Every Victorian barbershop had a rack filled with shaving mugs that belonged to regular customers. And most customers had a personalized mug with a name and often a special picture showing the owner’s job.
Shaving was different in those days. No electric razors — just shaving soap, a brush and a safety razor. Because shaving was difficult and small cuts often got infected, men went to the barber several times a week for a shave.
First, the barber softened the skin and hair with a hot, damp towel on the face. Then the barber would get the customer’s special shaving mug, rub the soap with a wet brush and lather the customer’s face. Then the barber carefully shaved off the softened beard and soap foam with a straight razor.
The occupations pictured on mugs included policeman, mail-truck driver, dentist, house painter, gymnast, plumber, undertaker or even ambulance driver.
Most of the mugs were made in Germany from the 1860s to the 1920s. Unusual examples sell for thousands of dollars. A Red Cross ambulance driver named McNultie would have been surprised to see his mug picturing a horse-drawn ambulance sell for more than $22,000.
What can you tell me about Westmoreland’s Paneled Grape glassware in ruby? I inherited a water pitcher and a few other pieces from my mother.
Westmoreland Glass Co. did not make its Paneled Grape line (Pattern 1881) in ruby glass. The popular pattern was made in white milk glass, some with hand-painted decorations, from the 1940s until Westmoreland’s Western Pennsylvania factory closed in 1984. Your glass pieces probably were distributed by the L.G. Wright Co., which was in business in New Martinsville, W.Va., from 1936 into the late 1990s. Wright distributed glass made by many different manufacturers. It sold its “Panel Grape” pieces in clear, blue, amethyst, green, amber and ruby. The pattern, based on Westmoreland’s pattern, was sold by Wright as early as the 1940s. An L.G. Wright Panel Grape pitcher in ruby sells today for about $75.
My parents have an old walking stick with an ivory handle. When the handle is pulled from the cane, a long sword comes out. I can’t find any information about this kind of cane. Can you help?
Canes are popular antiques, and “sword canes” are among the most eagerly sought. A sword cane is a special kind of “gadget cane,” a cane that hides something inside the shaft. If the gadget is a weapon, such as a sword or pistol, the cane is called a “weapon cane.” Sword canes can be traced back to the 15th century, when they were used by the nobility to protect themselves during pilgrimages. By the 17th century, sword canes became more widely used. They’re still made today, although it’s illegal to sell or carry them in some states. Single sword canes sold at auctions last year for prices that topped $2,000. Depending on the condition, age and quality of your parents’ cane, it could be worth hundreds of dollars or even more.
I have several pieces of mid-19th-century dinnerware in a blue and white floral pattern. The bottom of each piece has a printed diamond-shape English registry mark and several other embossed marks, but none of them has helped me figure out who made the dishes. In the registry mark, the corners read “F, 23, 2, B” clockwise from the top. A banner under the mark reads “Van Dyke.” The other marks include “New Stone,” “BB,” “O” and what looks like a tiny barbell.
Van Dyke is the name of the floral pattern on your dinnerware. The dishes were made by Minton, a company founded in Stoke, Staffordshire, England, in 1793. Today, Minton is owned by Royal Doulton. The English registry mark dates its design to Oct. 23, 1847. (The B stands for October and the 23 for the day of the month, while the F at the top of the mark indicates 1847, the year the design was registered.) The barbell symbol was used by Minton to show the year the dinnerware was made, 1848. “New Stone” and “BB” (for “Best Body”) were marks Minton used on earthenware dishes. Minton also made a multicolor Van Dyke pattern.
Write to Kovels, The Herald, King Features Syndicate, 888 Seventh Ave., New York, NY 10019.
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On the block
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.
Belleek sugar and creamer, Shamrock pattern, basket mold, second mark, black, $75.
Flintstones dial telephone toy, white bone base, red bone receiver, “Dial Bedrock 1-1111,” photo of Fred and Wilma, Barney and Betty, Empire, 1960s, red box, $110.
Green Ghost board game, glows in the dark, Transogram, original box, 1965, $255.
Fairy Floss Talc can, fairy sitting on ocean waves, green, white and red letters, 4 1/2 x 2 1/2 inches, $275.
Patchwork quilt, Irish Chain, green, red, calico, white with black circles, flower stitching, c. 1900, 84 x 84 inches, $630.
Silver coffeepot, high relief pods of grapes dangle from branches, engraved “Elizabeth Blaney April 6th, 1881,” impressed “J. Rudd &Co.,” 12 inches, $825.
Tiffany Studios inkwell, circular with pine-needle metal overlay backed by slag glass, glass insert, marked, 1940, 7 inches, $910.
Madame Alexander Nina Ballerina doll, plastic, sleep eyes, reddish-brown hair, tutu, 1949, 17 inches, $1,300.
Weller Garden Ware gnome, seated, brown jacket, blue pants, black shoes, blue feather in brown cap, incised marked, 14 1/2 inches, $3,185.
Webb cameo glass flower bowl, ruffled and crimped rim, deep emerald green body layered in white, leafy vines and blossoms, floral ribbon border, 1905, 3 x 5 inches, $4,485.
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