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Online Antique Store and Antique Store Search Tool. Charles Eastlake Furniture by art historian Dr. Lori. Beginning of Eastlake Furniture In the last half of the 19th Century, a reform movement spread through England and the United States. It changed the way many people thought about style and health in the home. People had filled their homes with large pieces of carved furniture, thick upholstery, and heavy draperies that collected dust and germs and kept out healthful air and light. The new simpler style of interior decoration was ushered in sparked by an idea from an architect and writer. Charles Eastlake, an Englishman, wrote the book Hints on Household Taste in Furniture, Upholstery, and Other Details. He thought the objects in people's homes should be attractive and well made by workers who took pride in their handwork or machine work.

Charles Eastlake Charles Locke Eastlake further popularized William Morris' notions of the decorative arts in the Arts & Crafts style. Identifying Eastlake Furniture Request an online appraisal of your Eastlake piece from Dr. Ticket Application | 2012 Tour | Antiques Roadshow. Welcome to the 2014 Tour! ANTIQUES ROADSHOW will be visiting: Bismarck, ND May 31 Santa Clara, CA June 7 Birmingham, AL June 21 Austin, TX June 28 Albuquerque, NM July 19 Chicago, IL July 26 New York, NY August 9 Charleston, WV August 16 The April 7 deadline has passed for ROADSHOW ticketing submissions.

Beginning Tuesday, April 29, our online Ticket Checker tool will be available for all online ticket applicants to use to find out whether their applications were chosen in the random drawing. For more information, see the Complete Ticketing Rules and Regulations » And for answers to frequently asked questions, see our FAQs » This website is produced for PBS Online by WGBH Boston. ©1997-2014 WGBH Educational Foundation. Wedgwood Museum faces selloff to pay £134m pension debt after court ruling. The Wedgwood Museum's collection includes the archive of Josiah Wedgwood, the pottery firm's 18th-century founder.

Photograph: Time & Life Pictures/Getty Britain is set to lose a world-renowned museum following a high court ruling which could force it to sell its collection to pay off a £134m pension deficit. The Wedgwood Museum in Stoke-on-Trent faces being forced to sell its historic collection of china, masterpieces by Stubbs, Romney and Reynolds, and an archive linked to the nation's social and industrial history. Judges in Birmingham ruled that the pottery collection owned by the museum was an asset of Waterford Wedgwood Potteries, which went bust in 2009. The collection can now be sold to pay off creditors, the largest of which is the Pension Protection Fund. The decision has shocked the art world because it could prove to be a test case for other public collections.

Simon Wedgwood, one of Josiah's descendents, was dismayed by the ruling. Halloween hunt - Test Antiques with a Black Light - Testing Antiques and Collectibles with a Black Light. Many antiques lovers use a long wave black light to date objects and test for authenticity. Some clues to age or telltale signs of repair aren't easily visible to the naked eye, but will fluoresce under ultraviolet light. While it's not the end all answer in antique authentication and dating, it is a good place to start. Read on for six good ways to utilize black light testing and check out the Black Light Book published by Antique & Collectors Reproduction News to learn more. 1. Detecting Porcelain Repairs Photo Courtesy of Morphy Auctions Hard paste porcelain should fluoresce a deep blue or purple color, while soft paste will glow white.

A good repair job might not be readily visible without assistance, but will become obvious under a black light since glue used in repairs will fluoresce. 2. . - Photo Courtesy of Morphy Auctions Many valuable vintage banks, mechanical toys and door stops from the early 1900s were made from cast iron. 3. . - Photo by Pamela Wiggins 4. 5.

. - Scan by Jay B. 6.

Prints

Old Portland Hardware - Home. UNE PAIRE DE PISTOLETS UNIQUE : c'est l'oiseau chanteur le plus recherché au monde (english below) New Study of Marie Zimmermann, Metalsmith. Photographs by David Cole Two Marie Zimmermann works: a steel dagger, with precious and semiprecious stones, and an Egyptian-inspired box. She hired men to handle some of the finishing work on her vessels, daggers, jewelry, andirons, stained-glass windows, light fixtures and garden gates.

But she did not let the subcontractors express much opinion. “I am the brains and they are the hands,” she told a journalist in the 1930s. Bruce Barnes and Joseph Cunningham, Arts and Crafts furniture collectors who live in Manhattan, have researched Zimmermann’s products and bristly personality for a new book, “The Jewelry and Metalwork of Marie Zimmermann” (Yale University Press). The men, who run an organization that fosters design scholarship, American Decorative Art 1900 Foundation, financed the Zimmermann project themselves. Producing the publication, due out in a few weeks, cost “significant six figures,” Mr. Mr. Only in the last few years have museums paid much attention to Zimmermann. Van Dyke's Restorers - Inspire Your Home Improvement Projects.

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