Antique furniture often sells for less than copies

  • By Terry and Kim Kovel
  • Tuesday, October 14, 2014 3:40pm
  • Life

What a bargain.

Often an authentic antique sells for less than a modern copy. Since the price of antique wooden (“brown”) furniture has dropped in the past few years, the good news is that there are many bargains for a buyer looking for an older style. Fewer home sales mean fewer furnishings sales, and the prices of antiques have suffered.

Few Americans grew up with a 19th-century inlaid secretary from Holland in the house. Dutch designs were elaborate, with curved legs, domed cornices, mirrored door fronts, even a slant-front opening covered by a flip top that served as a desk. And of course there were drawers, candle slides and cubby holes. It is the perfect piece for a period room or as an accent piece in a simple modern room. And the drawers furnish good storage space.

A new reproduction piece like this would have plain, not inlaid, surfaces and probably straighter legs and less trim. A top-quality copy would cost about $5,000. At a 2014 auction, a 7-foot-high secretary desk that could easily be moved into a modern room with the usual 8-foot ceiling sold for $2,214 at New Orleans Auction Galleries. More good news: An antique has a better chance than a copy to go up in value.

Q: I was 3 years old in 1937 when I was flower girl in my aunt’s wedding. I wore a pale blue dress with pink trim and ivory lace at the neck. The tag inside reads “A Nannette Toddler Shirley Temple Brand” along with a picture of Shirley Temple. I still have the dress. What is it worth?

A: Shirley Temple was 5 when she made her film debut. Her 1930s and ’40s retail dresses were designed like her movie costume dresses, in a toddler style even though she wasn’t a toddler. They were made by Nannette Manufacturing Co. of New York City, a division of Rosenau Brothers. The basic design was a skirt with soft pleats and contrasting collar. Fabrics were cotton, organdy and dotted Swiss in prints, plaids, checks and embroidery. There wasn’t much trimming, maybe a small bow, an appliqued figure or narrow lace edging. A 1936 newspaper advertised Shirley Temple dresses for $1.89 each. Dresses for older little girls were made by Cinderella, also a division of Rosenau. Shirley Temple dresses for sale in online shops are priced $30 to $60.

Q: I have a set of Norman Rockwell prints I received as a premium for subscribing to Reader’s Digest in the early 1970s. They depict the four seasons. Each one is signed and numbered 2945. I was wondering if they might be collector’s items.

A: You don’t say what size the prints are, but they’re probably small if they were sent to you as a premium. Norman Rockwell (1894-1978) was a hugely popular U.S. artist and illustrator in the middle decades of the 20th century. Respect for his work has grown again in recent years. Large Rockwell prints that were actually autographed by Rockwell sell for high prices. Your set might sell for $25 or so.

Q: I have a little bronze figure of a man wearing a turban and sitting on a donkey facing backward. He’s holding the donkey’s tail. The donkey is 31/2 inches tall and 41/2 inches long. I have had this for more than 25 years and nobody knows anything about it. What can you tell me?

A: You have a figure of Nasreddin Hoca (1208-1294), a Turkish philosopher and wise man. “Hoca” is Turkish for “teacher.” Nasreddin is a popular folk figure in many countries, especially in the Muslim world, and humorous stories about him have been translated into several languages. He has been called “a master of the negative way.” When people told him he was riding his donkey backward, he answered “No, it is not that I am sitting on the donkey backwards, it is the donkey that is facing the wrong way!” UNESCO declared 1996 “Nasreddin Hoca year.” Your Nasreddin figure is worth about $25.

Q: I bought a set of Gerber Swiss Bells still in its original package. There are five plastic bells, each in a different color. It has the original price tag of $1 still attached. When was it made and how much is it worth?

A: Dorothy Gerber (Mrs. Dan Gerber of Gerber Products Co.) wrote about the bells in her popular newspaper column, “Bringing Up Baby,” in 1965. But online sources that offer these musical bells for sale claim they are from the 1950s. A set of the bells in good condition but without the packaging recently sold for $20. Another set, in the original package, sold for $25.

Q: I have a ball-shaped, clear glass jar embossed “National Biscuit Company” in capital letters. I’m told it was in my family’s restaurant in the early 1940s. The jar, with the lid on, is 11 inches tall. It’s a little more than 10 inches in diameter at its widest point. Please tell us its approximate age and value.

A: The National Biscuit Co. was founded in East Hanover, N.J., in 1898. We know the company as “Nabisco,” which became its corporate name in 1971. It’s likely your jar dates from the early post-World War II era. There are other versions of National Biscuit Co. glass jars. Yours sells for $65 to $75.

Tip: If you are remodeling or redecorating, think about antiques and collectibles displayed in the work area. A workman will hammer on a wall without worrying about shelves on the other side.

Write to Terry Kovel and Kim Kovel at Kovels, The Herald, King Features Syndicate, 300 W. 57th St., New York, NY 10019.

Current prices

Current prices are recorded from antiques shows, flea markets, sales and auctions throughout the United States. Prices vary in different locations because of local economic conditions.

Disney hooked rug, Mickey Mouse as train engineer, Disney characters, multicolor, 46 x 57 inches, $60.

Mettlach stein, No. 2005, 1600s tavern scene, four drinkers, signed “H.D.,” 1901, half-liter, $270.

Paris porcelain vase, men, rowboats, waves, whale, bears, flowers, gilt highlights, c. 1850, 7 inches, pair, $480.

Belt buckle, silver armadillo pattern, overlapping links, Mexico, c. 1953, 43/4 inches, $530.

Cabinet, Arts &Crafts, oak, two panel doors, carved sides, iron hardware, 49 x 61 inches, $565.

Baseball jersey, New York Mets, World Series Champions, autographed, 23 players, 1986, $750.

Railroad poster, “Visit Washington, Symbol of Democracy, Pennsylvania Railroad,” J. Collins, c. 1950, 46 x 29 inches, $1,250.

Toy truck, stake, black, yellow, rubber tires, Buddy L, Junior series, c. 1925, 17 inches, $2,370.

Bronze sculpture, hunter with bloodhound, signed “P.J. Mene,” 1879, 1811/16 inches, $3,125.

Vienna Porcelain urn, lid, egg shape, woman water carrier and man, indoor domestic scenes, multicolor on cobalt blue ground, gilt, beehive mark, E.L. Hermann, 433/4 inches, $11,250.

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