Camille Buda and Matt King of Sandwich, Mass.,
had a hand blown Sandwich glass fluted toilet
water bottle in an ethereal blue.
:The larger than usual crowd waited eagerly for
the opening of the 41st annual Holliston Antiques Show,
and then surged into the high school gymnasium where
they rushed the dealers who awaited them. Energy
generated energy and buying began briskly. Good sales
were made over both days, February 21 and 22.
One of the more eye-catching displays was mounted by
William Beaupre of Barre, Mass., who showed some of his
handbags, heads and birdhouses he makes from vintage
jewelry. The quirky pieces piqued wide interest and
sales were healthy.
Milton, Vt., dealer Partridge Hollow sold early and
easily: chocolate molds, vintage kitchen utensils, white
ironstone and sterling such as a teaset, a set of spoons
and serving pieces.
The Fry Antiques booth was busy throughout the show.
The Elmira, N.Y., vintage toy dealer showed every
imaginable toy and game. The star was a 15¾-inch white
mohair Steiff bear.
Theresa Fleurent of Belchertown, Mass., reported good
sales. She filled her booth with appealing country
smalls: wood, glass and ceramics, such as the
Staffordshire platter marked Cyprus and JRB, and buyers
flew to her. She also offered a glamorous white ostrich
feather fan.
Sally Fuller of Acton, Mass., was also pleased and
had good sales early in the show: an interesting blue
and white tile depicting the "Old Hancock House, erected
1737 and demolished 1863," the Boston residence of John
Hancock, was one sale.
By noon of the first day, Woonsocket, R.I., dealers,
the Reinhardts, reported 21 sales from their display of
vintage kitchen tools. They also displayed a selection
of Massachusetts bottles that caught many eyes and a
substantial Vauxhall automobile medical kit made in
England in the 1930s.
George and Jackie Bernheimer of Moonstone Antiques,
Mansfield, Mass., had their reliable selection of
mouthwatering jewelry, including a pair of deep green
diamond earrings. Of great interest was an exceptional
Apache olla, woven with dogs and other figures, which
was sold. They also brought along a good selection of
children's moccasins, an Iroquois mask and some
noteworthy arrowheads.
William Beaupre, Barre, Mass.
Room settings in the booth of Bristol, R.I., gallery The
Center Chimney were exceptionally inviting. The booth
was set out with a fine pair of Chippendale side chairs,
an easy chair, a sofa table and a good green blanket
chest, accented by blue Canton ware, yellowware and
other glass and pottery.
Vintage photos of area sites and events drew a steady
stream of visitors to the booth of Patricia Carnegie
Antiques of Upton, Mass. A framed 1912 stock certificate
of the Spring House on Block Island was of interest
along with 1902 charts of the Charles River Valley.
Nicely framed fish prints culled ready sales.
A National Biscuit Company display rack was sold and
being hauled out of the booth of Farmer's Village,
Attleborough, Mass. The booth also had a birdhouse with
balconies evocative of Southern architecture. Jewelry
also sold.
Diane DeVolder of Ontario, N.Y., sold a fine bandbox
with Massachusetts provenance; Rochester, N.Y., dealer
Sandra Wilson sold sterling silver with great results.
Anita and Ed Sweeney of Auburn, Mass., had enviable
vintage dresses and vintage jewelry and evening bags for
accessorizing. Their selection of medals was impressive
and drew interest. Sterling, porcelain and linens
rounded out the selection.
Local fine art dealer Peter Feldman of Jonah Fine Art
of Holliston, was busy buying and selling in and out of
his booth. He showed works such as "Rocks at Scituate"
by Marilyn Powers, "Crested Honeycreeper" by Wayne E.
Smith and a view of Mount Chocorua, N.H., by Giragos Der
Garabedian. Feldman was pleased to exhibit at the show;
said he made some good contacts and had several sales.
Woven silk Stevensgraphs in the booth of Naugatuck,
Conn., dealer Newell Antiques included the curious, "The
Lady Godiva Procession." There was also a group of
miniature portraits along with Asian pieces, such as
netsuke and ivory figures, a pair of famille rose
parrots from the 1920s and several Chinese earthenware
funerary urns.
Jonah Fine Art, Holliston, Mass.
The selections were eclectic in the booth of Wayland,
Mass., dealer Bette Ann Weiner, who operates as One Call
Organizer. A Hardin Line oak settee and an oak National
file cabinet stood with a cased mahjong set,
The
Foxy Grandpa , one of The Stump Books and
daguerreotypes. Weiner also offered a selection of
Roseville pottery, a Nineteenth Century hair crimper and
other smalls. She made sales early of pottery, jewelry
and silver.
Two Edison phonographs and a stack of records were on
offer from Verona, N.J., dealer A Touch of Glass. The
booth had a colorful display of vintage Christmas
ornaments and art pottery, including a piece by Betty
Harrington for Ceramic Arts Studio of Madison, Wis. Gold
coins, toys and hat pins were sold along with a work by
Mabel Lucy Atwell.
Proprietor Jerry Arnold of Whistle Stop of Dover,
Mass., was pleased to report, "Smalls are drifting out
at a reasonable pace." He shared a booth with James A.
Turbayne of Needham, Mass., who restores copper diving
helmets. Together they filled the space with a diverse
selection that ranged from a crystal radio and a
photography collection, including the enlarger, that had
belonged to Lawrence T. Welsh, a late photographer for
the Boston Globe , to linens, a nice blanket
chest and pens.
Dealer Sam Petkov was a radioman in World War II, and
he made a career of collecting radios. He carved out a
space for his radios in the booth where he and his wife
had set up an inviting display of jewelry that was
selling rapidly. He showed the most popular radio in
World War II, a Zenith Transoceanic L 600 with seven
push buttons. It attracted the interest of a young man
headed to Memorial University in St Johns, Newfoundland,
to study marine science, who recognized the radio and
was enthralled with it. The Petkovs have exhibited at
Holliston since the beginning.
Judy Allman, Naples, Fla., made early sales,
including a Northwest Coast Dog Rib game bag, but still
had some fine offerings later in the day that included
some intriguing black and white watercolor portraits,
silhouettes and a desirable pair of ivory clothes
brushes.
JSD Antiques, Durham, N.H.
Antique marbles of clay, glass, stoneware, salt glaze
and other ceramics made an arresting display in the
booth of Reflexions of Salem, Mass. They were set out in
ceramic reagent trays that were made by the Coors
Porcelain Co. during Prohibition when not a lot of
brewing was taking place. The booth was filled with
pipes, games and political pins, all of which were well
received.
Choice ceramics, glass and pewter from Antique Cellar
of Easthampton, Mass., included a Clewes feather edge
platter and a Staffordshire Davenport wash basin and jug
in the Friburg pattern.
A stoneware churn and a stoneware glazed jug or flask
were offered by Longmeddowe Antiques in Monson, Mass.,
who also offered a nice figured birch table, treenware
and a trencher and two Wilton, N.H., pantry boxes.
Wayside Antiques of Marlborough, Mass., used a
Sunshine Biscuit display rack to arrange their wares,
which included an antique wicker doll carriage filled
with Steiff bears, stoneware and yellowware, miniature
Toby jugs and mocha pitchers, a Queen Anne looking glass
and some fine framed toile prints.
Janice Andrews and Jean Peterson of Douglas, Mass.,
filled their booth with mellow wood in the way of
treenware, tool boxes and benches, a brown ware jug, a
child's mug with chickens and a gray painted desk from
an area family.
A four-piece, red and white Staffordshire dresser set
made by Dudson, Wilcox and Till, Ltd, and some ruby
glass beckoned from the booth of K and B Enterprises of
South Bethlehem, N.Y. There was also an extensive 1953
dinner service in the Autumn Leaf pattern made by Hall
China and sold by the Jewel Tea Company, complete with
catalog.
Camille Buda and Matt King of Sandwich, Mass., had
some fine glass, including elegant violet hued bottles.
They also showed a Steigel type flip glass etched with a
tulip, mercury glass, redware and pewter and some very
good redware, along with an Eighteenth Century pine
table with cut corners, textiles and lusterware.
Steiff animals from Wayside Antiques,
Marlborough, Mass.
Bright red sold tags were stark against the largely
white wares for sale from Twig and Berries Antiques of
Westfield, Mass. A trio of white ironstone pitchers and
a trio of cement finials were marked sold; others were
under discussion. A vignette of architectural elements,
a trellis and a plant stand mixed with an early iron
candlestand underwent careful inspection and sales were
made again.
Pewter and brass in the booth of Kay Baker's Antiques
of Amherst, Mass., competed with badges, including an
English Yeomanry example, a framed early English toile
and an English gentleman's saw for dovetailing and
ceramics.
Local Holliston dealer Candleglow Antiques had a late
Eighteenth Century fir tripod stand with an interesting
construction, several good country chests and a diorama
of the tug boat Bassens at LaRochelle, France,
that was made at Newcastle in 1917.
Chelsea Hill Antiques of Hampton, Conn., set up the
booth in an extended room arrangement and had a good
show. A 96-inch Pennsylvania tall clock by Jacob Smith
of Lancaster was sold. Four painted side chairs, circa
1820–30, came from a house in Willimantic, Conn., and
attracted much attention.
Allman Promotions has managed the Holliston show for
31 of its 41 years. It has added a new show, Old Naples
Antiques Show, January 30–31, 2010, at St Anne's Jubilee
Center in Naples, Fla. For information, 315-686-5789 or
www.AllmanPromotions.com .