White ironstone and Staffordshire ceramics
predominated at the booth of Gray Goose
Antiques, where sold stickers appeared minutes
into the show.
:One would have had to work at it to come away
from the February 24 and 25 Holliston Antiques Show
empty handed. For four decades, the show has attracted a
loyal following of dealers and collectors and this
year's event was no exception. Dealers and collectors
alike expressed pleasure at the results — again and
again. Some 125 dealers set up booths in the gym at the
Holliston High School and a healthy crowd eagerly
awaited the 40th annual opening bell.
The show was a serendipitous combination of diverse
dealers and merchandise and a diverse audience.
Enthusiasm levels were high on both sides and smiles and
sold stickers prevailed.
When we stopped by the Gray Goose booth about 15
minutes into the show, dealer Jamie Buchanan was already
packing up a client's purchases. The Poland, N.Y.,
dealer arranged an enticing assortment of ironstone and
Staffordshire by color — white. Attleborough, Mass.,
dealer Joyce H. Charbonneau showed a range of cloisonné
and some silver plate. The most intriguing objects for
one visitor were the toys she had for sale: a tin
alphabet game made in 1917 by Foxy Toys of Berea, Ohio,
retained the wood letters and a large tin school bus
added vibrant color to the display.
JSD Antiques of Durham, N.H., had a cabinet full of
desirable ivory figures that attracted a crowd of highly
focused shoppers. An array of pre-Columbian figures
alongside a Chinese Liang zhu ceremonial ax attracted
scholarly buyers. Song dynasty tea bowls were impressive
and made for easy packing. Just to throw buyers off,
dealer Jim Dolph threw in some blue Wedgwood Jasperware
among the Imari and Peking glass. It, too, was of
interest. Choice jade snuff bottles were displayed in a
fitted case and invited lots of attention.
Ventura Collections showed a bible belonging to
a Civil War soldier, period family
daguerreotypes and related documentation. Bob
Ventura held some of the items for this photo.
Ed and Carol Correia, who operate as Under the Pine
Antiques of Sterling, Conn., had a couple of Hoosier
cabinets with enormous appeal to those in the buying
audiences who were furnishing homes.
It was hard to even get near the jewelry dealers.
Maria L. Carro, who deals as Cache Maria, hung
glittering vintage costume jewelry necklaces across her
booth and was rewarded with a full house.
Bob Ventura of Ventura Collections of Middleborough,
Mass., had a small Nineteenth Century bible that
belonged originally to J. Frank Pope of Milton, Mass.
Pope served in the 13th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry
and was taken prisoner at Gettysburg and later released.
The bible was accompanied by documentation and a pair of
daguerreotype portraits of a husband and wife — or a
brother and sister, although Ventura and most other
observers leaned toward the married couple — with the
inset likeness of a young Civil War soldier in a double
gutta percha case. Ventura offered other well-documented
daguerreotypes that drew clusters of students and
scholars alike.
Pride of place in the booth of Candleglow
Antiques was a mid-Nineteenth Century East Asian
water buffalo horn that was bound neatly in
brass.
Eight 1950s-style oak chairs were offered by Reflections
in Time Antiques of Groton, Mass. Two pretty patchwork
quilts folded neatly on them were unfolded and refolded
several times by interested buyers.
From Barre, Mass., Village Green Antiques had a set
of four grain painted and stenciled chairs with caned
seats. They showed stoneware, pine furniture and a set
of steps that was home to all manner of antique cast
iron skillets.
Bob Carnegie of Upton, Mass., showed highly colored
framed antique board games and maps. An evocative World
War II poster with an image of a soulful-looking spaniel
resting his head on a sailor's uniform and the caption,
"Because somebody talked…." came from a Milford, Mass.,
collection. The poster, Carnegie explained, incorporated
the gold star flag given to families who lost members in
the war. It was part of the collection of Mary Comba,
whose glamorous 1930s photograph was also for sale.
Carnegie also had vintage aerial views by photographer
Walter R. Merryman of Haverhill, Mass., that included a
1930s image of Marblehead Harbor, Mass.
John B. White and Warren A. Brown of The Center
Chimney in Bristol, R.I., had some fine furniture for
sale, ranging from a nice easy chair on claw and ball
feet, a bombe chest and an elegant tea table to a
dressing mirror, brass and an array of small decorative
objects that raced out of the booth to new homes.
Many people of a certain age perfected their reading
skills with Dick and Jane, and, of course, Spot. The
Scrapbook, Vincent and Barbara Caravella's antique print
and map shop in Essex, Mass., offered two large Dick and
Jane prints, one of which included Spot, that stopped
many in their tracks. Speaking after the show, Barbara
Caravella said she wished she had a dollar for everyone
who inquired about Dick and Jane. The Scrapbook also
offered some compelling terrestrial and celestial maps.
Vincent Caravella provided us with information about the
existence of the growing and eminently desirable website
for Essex antiques dealers, www.essexada.com.
Wayside Antiques in Marlborough, Mass., had a
1907 edition of Ozma of Oz.
Wayside Antiques, a group shop in Marlborough, Mass.,
showed country antiques in the way of mochaware,
stoneware, tole work, baskets and furniture. One piece
de resistance was the 1907 edition of
Ozma of Oz
that was printed and distributed as a prize by the
Worcester Telegram and Gazette and bears a page
attesting to that.
Roger Cooley of Harrisburg, Penn., says he enjoys
coming to the Boston area — even in February. He
assembled a wide display of uniformed soldiers,
warriors, even a Boy Scout, representing centuries.
Three illuminated Victorian hall lamps with glass
shades of red, pink and orange festooned a pole in the
booth of Greenhouse Antiques of Scituate, Mass., which
specializes in lamps and lighting, clocks and watches
and Asian objects. Proprietor Irving R. Versoy has
traded in lamps and clocks for 40 years and had some
nice parlor lamps, glass shades and mantel clocks.
Candleglow Antiques in Holliston did not have too far
to travel. The dealer showed prints, a pair of ceramic
poodles, Quimper, textiles, small furniture, candle
molds and an interesting East Asian water buffalo horn
with brass trim.
The booth of Dottie & Cuto's Antiques had fine
ceramics, early glass and lighting and the dealers were
busy making sales of a variety of items brought with
them from Wentworth, N.H.
Those in search of desirable smalls and ceramics
created consistently heavy traffic at the booth of Matt
King and Camille Buda from Marshfield and Scituate,
Mass. They offered the unusual, like the two dainty
Staffordshire inkwells in the form of white dogs with
black spots and pinkish muzzles for sale singly or as a
pair.
Among the 1950s glass, tools and jewelry offered
by Jantiques of Belchertown, Mass., was a
Russian glass vase identified as having been
made by Baijas.
Fry's Antiques of Elmira, N.Y., did the show for the
first time. The array of vintage toys was simply
stunning. Homestead House of Madison, N.Y., had
something for every holiday: vintage jack-o-lanterns,
toy polar bears, Christmas figures and decorations,
old-fashioned tree stands and portraits.
Raven's Way Antiques of North Kingstown, R.I.,
brought an owl decoy by Frank Finney, as well as bird
and duck decoys and highly colored fish decoys. The
booth also had a shining selection of brass plumb bobs,
turn of the Twentieth Century hammers, planes and
wrenches. The booth was supplemented by woodenware and
candle molds, and more decoys. A blowfish sculpture by
Richard Hatfield commanded a lot of attention. Hatfield,
who usually creates kinetic art, said the blowfish was
his first fish.
Images of the Past, Abbeville, S.C., deals in
paintings, and M.V. Schedlbauer of North New Salem,
Mass., sells furniture and decorations. The two dealers
occupied booths across from one another, situated in the
entrance passageway. Arriving visitors seemed to brush
by in their haste to get into the show. But, their
location paid off in spades. Buyers leaving the show
were much more relaxed, some nearly dragging their feet,
not wanting to have missed anything. The two dealers and
the nearby Chelsea Hill Antiques from Hampden, Conn.,
had lots of activity as we exited the show.
Speaking by telephone several days after the show,
show manager Stephen Allman said he had more booth
commitments for next year's show than was usual. The
show is a fundraiser for the Holliston Scholarship
Foundation, which last year awarded about $40,000 to
Holliston High School seniors headed to four-year
institutions.
For information, 315-686-5789 or
www.AllmanPromotions.com.