Clean Program
Nov 28

The New York Times has just run an article on shopping for antiques in Atlanta, GA and surrounding areas. The article gives a lot of information on a large number of antiquing destinations. It also gives some suggestions for restaurants and hotels if you decide that a trip to the area is worth your while.

In Buckhead, a trendy neighborhood close to downtown, look for Bennett Street and its “upscale antique shops and art galleries.” A large store called the Stalls has 60 dealers, and right now there’s a 19th century French walnut buffet in there somewhere going for $4,500.

Want even more variety? How about 2,400 antique booths on the second weekend of each month. You’ll find them at the Atlanta Expos Centers near the airport.

Let’s see, what else? Traveling east of town you can find antiques in the tiny town of Rutledge. Then keep going to Madison, a town frozen in time, full of restored antebellum homes. This sounds like a good place to hunt for Victorian furniture. Check into Antiques on the Square. They’ve got an American walnut armoire, Renaissance Revival, circa 1870 for $1,795.

Have a look at the article here. There’s a whole lot more, and it’s an entertaining read even if you can’t make it to Atlanta.

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Nov 16

Here’s a column from the Ottawa Citizen, written by antiques expert John Sewell. The column is another one that gives appraisal of antiques to readers who I assume send in their inquiries with photographs.

Unfortunately, I can’t seem to find the photos that go with this column. That’s odd. Unless I’m overlooking a link, it’s left to our imagination to supply an image of the pieces.

One of them is intriguing enough for me to have linked to the article despite its visual deficiency. Someone named Ron describes a “piece of furniture” that his mother brought from Ireland in the late 19th century. Mother? Late 19th century? Wow.

We learn from Ron that it came from a castle in Ireland, is solid mahogany, has its original finish and original mirror, and measures 236 centimeters high by 90 centimeters wide. Evidently, however, Ron doesn’t have all his information straight. Because Mr. Sewell replies that it’s actually North American, not Irish, and made of walnut rather than mahogany. No, at this point we still don’t know what type of furniture it is, except that it does have a mirror. I assume Ron wasn’t mistaken about that.

Are you guessing dresser? In fact, it’s an étagère, the French name, Mr. Sewell explains, for an open-shelved piece of furniture used to display ornamental pieces, common in hallways of grand Victorian homes. The style is Renaissance Revival, dating to around 1865 to 1870, worth at least $1,500 in today’s soft, buyer’s market.

The mysteries of antique Victorian furniture. What about that Irish castle? Did this North American étagère make two trips across the Atlantic in the late 1800s?

Click here to see the article, but not the étagère. If you do find a photo, please let me know.

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Nov 10

I ran into a column written by a woman named Anne Gilbert. Anne is known as The Antique Detective, and her column appears in the publication ElmLeaves, which is part of the Sun-Times Group in the Chicago area. People send Anne photos of their antiques, in order to get her expert assessment of them.

This particular column contains some interesting pieces. There’s a desk that converts into a bed, c. 1916. There’s an Arts and Crafts table in the style of Gustav Stickley, which currently has little value because of its poor condition. But Anne reports that if it could be attributed to a specific maker like Stickley and then professionally refinished, it could fetch $5,000 at auction.

And for us? How about an antique Victorian parlor table, Renaissance revival, c. 1875. Excellent carvings. Shop value in the range of $800.

Have a look.

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