HOW TO DISPLAY YOUR COLLECTIONS
Now that we have finished our Spring cleaning or at least started we need to decide how best to display our favorite things; not just for decorating and viewing by others, but for our own enjoyment whenever we look at them. I found a very interesting article about using your collection in your decorating plans. So read and start thinking about how you too can decorate with your collectibles
Making method in their menageries
Whether it's old toys, fountain pens or seashells, don't keep your collection in a closet or under the bed. But choosing how to display them is an art.
By ELIZABETH BETTENDORF Published April 21, 2006
TAMPA - Jo Apthorp's collection of vintage silver is a sight to behold: Her lovely and obsolete egg coddlers, continental baby spoons and silver tea sets preserve a lost era that Apthorp, a sixth-generation Tampa resident, can still recall. "Sunday dinner meant fresh roses, linen, silver, and afterward, hymns at the piano with my grandfather," said Apthorp, whose family lived in the Lake Thonotosassa area and on Davis Islands. "It took a lot of work and wouldn't be possible today, but those meals were so enjoyable. I will remember them for the rest of my life."
Apthorp, an interior decorator who collects antique musical instruments and just about everything else, displays her collections throughout the house. The silver, including precious Orange Blossom flatware, is relegated to the room where it might "historically have been used in the past.'' That means the dining room, where she spreads out her prized pieces with casual grace: a beautiful orchid in her grandfather's old silver horse show bowl, baby utensils on an antique high chair. "As if people were really about to sit down and eat," she explained.
Displaying cherished collections is an art form, one that design experts like Apthorp just get intuitively. But for the rest of us, it's not so easy. Many collections - old toys, fountain pens, Depression glass, miniature sailboats - take a lifetime to acquire. Amassing alike objects is one thing. Bringing them to life in a home, whether in glass cabinets or on built-in shelving, is another.
"I would say you have to edit, pick and choose what you bring out so that you don't clutter up the space and you appreciate what you have," said Karen Brown, a Tampa Bay interior designer whose clients collect everything from bottles to family photos to pillboxes. "You want a nice composition, and for things to relate to each other. Put the rest in closets or get rid of it.
"Otherwise, dusting is a nightmare." ("This was the part that really caught my eye". missylol)
Brown has collected unusual artwork during her travels, including watercolors and oils that reflect the places she's visited. The framed pictures cover the entire wall of her stairwell in "a random arrangement." An antique postcard collection she acquired in bulk now wallpapers her bathroom, with the more cherished objects in the foreground. "Now I see them much more frequently than if I had left them in boxes," she said.
In House Beautiful's Collections on Display, a book devoted to decorating with favorite objects, author Elaine Louie offers tips on creating drama with treasured objects. Collections, she said, can be displayed on walls, tabletops, mantelpieces, shelves, cabinets, even in drawers.
She recommends arranging focal points, particularly when displaying collections on tabletops, and creating a "strand of connective tissue," a relationship between collectibles arranged on a tabletop or mantel, for example.
Among her tips:
-- Isolate what's in the center and point out the levels of importance. What's highest, biggest and most fascinating is clearly the most important and goes in the center.
-- When you have lots of little things, keep them at a low angle or on a low table.
-- As you group the objects, consider height, rhythm, variation and silhouettes.
-- Think of a physical landscape with mountains and valleys. Put the flattest, smallest pieces on the perimeter. These are the supporting pieces to the central objects.
-- Natural items such as stones, seashells and fossils are obvious collectibles and are gathered by children and adults. One way to display them on a table is to center the display with a shell-framed mirror, a piece of art made of shells, or a gigantic seashell.
Apthorp has stopped acquiring items for her collections because she's run out of space, even though she does give things to her grown daughter. Still, she said, having your prized collections around you makes life interesting "and brings history so close I can sometimes feel it."
She displays her antique musical instruments around the dining room to create a feeling that it's possible to break into song once the last plate has been cleared. She uses all her silver, including her egg coddlers, which are festooned with birds. Her 1905 Orange Blossom silver is a regular staple at dinner parties.
As for all the good wedding silver you were hoarding, stop waiting for company or a holiday to bring out the best. Create a collection with what you already have by dusting it off and incorporating it into everyday entertaining. "Use your stuff and live!" Apthorp said. "It's so much more fun that way."
[Last modified April 20, 2006, 08:20:11]
Wednesday, May 17, 2006
Sunday, May 07, 2006
ANTIQUE OR COLLECTIBLE? HOW DO YOU KNOW?
I recently had a friend ask me to see what something was worth on eBay. She had inherited some things from a grandmother and assumed that because they were "old" that they were antiques and therefore valuable. Imagine her disappointment when I did find a couple of the items she has on eBay, with a price well below what she had thought it would be. This started us talking about what makes something an antique and not a collectible and what makes it valuable. The following article seems to address this issue. If you have any thoughts on this please add them in the comments.
Antiques - When Is An Object Considered An Antique And Not A Collectible?
By Peter Lim
It has always been a puzzle to me when an object, somewhat aged, can be termed an antique.
Must it be really very old- perhaps in excess of 100 years to be called an antique? Or just when can we call an object an antique?
After all, we very loosely use the term antique for any object that has lived past its popularity. A lady's coach handbag that was in vogue in summer, is now called an antique in winter!
In the days of the British Empire where the British had their conquests in far away worlds and colonised many territories, they left behind many legacies of worth. British systems of government, british designs and most of all british products and goods which now can rightly be called antiques and their systems "antiquated" at this time. Thus when I discovered a really old looking lock with the logo of the maker stamped onto it and marked "Warranted Best English Made" and " Warranted Secure" amongst some old belongings inherited from my deceased father who lived through the colonial period, I thought the lock must really be an antique.
So when is an antique really an antique?
The definition of antique varies from location to location, product to product and year to year.
In any case, universal common definitions of antiques adopted worldwide consider an item which is at least 75 years old and has unique features to enable it to be collected or kept as desirable due to it being rare, or useful is considered an antique.
Generally, cars are considered antiques in the U.S. if they are older than 25 years. In Kansas, however, I learnt that cars are eligible for an antique tag after 30 years. Guitars are only considered vintage if they were made before 1972. In the UK anything over 75 years old generally qualifies as an antique. A car is known as a collectible "classic" rather than an antique after 25 years.
There is an understood line between antiques and collectibles in the United States as well. An item is tagged as an antique by most reliable commercial antique dealers if it is more than 100 years old, even though the universal common understanding is 75 years, and anything less than 100 years is called a collectible. It is not always the antiques that carries a higher price tag. Collectibles can be worth many times that of an antique. It all depends on the eyes of the beholder.
Peter Lim is a Certified Financial Planner. For more interesting details about antiques, and how to buy and sell antiques and collectibles, visit his website on Antique Resources at http://antique-classics.revenuemonitor.biz/.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Peter_Lim
I recently had a friend ask me to see what something was worth on eBay. She had inherited some things from a grandmother and assumed that because they were "old" that they were antiques and therefore valuable. Imagine her disappointment when I did find a couple of the items she has on eBay, with a price well below what she had thought it would be. This started us talking about what makes something an antique and not a collectible and what makes it valuable. The following article seems to address this issue. If you have any thoughts on this please add them in the comments.
Antiques - When Is An Object Considered An Antique And Not A Collectible?
By Peter Lim
It has always been a puzzle to me when an object, somewhat aged, can be termed an antique.
Must it be really very old- perhaps in excess of 100 years to be called an antique? Or just when can we call an object an antique?
After all, we very loosely use the term antique for any object that has lived past its popularity. A lady's coach handbag that was in vogue in summer, is now called an antique in winter!
In the days of the British Empire where the British had their conquests in far away worlds and colonised many territories, they left behind many legacies of worth. British systems of government, british designs and most of all british products and goods which now can rightly be called antiques and their systems "antiquated" at this time. Thus when I discovered a really old looking lock with the logo of the maker stamped onto it and marked "Warranted Best English Made" and " Warranted Secure" amongst some old belongings inherited from my deceased father who lived through the colonial period, I thought the lock must really be an antique.
So when is an antique really an antique?
The definition of antique varies from location to location, product to product and year to year.
In any case, universal common definitions of antiques adopted worldwide consider an item which is at least 75 years old and has unique features to enable it to be collected or kept as desirable due to it being rare, or useful is considered an antique.
Generally, cars are considered antiques in the U.S. if they are older than 25 years. In Kansas, however, I learnt that cars are eligible for an antique tag after 30 years. Guitars are only considered vintage if they were made before 1972. In the UK anything over 75 years old generally qualifies as an antique. A car is known as a collectible "classic" rather than an antique after 25 years.
There is an understood line between antiques and collectibles in the United States as well. An item is tagged as an antique by most reliable commercial antique dealers if it is more than 100 years old, even though the universal common understanding is 75 years, and anything less than 100 years is called a collectible. It is not always the antiques that carries a higher price tag. Collectibles can be worth many times that of an antique. It all depends on the eyes of the beholder.
Peter Lim is a Certified Financial Planner. For more interesting details about antiques, and how to buy and sell antiques and collectibles, visit his website on Antique Resources at http://antique-classics.revenuemonitor.biz/.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Peter_Lim
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