Friday, August 17, 2007

YOU NEVER KNOW WHEN YOU WILL FIND SOMETHING TO USE


When I go to the grocery store, I always stop at the racks that hold all of these free magazines.
Most are about real estate or cars and trucks. There are ones about parenting, community college classes, local casinos, different local community weekly news, shopping and classified ads and some New Age ones. But the other day I found something new that caught my eye. It was called Today's VINTAGE Magazine, and it was Vol.1, Issue 1. I grabbed it and took it home to peruse immediately.

The Publisher and Editors had been associated with the Antique & Collectables Newsmagazine
and Antique Journal. When the company closed the California offices and moved operations back to Wisconsin, they had a chance to look around and decide what to do. Fortunately for us in California, they decided that communications was their business. So they decided that they could not "think of a better way to support the greening of America than by educating and encouraging people to research and use antiques and vintage items in their daily lives".

I am using this post in my blog to congratulate Today's VINTAGE Magazine for remaining in California and for creating this very informative magazine. You can visit them at their website which they say is still a work in progress; but it already has a lot for all.

One of the articles that I really liked and found helpful was one written by Angela Moore, Editor.

25 WAYS to USE VINTAGE ITEMS

Find yourself with family heirlooms, hand-me-down furniture, or a random collection from Uncle Fred's closet? Feel like you just can't part with Great-Grandma's handkerchiefs, but don't know just what to do with them? Truly valuable antique items should be displayed with the proper care and reverence, but there are many ways to incorporate collectibles, vintage pieces and found objects into your modern décor..

1. Sew pretty handkerchiefs together to create pillows, table skirts, or window valances.
2. Create a collage from old postcards or love letters hang them in antique picture frames.
3. Break up old dishes and china, and use the pieces to create mosaic designs on coasters, flower pots, wall plaques, memorials and tabletops.
4. Fill a clear vase or bowl with a collection of small items, like buttons, marbles, matchbooks or costume jewelry, and display on a dining table or end table.
5. Convert an old dresser into a computer desk by removing the drawers and inside framing, then attaching a prefabricated keyboard underneath the top.

To see the rest of the 25 Ways, go to the website and look for this article under Vintage Decorating














Tuesday, July 17, 2007

COLLECTIBLE vs COLLECTION ---WHAT IS THE VALUE TO YOU?


My husband and I were having a discussion the other day about how one really knew the value of ones's collections. He has a collection of coins that he has had from when he was a child; one coin he is particularly proud of is a 1950 Denver nickel. So is the value what you, the owner of the item, place on it and how do you know that if you take it to someone for appraisal, you will get a correct value. I remember a collection of baseball cards that I had inherited and had no idea of the value. Someone who was more an acquaintance rather than a friend told me he didn't think that they were worth much. He would give me $50 for all of them. Now some 20 years later, I know that they had more value than that. It didn't help to find out later that he actually collected baseball cards himself.

So my thoughts to share with you this time is to realize that most things we have around have value to us personally, but if you have something that you think might have dollar value; please find a reputable individual or company to appraise the item for you.

The following info that I found on the internet addresses this issue quite well.

One Man's Junk is Another Man's Treasure
From Carrie Conaway, Associate Editor of the Regional Review
Jun 11 2004

What distinguishes a collectible from ordinary rubbish is not always clear. Nonetheless, there are two primary characteristics that collectible items share: desirability and rarity.

DESIRABILITY Whether it is destined for a museum or a private collection, to be collectible, an item must be desirable to someone other than the collector. So, your seventh-grade love letters probably won't qualify, unless you become famous (or notorious). But what makes something desirable?

CONDITION Condition is so important that third-party grading services have sprung up in some collecting areas to grade and validate the quality of items. The coin collecting market is one of the best-developed examples, with 70 possible grades of coin in the Sheldon Numerical Grading System.

AESTHETICS Form, color, size and materials also matter for desirability, although these preferences tend to change with popular tastes. For instance, very large items historically were not viewed as popular collectibles because of the difficulty of storing them, but this has been changing in recent years. Rudy Franchi, a vintage movie poster dealer and appraiser on Antiques Roadshow, points out, "The typical movie poster is 27 by 40 or 41 inches and is known as a 'one-sheet'. The market for larger movie posters used to languish, but people are now living in bigger homes, and so they are able to display bigger things. Now there's a big fad in buying the larger sizes, known as 'six-sheets,' that are 81 by 81 inches, as well as foreign posters, which are often larger."

RARITY "There are some books that are absolutely fabulous literature, but there are too many of then," says Ken Gloss, proprietor of the Brattle Book Shop in Boston. "For instance, Shakespeare, next to the Bible, is the most commonly printed literature in the English language. It's wonderful stuff, but there are millions and millions of them so they're not worth much. You're looking for the one that's a little more unusual, that you don't see all the time." Items can be rare for several reasons: Some items are simply uncommon and irreproducible. Among those who collect materials about signers of the Declaration of Independence, for instance, the autograph of the all-but-unknown Thomas Lynch or Button Gwinnett is worth far more than the John Hancock of, say, John Hancock.

In many cases, what people collect is only in short supply because they define their collecting area so narrowly. But sometimes rarity is created by the manufacturer. In the 1980s, the Swatch Group created a frenzy by selectively releasing Swatch designs to a limited number of distributors, such that every retailer had a different selection, and by limiting sales to one per person. Swatch also launched an intensive promotional campaign touting their watches as a good investment. Swatch Fever spiked, and sales in the U.S. alone increased from $3 million in 1983 to $200 million in 1987. The same strategy applied to anything manufactured in limited edition, such as Franklin Mint plates, Beanie Babies or Precious Moments figurines.

On the other hand, it can't be too rare. "If there's only one of something, there can only be one collector," points out David Wood, curator of the Concord Museum in Concord, Massachusetts. "What fires people up is things that are relative common, so that you can get a complete collection of it in every form and every style." These sorts of items are easier to find at antique stores, flea markets, and garage sales, adding to the serendipity of the collecting experience and fueling the motivation of the devoted collector to keep searching.

This article, a portion of "Objects of Desire", is courtesy of the Regional Review, published by the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. The article in its entirety, can be found on the: http://www.bos.frb.org/economic/nerr/rr2004/q1/objects.pdf

Stay Collected!

Monday, June 18, 2007

Baseball Card Collecting---A History

After having a couple conversations with people after making my post on LOL COLLECTIONS about baseball and baseball card collecting; I realized that there are a lot of people who don't realize people do actually save/collect baseball cards and have for a long time.

Therefore I went on a search mission on the internet to find out about the history of baseball card collecting. As always, I started with Google. I do believe that I could spend days searching and researching on the Internet. One lead always takes you to another.

I found a great History of Baseball Card Collecting that I thought was a perfect addition to my previous post on here. Hope that you will enjoy reading it.

http://www.geocities.com/chrisstufflestreet/history.html

Stay Collected.


Friday, June 15, 2007

BASEBALL! ---- Who knew that I would become a FAN

I can remember when I was in high school and we were allowed to listen to the World Series game on the radio, perhaps because our teacher/study-hall advisor was a baseball fan to the max. It was fun because we felt like we were skipping school and we would divide into sides for whomever was in the WS.

But as far as regular season went, I thought that listening to baseball on the radio was boring personified. Even after we got television, it still seemed boring to watch as well as listen to a baseball game.

But ten years ago, something magical happened. I was attending a National Conference on Aging in San Diego. At that time, the San Diego Padres were playing in Qualcomm Stadium and I had a friend who loved the Chicago Cubs. Well, she talked some of us into riding the trolley to Qualcomm and watching the Cubs play the Padres. The first time I had ever attended a live baseball game in a real baseball stadium. Well, well -- who knew.

Five years ago my husband and I moved from Nebraska to California--San Diego, in fact. I now have been to see the Padres play in the new Petco Stadium and will drop everything to listen and/or watch the Padres play ALL of their games. Yes, I didn't know -- but I am a baseball fan.

This has prompted a memory of my brothers and I saving baseball cards. I also have the memory of getting rid of them for change and realizing what some of them would be worth today. Another who knew.

So in case some of you are baseball fans and even have a baseball card collection, you may be interested in visiting the following link to a for a baseball card collecting site. Go Padres!

http://searchwarp.com/swa64941.htm

Tuesday, May 08, 2007

WHERE DOES THE TIME GO?

I realized the other day that I had neglected my blog about collectibles and antiques. Little did I realize that it had not been just a little neglect; but a major one. Imagine my surprise when I went in to post a new message and discovered that it had been five months since I had posted last. It made me think about all the things that I have neglected. One of my major neglects this new year has been my collections. I have not dusted off my angels, and everyone knows that even angels need a periodic dusting. I have not taken my list of "wants" to any garage sales to see if I can find a good bargain. I have not gathered the collectibles that I have been wanting to sell on eBay and actually listed them.

But before I get too hard on myself, I realize that part of the reason for the overlooking my collections is that I currently have too many other things on the front burner with a higher priority. How sad it is that we have to put so many priorities in place when perhaps we should try to pay attention to all of them at least a little. So, even though it is well into 2007, I resolve to give more attention to my collectible angels, I will visit at least one garage sale this next weekend and I will list some things on eBay.

I know that a lot of collectors have been buying and selling on eBay for a long time. I have bought, but not sold. Perhaps if you are in the same place and would like to get started on eBay; you might find the information on SeniorNet.com of help to you. SeniorNet and eBay have been teaming up together to help those of us who might be a little intimidated about the whole process to provide an excellent training guide.

Check it out and see if you can't become a collector buying and selling on eBay. Good luck. And take some time this week to see what things you might have been neglecting.

http://www.seniornet.org/ebay/

Sunday, January 07, 2007

Even Collectors Can Use a New Year's Resolution

In an effort to try to make quality time out of the minutes that make up our brand new year, we might consider turning to a New Year’s resolution or two. Sure, giving up vices and leaving unhealthy habits behind are admirable goals, but I think aspiring to resolutions that incorporate some fun for us as collectors might be easier to stick to for any length of time. With just a little effort, accomplishing collecting goals can be a breeze.

To read the rest of this article use this link:
http://antiques.about.com/cs/holiday/a/aa122903.htm

"Side note from Carol Ann----my new year's resolution is to do a better job of posting to this blog and trying to get some comments from other collectors about tips and/or questions about collectibles/antiques".