For some, collecting corkscrews may seem quite peculiar. Some would even note that these items look pretty much the same, while some would even say that corkscrews do not even possess aesthetical appeal. Anyone can be an avid corkscrew collector. As with any other collectable, one collector’s preference might differ from another. One could decide to collect corkscrews with a particular mechanism, while others might look at the place of origin or age of a particular corkscrew. Peculiar or not, collecting these curiosities may be a means of preserving a small part of the history of humankind and its tools.
Author: Learn Antiques Team
Rising in inverse ratio to the decline in classic English furniture has been the interest in 20th century […]
A pair of engravings after Pieter Bruegel the Elder (c.1525-69) sold for more than six-times estimate at auction […]
Musical manuscript and portrait on song in salerooms. Extracted from Antiques Trade Gazette | Anne Crane Mozart was […]
Consigned from a scholarly collector in New Zealand, a pair of relief-carved ivory panels was the among the […]
Postcards, as we know them today, could have been inspired by the picture envelopes in which cards were sent. These envelopes would have comics, pictures of the season or holidays, patriotic pictures and even musical notes. John P. Charlton was the first person to copyright a postcard in the United States in 1861. Hymen L. Lipman bought Charlton’s copyright and began reissuing these postcards in 1870. Postcard collecting or deltiology came about shortly after the first picture postcards appeared. People bought postcards not only to send messages but also to add to their collection. One could also visit museums that feature postcards or find them in auction houses and antique stores.
Auction house Sotheby’s has won its case against the former business partner of Old Master picture dealer Mark […]
A selection of books relating to conjuring dating back to the 17th century is one of the features […]
After a 17-minute bidding battle, a Chinese blue and white bottle vase with a Daoguang (1820-50) six-character seal […]
A Japanese Meiji period shibayama inlaid lacquer shodana will feature in the Asian works of art section of […]
A pair of boots owned by Napoleon which were worn by him during his exile on the island […]
In a large collection of fountain pens offered at Cornish auction house Barbara Kirk (15% buyer’s premium) most […]
In the third multi-million-pound sale this year of a rediscovered Old Master at a provincial French auction house, […]
A pair of Castelli maiolica plaques will feature in Artcurial’s mixed-discipline sale of furniture and works of art […]
Part toy, part biscuit tin, the crossover appeal of a 1929 Huntley & Palmers product helped it to […]
Bruneau closes the year with a December 14 sale of Comics and Toys, for which Travis Landry, its […]
Toys have always been integral to the development of children. This is true today as it was in the countless generations before us. For as long as there are children, there would be playing and, by extension, toys. Toys, however, are not the exclusive province of children. Even as adults, people still find them fascinating, perhaps no longer as playthings but as tokens from childhood, nostalgia pieces, memorabilia, and even collectables. In fact, toys from bygone days can command very hefty prices. While people did collect toys before, the toy market now actively markets to adult buyers. Plus, this century saw an increasing demand for antique and vintage toys.
On January 11-12 the specialist doll auction firm Theriault’s will be offering the collection of an American heiress, […]