Date: Fri 12-Feb-1999
Date: Fri 12-Feb-1999
Publication: Ant
Author: SHIRLE
Quick Words:
Weiderseim-Steiff
Full Text:
Wiederseim Postsale
(with cuts)
By Ginna Clark
CHESTER SPRINGS, PA. -- Amidst dense January fog and thawing mud, more than
400 people turned up for Ted Wiederseim's Winter Catalogued Antiques Sale on
January 23. The auction grossed a respectable $165,000, including buyer's
premium.
Many of the bidders were private collectors, although there some dealer
participation was also noted.
The sale featured the lifetime collection of Nancy K. Thomas, which included
Steiff animals, Victorian Christmas decorations, trains, early illustrated
Christmas books, dolls and dollhouses, as well as antique glass paperweights,
porcelain, sterling silver, fishing books, paintings and furniture.
Items from the estate of Glady's P. Ackerman and material consigned by a Main
Line private school were also offered.
Wiederseim's business is exactly two years old, and this represented the fifth
major sale he has conducted. Grand totals for previous sales averaged $250,000
to $375,000. Wiederseim hosts a significant number of on-site auctions. He
also does a great deal of appraising in addition.
Many bidders came for the more than 80 Steiff animals featured in this sale,
and they were not disappointed, despite the fact the Thomas children and
grandchildren had taken their pick from the estate before the auction. Snails,
hedgehogs, an alligator, a parrot, and orangutan, a kangaroo, "Eric the Bat,"
a bluebird, a beaver, a rooster, four "Jaco" monkeys, an owl, a polar bear,
skunks, a badger, squirrels, sheep, mice and hippos -- a veritable Noah's Ark
-- all crossed the block.
A Steiff ark store display sold for $900, and a 57-inch "Hazel the Giraffe"
went for $800. "Hazel" had graced the front hallway of the Thomas' home for
years, and apparently Thomas decorated her in seasonal apparel, such as an
Easter bonnet, a summer fishing rod, and other assorted outfits. Two Steiff
spiders reached $550, and a Steiff mohair penguin sold for $950. An important
tiger sold for $500.
The sale started off with a roomsize Heriz carpet, which went for $5,000.
Other carpets reached fair prices as well. An early Navajo Indian blanket,
five by eight feet, went for $1,000 to the trade.
There was very little furniture, but what was offered was snapped up by
dealers and private buyers. A Chippendale style mahogany tall case clock,
circa 1900, made by J.E. Caldwell in Philadelphia, fetched $2,800. It most
likely found a home in Chester County or a nearby region.
Phil Bradley purchased a mahogany cased stock barometer for $4,000. An Empire
plantation desk went for $950. A Hepplewhite style mahogany banquet table took
$3,000, and a walnut dresser garnered $1,000. A Hepplewhite cherry bow-front
chest of drawers sold for $1,750.
Several paintings sparked interest. The most outstanding was Charles Wilson
Knapp's (American, 1823-1900) signed landscape of Chester County, which sold
for $3,350. The Honeybrook scene depicted a farmhouse, the Brandywine, and
cows.
