Archive for March, 2006

Vintage Advertising Now Sells Itself

Sunday, March 26th, 2006

The Columbus Dispatch posts this article by Ralph & Terry Kovel about how an old forms of advertising have become a very collectible items:

Vintage advertising, especially tin signs, is being treated like rare folk art by some collectors.

Hundreds of each sign were printed or lithographed on a tin backing and sent to stores to be displayed. The images were sometimes just the brand name or logo, but signs made before the 1920s featured detailed pictures of famous people, sites or colorful pictures of a product.

Oh Those Magic Carpets!

Saturday, March 25th, 2006

Vimla Patil of the Deccan Herald writes that rugs and carpets have become a huge global market:

Carpets and rugs are magical! They spawn dreams of flying to lands beyond the rainbow,” says Bini Malcolm, one of the world’s best known authorities on carpet weaves and designs, “These priceless art pieces have been woven for thousands of years in the heartlands of Central Asia and the Indian subcontinent.”

For more than forty years, Bini Malcolm has been fascinated by rug and carpet designs. She has travelled for decades through Central Asian and Oriental countries to trace the origins of the weaves and designs which continue to hold millions in their thrall.

Antique Maps & Prints, Week of March 27, 2006

Saturday, March 25th, 2006
Swann Galleries Auction

The big action this week is at Swann Galleries, on Thursday, March 30, in their sale entitled 100 Rare & Important Maps & Atlases. And indeed, it's a very good auction to follow if you are an antique map enthusiast.

Highlights of the atlas section include Blaeu's Nouvel Atlas, parts 1 & 2, published in 1650 (lot 2, estimate $15-25,000); Bowen's Complete System of Geography, including some important maps of the Americas, published London 1747, (lot 3, estimate $7-10,000); and the star of the show, John Senex's New General Atlas, with 34 double-page engraved maps, published London 1741 (lot 35, estimate $20-30,000). Also featured are David Burr's New Universal Atlas, 1836 (lot 5, estimate $4-6,000); Coven's & Mortier's Atlas Nouveau, 1733 (lot 11, estimate $5-7,500), and a number of American-published atlases, including works by Finley, Greenleaf, Johnson, Mitchell, and Colton, plus a selection of American state and county atlases.

Included in the individual map section is an extremely rare first state of Thomas Holme’s A Mapp of ye Improved Part of Pensilvania in American, Divided into Countyes, Townships and Lotts, one of the earliest accurate mappings of the region, London, circa 1687, (lot 81, $20-30,000). The sale also features Guillaume Delisle’s Carte de la Louisiane et du Cours du Mississipi, which is the first map to name Texas, 1718 (lot 57, $5-7,500); Allard's New Belgium, with an early view of New York City (lot 40, $4-6,000); a scarce early pocket map of Colorado, by Cram (lot 56, $1-1,500); a rare mid-19th century map of Florida, by J. Williams, 1837 (lot 61, $800-1,200); an unusual Arabic manuscript map of the Mediterranean, 17th or 18th century, no publisher, (lot 72, $4-6,000); Mitchell's important 1846 Map of Mexico, showing Texas, (lot 74, $5-7,500), and Nicollet and Fremont's Map of the Hydrographical Basin of the Upper Mississippi River, Washington, 1842, described by Bray as "one of the most important contributions ever made to American geography." The map section concludes with an important run of mid-19th century atlas and pocket maps of Texas.

New Ephemera Blog

It's unusual when a new blog is started that covers any facet of historical collectibles, so even though it is a little off topic, I wanted to mention an informative new ephemera blog that started recently. You can check it out at Ephemera: Exploring the World of Old Paper.

You Can't Throw A Stone In London Without Hitting An Antique Map Dealer

That's more or less what antique map dealer James Rutter says in a new article published in the Financial Times of London. Presumably quoting Mr. Rutter, the article states that "London is the hub of antique-map dealing, reportedly with more dealers than the whole of the U.S." That took me a bit by surprise, but maybe it's so. What do people think? Please feel free to post a comment. The story, by the way, focuses on the big rise in the value of antique maps in the last decade or so.

Upcoming Events

March 31-April 1. Fort Davis, and Alpine, TX, the Spring meeting of the Texas Map Society. There is a lot going on at this meeting, so check out online info if interested.



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Stamps and Anticipation

Friday, March 24th, 2006
I've waited all week to get back to my Mongolia collection only to find that I was out of time. There's just something about securing a chunk of time for organizing and researching new stamps. I have 5 new packets and I've only sneaked a peek at one of them so far. I could rush it and just go over a few stamps. But I won't.

I'd much rather save the time for being well spent than rushed. I think Deanna B explains the feeling of looking forward to new stamps best in her September blog about checking the mail for new stamp approvals.

-- James the Web guy

Hobby Turns into Thriving Business

Friday, March 24th, 2006

Mary Tallon of the Herald & Review reports on a couple who went to stained glass classes to delve into their artistic side only to start a successful business:

When Steve and Marilyn Trebacz signed up for stained-glass classes about 25 years ago, the couple thought they were embarking on a hobby that would allow them the chance to embrace their artistic sides.

Eventually, however, it led to both of them quitting their jobs and starting their own business.

“We were both working full time, and we were taking our things to work and selling it to our co-workers and doing stuff at night and craft shows, and finally we decided that we couldn’t work two full-time jobs,” Marilyn said.

If I lived in Indianapolis, IN…

Friday, March 24th, 2006
...I'd go check out the Amy Cutler exhibit at the Indianapolis Museum of Art Passage, 2005; Gouache on paper; 30 x 22 inches March 10 - June 4 Indianapolis Museum of Art 4000 Michigan Road Indianapolis IN 46208-3326 Tel: 317.923.1331...

Collecting Western Memorabilia

Thursday, March 23rd, 2006

Fran Devereux Smith of Western Horseman writes that there are still alot of valuable items out there to be found:

Bill Manns, who’s profiled in our April print feature (“Playing Cowboys with Authentic Gear”, has spent a lifetime collecting western memorabilia, much of which forms the basis for historic Old West books he creates at Zon Publishing. According to Bill, there still are western-collectible treasures to be found. “Look on eBay or Antiques Roadshow, and you realize how many things are still in people’s households, unbelievable numbers of things.”

However, not every old thing stuck in the attic is a valuable collectible. Nor is refurbishing a bona fide antique always a great idea. Here, Bill offers some guidelines for the budding western-memorabilia collector to use the next time he or she raids grandma’s attic or visits the local second-hand store.

Stamp Cancel Marks

Thursday, March 23rd, 2006
We were soaking off some stamps the other day and noticed that some of the stamps had large, almost defacing cancel marks on them. Obviously, their purpose is to mark the stamp as having been used. But one would think that postal service would do their best not to destroy any aesthetic value of the stamp(s).

We're not talking about just one or two stamps either. It seems that most of the stamps from Christmas letters had this problem. I don't mean to harp on the postal workers. Certainly, they have plenty to do without worrying about lightly canceling stamps. But with all the technology available today, it would seem that less destructive ways of canceling stamps would exist. Do we really need large black marks to prevent the possibility of someone reusing postage stamps? I've heard that some offices are using spray on cancels but have yet to see any in my little town.

-- James the Web guy