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Oct 22

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A deeper understanding of antique Victorian furniture begins with some knowledge of the Victorian Era itself, the period of time in which this remarkable furniture was made. The Victorian Era takes its name from Queen Victoria, who ruled in the United Kingdom from June 1837 to January 1901. During Victoria’s reign, the British people grew very prosperous, both through their empire and through industrial progress at home. This prosperity led to the rise of a large and highly educated middle class.

The Victorians were fascinated with novelty, and the era witnessed much conflict with regard to style, including the famous Battle of the Styles, which pitted Gothic against Classical. The Great Exhibition, which took place in London’s Hyde Park from May 1 to October 15, 1851, was the first World’s Fair. It featured the Crystal Palace, which the famous critic John Ruskin, who supported Gothic style, called the epitome of mechanical dehumanization.

The Victorian Era was also greatly influenced by the development of photography, which scholars link to the rise of Impressionism and Social Realism in the latter part of Victoria’s reign.

The decorative arts were characterized by an eclectic revival and influences from Asia and the mid-east. Here at The Antique Victorian Furniture Blog we are particularly interested, of course, in the furniture of the era. No particular style dominated the creation of Victorian furniture. Rather, the designers drew inspiration from Gothic, Tudor, Elizabethan, English Rococo, Neoclassical and other periods.

Gothic and Rococo were perhaps the most popular and common styles. The Gothic style of Victorian furniture, which flourished from approximately 1830 to 1860, follows the design and motifs of churches, with arches, quatrefoils, spires and crockets. Rococo, prevalent in the 1850s and 1860s, is characterized by sinewy curved lines, C and S scrolls, and elements of nature such as leaves, vines and flowers.

On the other hand, one of the most famous Victorian furniture designers, Charles Eastlake, despised Rococo and ushered in an era known as the Eastlake era in response. This was noted for its trend toward less showy and less complicated designs, with more stylized natural elements, shallow incisions and turnings.

It’s important to understand that the styles of antique Victorian furniture vary greatly. It can be a tricky business for the novice collector, especially given that the furniture is rarely labeled and attribution is largely a matter of opinion. I’d recommend that you start by reading a few good books, such as Jeremy Cooper’s Victorian and Edwardian Furniture and Interiors. Pick the brains of people who know the business. Find and observe local auctions that deal in antique Victorian furniture.

And visit websites, like The Antique Victorian Furniture Blog and others that I will point you toward, which are devoted to giving you reliable information and to helping you deepen your understanding and appreciation of this glorious period of the decorative arts.

Thanks for the visit. Hope to see you again soon!

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Feb 3

Learn a bit about kingwood, and marvel over the finished product. Robert Whitley is a wonder.

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Jan 15

Check this one out.

Victorian Antiquities And Design.

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Jan 14

Here’s a preview of an auction being held next week by the Conestoga Auction Company in Manheim, PA. Look for the Victorian inlaid parlor set attributed to Jelliff.

Click here for the link to the Maine Antique Digest.

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Nov 14

Here’s episode 3 of the series I started back on Sept. 28. Episode 2 was on Oct. 6.

The panels are absolutely beautiful. And I love the part with the steel wool. Mr. Whitley is no amateur.

Enjoy.


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Oct 17

On Saturday, October 24, Stair Galleries of New York will host an auction of the Hunt Slonem collection contained in Edgewood Terrace, also known as Cordts Mansion, “an imposing Second Empire-style brick mansion that stands at the top of a hill overlooking the city of Kingston in New York’s sprawling Hudson Valley.” Previews run from October 9 to October 24.

I’ve attached the press release and photos here for you, so there’s not much need for me to elaborate. Suffice it to say that this is going to be one magnificent auction. Here’s some more from the press release to entice you:

“After restoring his country retreat to its original Victorian grandeur, Mr. Slonem filled the rooms with an eclectic combination of 19th-century furniture and decorations, modern art and his own exotic, vibrantly colored, neo-expressionist paintings… The sale will feature an extensive selection of 19th-century furniture, decorative arts and fine arts as well as a number of 20th-century paintings, prints and photographs.

According to Mr. Slonem, ‘The collection represents nine years of gathering.’ The impressive array of 19th-century furnishings, spanning the years from 1830 to 1900 and encompassing all the major styles of the Victorian era, is heavily focused on the Gothic Revival. Throughout the house are chairs, center tables, dressing bureaux, secretaries, gilt-bronze mantel clocks, glass vases, porcelain teawares and ironstone toilet sets embellished with tracery, pointed arches, steep gables, pinnacles and cusping. Balancing the medieval-inspired pieces are furniture and decorations in other revival styles including Rococo, Renaissance, Louis XVI and Neo-Grec. Modern works of art, hung on brightly painted walls inspired by the colors in Mr. Slonem’s paintings, serve as a foil to the Victorian furnishings.”

Wow.

Click here to read the full press release.

Click here for the catalogue. You have to see this.

For information, contact Walter G. Ritchie, Jr. of Stair Galleries at 518-751-100 or walter.ritchie@stairgalleries.com. Visit Stair Galleries’ website at http://www.stairgalleries.com/.

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Oct 9

Here’s a thought. If you go to Google and do a search on antiques or antique furniture or Victorian furniture, you’ll see sponsored links come up on the right side of the page, or even at the top. Look at all the people trying to sell antiques by advertising on Google Adwords.

You can try the same thing on Yahoo and Bing, too. More ads.

Do you think some of these advertisers are getting results? Those ads cost money every time somebody clicks on them, so they must be productive. If you’re not advertising your antiques in the same place, do you think you might be missing out on something?

Where do you think those people learned how to place those ads? Do you think they hired someone to do it for them or just started doing it themselves through trial and error. I can tell you from experience. It’s pretty easy to get an ad up and running, but it’s not easy to make it profitable.

I’ve been looking around for training on the subject. Here is simply the best thing I have found.

It’s an eBook put out by a company called Mastermind Pros. The ebook is called $1 A Day Plan, and there is a series of four videos that accompany it.

What this book teaches is how to apply real-world, offline principles of marketing to your online, pay-per-click marketing campaigns. It shows you how to research your market, which means researching keywords and competition, and how to test your campaigns with minimal risk. Indeed, for no more than a dollar a day.

A series of bonus booklets also shows you how to get started with Google Adwords, Yahoo Sponsored Search Marketing, and Microsoft Ad Center Bing.

This isn’t the usual online hype. This is for the serious marketer, newbie or pro.

Check it out. It’s actually a small investment, much smaller than placing ads in the offline media. Here’s the link:

http://www.one-dollar-a-day-marketing.com/Pros/

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Oct 4

Here’s an article called “Victorian loos can leave you feeling flush.” It’s from the Mail Online out of England, and it’s all about loos, or toilets if you live this side of the Atlantic.

While many styles of Victorian furniture have slumped in value in recent times, Victorian toilets “are now fetching thousands of pounds and being plumbed back into properties as prized period pieces.”

How do you like that?

Interestingly, the earliest toilets that are readily adaptable to modern bathrooms date to the 1880s. And the most valuable now are the ones decorated with prints such as flower arrangements.

This article is chock full of history.

Did you know that the toilet company Thomas Crapper & Co was established in 1861 and was purchased by a toilet collector named Simon Kirby in 1999?

Or that Sir John Harrington is credited with inventing the first flushing water closet, the “John,” back in the 16th century?

By the way, if you think you’re sitting on a goldmine, as the article puts it, make sure your Crapper doesn’t have a crack. It has to be in pristine condition to be worth a bundle.

You might also be able to find one of these unexpectedly valuable loos if you know where to look. But beware — you won’t be the only one looking for the John. These commodes are hot commodities.

Get the full scoop here.

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Sep 28

In my search for quality videos related to antique furniture and Victorian furniture in general, I came across this one. It’s a video made by a restorer named Robert Whitley, who runs a restoration studio in New Hope, PA.

The video is the first of a five part series of videos in which Mr. Whitley tackles the difficult job of restoring a high end Victorian consol cabinet that has some significant damage. I myself couldn’t imagine bringing it back to its original splendor.

This first episode sets the stage for what promises to be an interesting job. Keep your eye out for the next four.

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Sep 17

Here’s Blake Kennedy with advice on how to restore the wood of a piece of antique furniture.

Check out some earlier posts with videos by Blake Kennedy: Aug. 25, March 1, Feb. 14.

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