged approximately $50.

An unusual powder puff in its original box, accompanied by a card on which

there was a poem and an image of a flapper, was double sided, with one side

for powder and the other for rouge. Called a "Peggy Powrou Puff," it realized

$80.

A porcelain powder box with a colonial lady forming the handle sold at $160;

two Schuco Company perfumes reached $200 each, one container a dressed monkey,

the other in mohair "au naturel"; and a bisque black bathing beauty wearing an

original Hawaiian hula skirt, 4  inches high, realized $100.

Compacts were headlined by an example used as an advertising piece, having an

enamelled reproduction of a Pepsi-Cola bottle cap embedded in its center. It

achieved $170.

A porcelain Goebel half doll, nude, with three feathers in her hair, 5‹ inches

high, made $130; and three powder-patters, which are powder puffs each mounted

on a stick, ranged from $30 to $60.

Unlikely as it seems, buyers came out for 1940s and 50s used and unused tubes

of lipstick. A lot of five tubes, two French and three American examples, some

used and some intact, drew $10 for the group.

A sterling silver card case or change purse, deeply engraved, with a London

hallmark and blue satin lining, garnered $40, which was the bargain of the

day, and a glass paperweight advertising "Little Nemo," a jewelry

manufacturing company, went for $30.

"There is a whole group of people who look forward to these sales," remarked a

spokeswoman for the gallery. "We advertise on the Internet and people who live

in remote places who can't get out to antiques shows appreciate the

convenience."

Prices quoted do not reflect a required ten percent premium.

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