The seventeenth annual Toronto Bottle Show was a big success. The show is produced entirely by volunteers from the Four Seasons Bottle Collectors, one of Canada’s oldest and most respected clubs.
Sunday April 17th 2011
was a gray day with periods of rain and huge flakes of snow, but the
miserable day outside didn't spoil the mood at the bottle show, in the
gymnasium at Humber College in Rexdale. Over thirty different dealers
waited inside at 9:29 am as over 100 collectors and enthusiasts lined up
outside waiting for admission. The ticket price was only $5, but there
were no exceptions! Click the pictures below; they expand so you see all
the juicy details.Dwight Fryer
held up a triangular amber poison bottle with really pronounced
horizontal ribs. It was German, a bottle produced for a wealthy chemist /
druggist and the personal doctor to Ludwig III of Bavaria. The bottle
had the word GIFT stamped in the glass midway down the panel. What was the GIFT? Poisonous lozenges!
The
bottle held disinfectant lozenges which could turn ordinary water into a
disinfecting solution for surgical tools. These were called sublime
pastels and the product was used before the 1900s. Dwight wanted $500
for the piece which he believed was quite rare. This collector
specializes in poisons and so if he treasures a piece for its rarity
than it must indeed be rare, or else he's an amazing salesman. I didn't
spend $500, but I did buy a cobalt blue Teasdale chloradine and a coffin
shaped carbolic acid bottle NOT TO BE TAKEN because I love them.
Brett Bloxam
had the best table of different coloured insulators, with his best
being displayed on a white board. Some are threadless and most are just
real hard to find he told me. He was asking $100 or $200 for the Hudson
glass pieces. For Brett it’s all just a wonderful hobby and nothing more
– he always does well in the exchange of ideas and hard currency at the
bottle show and likes being in on the fun as one of the dealers.
Michael Rosman holds up his book, 'Kinkly to Mae West' which encapsulates all his knowledge of orange crush collectibles.
His Orange Crush t-shirt was visible from the door.
He's a man that treasures uncommon isotopes of orange pop. Michael has
studied and collected Crsuh for many years and now he's sharing his
knowledge with other collectors. Michael Rosman has authored and sells a
$40 print book. Good move. Its a fact that knowing the different
bottles and their classifications is key to spotting and buying at good
prices those precious rare variations. Michael also showed me the most
current gem in his collection , which regrettably I didn’t get a picture
of – it's a French language Orange Crush that was made for the Quebec
market. A quiet Ron Hunsperger
collects beers, but is changing his focus to collecting bottles local
to Oakville, Hamilton, especially Burlington. While I waited Ron had
another conversation about Stratford medicines and then when he came
back to me we discussed his black glass 1880 O'Keefe beer bottle that’s a
particular dark shade of green. It looks black. The dark glass may have
contained a light sensitive specialty brew and that's one of the
reasons he brought it to the show.
Robert Lloyd
had some insulators and bottles and he explained how these items
reflected his own progression as a collector. His father was a cartridge
collector and he would accompany his Dad to gun shows and didn’t have
very much fun because he wasn’t allowed to touch things. So at a very
young age he started collecting things he could handle, and that was
insulators and bottles.
In
the center of his table he had a porcelain doll in fair condition,. He
described it as a good fixer upper for a period doll collector and I
laughed wondering how a doll could ever be considered such a thing. But
the face is great and X overall in good shape. it has a porcelain head,
neck and shoulders and leather body . It is however missing its
porcelain hands and has suffered a few small puncture wounds – Robert
recalled how he’d once seen a period advertisement of this doll in the
same newspaper that reported the assassination of Thomas Darcy McGee
April 7, 1868.
Adam and James Jarzabek
collect beverages and they both have a particular fondness for old
milks and cream bottles. And milk caps and beer labels. And beer trays
and old beer cans. Also present among their offerings were some rare
sodas.
I ask dealers to pick up a bottle for a picture and Adam
selected a Tossells bottle from Niagara Falls Ontario. The bottle was
embossed with plenty of writing including the words Lager and Gingerale.
How could it be both? The bottle could hold either liquid – the company
made both , which meant they could comfortably put either beverage in
this vessel alongside a paper label identifying which one it was.Ron DeMoor
is one of my favourite dealers and talk with him every year at the
bottle show. I find him very personable and quick to make a jokes and
tell me something interesting – he’s well liked by the rest of the crowd
too, and so its good to visit him a little later after everyone has
said hello. That way you’re not constantly being interrupted by gentle
banter – their three ways deals - and the connections people make after
not seeing each other for a year.
Ron and I talked about torpedo
bottles and he posed with an English torpedo (and he revealed a secret
to me…*) the bottle was embossed J.T. Shephard Co Geraldton Potass Water
which is a form of soda beverage I concluded and didn’t ask any more
... I don’t think potass water would sell very well today hahah. I did
ask how old it was, and Ron reckoned it was from the early 1880s but it
could have been made earlier, as early as the 1860s. There are other
specimens so it’s not 100% unique.
*Ron revealed to me that in
his experience, torpedo bottles manufactured in North America are more
egg shaped and have rounder bottoms than the English variety torpedo
bottle which are more conical, and more 'torpedo like' if you will.
That’s a good tip and something I will investigate further.Have you got any one of a kind North American torpedo bottles?
He reached for the R.A. Pilgrim torpedo. Is this rare? I asked. ‘There
are three that we know of in Canada’, a nearby gentleman (pnjmarchand)
volunteered the information that Robert Alfred Pilgrim of Hamilton was a merchant druggist / soda manufacturer and recent immigrant.
In
1848, (based on their advertising), Robert Alfred Pilgrim, then a 21
year old Englishman, established in Hamilton, Ontario, one of Canada's
first pop works. Six of his seven sons joined him the mineral water
trade as they became old enough to help. - P. Marchand
So
'Pilgrim Bros' soda bottles are younger than R.A. Pilgrim, the father of
the boys. So how much money would Ron take for the piece? Ron hummed
and wheezed and finally said he would consider all offers over two
thousand dollars for this rare bit of Canadian history.
David Langford was selling many antiques, but very few bottles.For
David Langford selling stuff is part of the hobby; he explained to me
that collectors are always evolving and sometimes devolving as they
progress through life - these shows are great places to switch
directions. Dave is switching directions, again. He was a banker and now
a world traveler and avid bird watcher. He just got back from a trip to
Sri Lanka. He loves antique advertisements that feature recognizable
species of birds, and he used the phrase ornithological art. I made him
write it down on my notepad so I could include it in this write-up. Have
you got any ornithological themed period advertising? David's email is
davidslangford AT hotmail DOT com

Ed Locke
had lots of neat stuff to show and sell and a marvelous attitude
alongside. His table was one of busier booths and our talk was twice
interrupted by commercial traffic. Ed likes old advertising and that
includes tin signs, box art, metal panels
and even good condition cardboard signage. He knows how much art
decorators and interior designers love old signs - there will always be a
demand for these antiques because they look good on basement walls and
Canadian cottages. Ed has been collecting posters and old signs and
other fascinating things ever since he started decorating his own house
twenty five years ago.On
the edge of his table, Ed kept some copper plates used to make beer and
spirits advertising for newspapers. They were sealed in plastic, the
visible cover is the printed positive image on the paper that wraps the
negative copper etching on the top surface of the 1/4 inch thick copper
plate – this reverse was hand carved by etching artists. But that wasn't
the only print artifact he had on display...
Ed showed me a rock
that is Solnhofen Stone from Germany and used for lithographic
printing. This sedimentary rock is a very fine-grained, compact
limestone. It’s the finest grained limestone in the world, and that’s
why its so sought after for making the negative hand carved etchings
used in early lithographic printing.
The
uniquely fine granular qualities of Solnhofen Stone are remarkable
because limestone is so prevalent on Earth. Yet Solnhofen Stone is only
found in the Jura Mountains in Bavaria. Only this stone has the
superfine quality necessary for lithographic printing. The curious piece
gets more interesting when you ponder the rough hewn sides – how could a
machine incorporate such an odd sized rock into any type of printing
assembly? The printing rock has a lifespan. It is shaved down when a new
advert is etched into the surface. So the rock lives on through many
ads - one rock could be quite thin at the end of its life after having
served up thousands of replications.
Robin Newton Smith
holds a tea kettle ink embossed on all six sides. The Joshua Jonson
Japan Writing Fluid London tea kettle ink is worth about $150 bucks he
reckons - its from the 1830s. The piece is newly acquired and currently
the apple of his eye and the centerpiece of his table, which had some
great cobalt blue bottles and bottle of unusual colour. Robin was saying
on how he believes that cobalt disappeared from glass making because it
was high demand for medicine. He postulates that the high price of
cobalt element which is key to making blue glass, disappeared from glass
making because of its rising price due to the popularity of the freshly
discovered 'cobalt treatment' medical procedure. An interesting
hypothesis.
Robin collects early glass and not just early
Canadian glass, but all sorts of early glass and not just bottles
either. He once possessed Syrian glass which predated Christ, and he’s
handled some Roman glass pieces too. Robin is the proprietor of NSA Auctions
which is currently being retooled. He hopes to host another online
antique glass auction in late 2011, and so we’ll all be watching for
that.
Chris (Newf) Welton
is a true Canadian dumpdigger and one with whom I've pitched a few
holes. I like Newf and so does everyone else in the scene - he's a
straight shooter with a lot of Hart.The
Toronto Bottle Show is always better with Newf and Malcolm together in
their usual spot just inside the front door at the headland of the rows,
if you know what I mean. There's no doubt its a position of honour;
they earned that spot by always having the busiest table on the evening
before the show. Remember, by and large, the set up on the Saturday
night before the Sunday event is when the dealers buy from each other.
At that time Chris Welton and Malcolm McCloud are by far the busiest
vendors. As prolific dumpdiggers they're a perpetual source of fresh
curiosities. Chris is a very charismatic digger and collector of early
Canadian pottery and especially salt glazed stoneware.
Always
ready with a story Chris related to me on how he recently attended an
estate auction in a small town about an hour north of Toronto, during of
snowstorm. With only 25 other buyers in the room, and only one other
known bottle collector the conditions were perfect for scoring some nice
treasure cheap... for but nothing caught his fancy until he spied this
jug. Over by the fireplace he spotted an ovoid jug well decorated with
Hart Pottery distinctive figural design around the number 2 denoting its
capacity in gallons. More than one hundred and fifty years ago this
beautiful jug was once filled with whiskey or rum or whatever a merchant
could sell.
Here
is a wonderful rare marmalade jar that belongs to Malcome McCloud, a
veteran who digs in downtown Toronto and procured this relic from the
earth last summer. The label reads 'Superior Orange Marmalade
manufactured by William Hessin 179 King Street East'. These kinds of
relics are terrific because they're really traceable - by using the
1800s business directories its possible to find the exact years that
this merchant occupied that location and thereby date the artifact. Frederick Hartl
makes the drive from Quebec every year, and usually brings a friend
named Jean Marc who unfortunately could not attend this year because of
Monday morning commitment at furniture school in Quebec City.
Bottle
collectors keep many wonderful things on their tables, but I've not
seen bone handled steak knives before - The centerpiece of Frederic's
2011 table display was a mint condition set of Crown Sheffeld steak
knives still in their original box. When I asked about these relics he
told me that it was once a catalog reward item in a social currency
program called Gold Star Stamps which rewarded good consumers with printable coupons for redemption in exchange for high quality items such as bone handled steak knives… curiousWhen
it came to pose for a picture Frederic picked up his H. CHRISTIN ginger
beer. It was made by Brantford pottery and now has a marvelous crackled
finish. Frederic is partial to this one.
When he was just fifteen
years old he started collecting the most commonly found old bottles and
was giving himself an education by reading books. When he flipped to the
section indexing the most valuable bottles in an early UNITS book he
found this crown jewel held up as one of the most rare and vaunted of
Canadian ceramic collectibles. At that time Frederic felt that he would
probably never own such a precious thing, until last fall when he got an
opportunity to buy one from a construction worker living in Ottawa.
Frederic has his own website , french language Quebec bottles website.
Terry Matz
was full of surprises this year. The Torpedo Bottle king of the fair
specializes in all manner items relating to torpedo bottles including
molds and pressure guages. He has a lot of coloured glass on his table,
pontiled glass and early stoneware and other Canada West trade
merchandise. Terry
Matz is the club's resident bottle tumbler and he charges $20 a bottle
no matter how dirty or how valuable. Any glass vessel can be made
clean(er) by 'tumbling it' - someday I will detail this science / art
form on this blog, but not today.
On the edge of the table Terry
had a very curious copper mold for blowing torpedo bottles. I've never
seen such a thing before. This hinged mold could accommodate the
manufacture of three torpedo bottles at once.
Jamie
McDougall was passing by the table when Terry was demonstrating the
device and mimicking the motions of the glass blower – Jamie correctly
pointed out that this piece was no doubt used in a factory operation
with many glass blowers, because all three chambers on the piece would
have to be filled near simultaneously. Terry agreed there would be a
process involving more than one glass blower – as soon as the
compartments were blown full of glass the mold would get cut open. The
newly formed glass cylinders sprang forth. the hot glass torpedo bottles
would have each been embossed with the word Ozane which Terry believes
is some form of aerated water that was sold in continental Europe. He
has never seen such a container here in North America. Is that strange?
Terry has spent his entire life collecting torpedo bottles and has never
seen or even heard of one marked Ozane. Have you? As
Terry was demonstrating another rarity – a JJ Dornat pressure gauge for
checking the internal pressure of a soda siphon, I questioned his
daughter behind the counter. There were some young people at the event,
but not many. While Terry was demonstrating this device I snapped a shot
of his booth and captured Evelyne Matz who has always come to the show
with her Dad. She enjoys spending time with her father this way, and has
ever since she was a little girl. Over the years, through osmosis she
has inherited lots of knowledge and some degree of passion for the
hobby. The bottle show is good family time and the two enjoy coming and
meeting friends - when I probed deeper I found that they go digging
together and Evelyn uncovered some unusual iron relics in a railroad
dump. Check out Terry's website Torpedobottles.com
Email Terry, sodapach AT scinternet DOT com
Jamie McDougal
is an extremely knowledgeable individual and 'book smart' collector
that hunts and gathers really old antiquities all the way back to
arrowheads and flint tools. His table is always a hodgepodge of really
sensational stuff.
Jamie
posed for my camera with a bottle that was embossed, ELEPIZONE certain
cure for fits epilepsy H.C. Root MC Toronto ONT. The bottle has a slight
sun cast amethyst colour which Jamie was quick to remind me meant the
bottle was made before World War One when manganese became rather
difficult to procure in North America.
Mark Wilson
lamented that he had a quiet year and didn’t do any digging and only a
little diving. He’s been passing the time buying and selling and doing a
lot of reading online, streamlining his Peterborough area collection. Mark
collects crocks and bottles from Peterbourogh and the Kawarthas. He had
a David Knox gravitating stopper on the table for sale – its from
Campbellford, and that’s too far away, on the other side of Rice lake
and down the Trent River a stretch..
At
the end of his table, and the property of another vendor on Mark's dive
team were miniature wooden paddles that were selling for $50. This is
cottage kitsch that was made to promote a vacation destination.
Sometimes by these items were made by indigenous peoples and are labeled
'native crafts'. More sophisticated goods was imported by a tourism
board, or a travel association that profited by the trade. These items
were not created as advertising per say, but rather they were small
knickknacks, or mementos that could be purchased in hotel gift shops and
in restaurants and thrift stores in the small towns. They would be
taken back to the cottage and mounted on the wall, or taken home and put
in the living rooms of houses to remind the family of their cottage and
their annual summer fun. Priced attractively at $50 a pair, or $100 for
the Algonquin park piece, these would look great in a certain Muskoka cottage located fifteen minutes west of Bracebridge, on the sunny shores of Lake Muskoka.
This
summer Mark hopes to do more diving in the lakes in and around
Peterborough, which is his focus as a collector. He’s one of the most
experienced divers in the Kawarthas and very good at finding wrecks and
marine dump sites. He’s found many great old bottles over the years, at
the bottom of the Kawartha Lakes which I assume to be Burleigh Falls,
Buckhorn and Lindsay, but there are many more lakes farther east around
Havelock. Do you need a freelance diver for any interesting antique
salvage opportunities? If so, you couldn’t find a better candidate than
Mark Wilson 705 area code 799 1943
Abel DaSilva and his wife June Ng had a mountain of stoneware that occupied every square inch of available table space. As
usual, Abel did more talking and walking and orbiting the booth, while
June remained behind the counter and handled all commercial
transactions. Together they're quite a team and on this particular
Sunday they did a lot of business.
Abel
showed me some handsome pottery from a merchant named James Burns who
was a wealthy grocer and spirits dealer in the 1840s St Lawrence Market
in Toronto.
I
was also attracted to Abel's large collection of whiskey water jugs
that were the foremost row of his grand assembly. These were painted
with faces and logos and cartoon characters and fashioned as barroom
advertising for famous whiskey brands. Abel explained that whiskey and
water was always a popular drink and these tiny pint sized pitchers held
ice and water for bar patrons. 'They added some class to the joint you
know' he said they were popular in America as early as 1910, and the
trend emerged here in Canada after World War I, and lasted throughout
the 1920s and 1930s. Today they range in price from $300 to $500 - the
pieces sell well in online auctions.
When everyone was packing up, I managed to corner Pete Bechtel and Laura Casselli These
two bring their own personal style to the Toronto Bottle Show and in
many ways they put themselves on display right alongside their uber
brewerania. They are however extremely friendly. Laura likes rock and
roll and is particularly fond of Joe Satriani.
On their table
rested one of the most talked about pieces of the 2011 bottle show. A
Dutch onion wine bottle from 1735 with its original contents. This
fantastic museum grade antique is older than Canada and was the oldest
bottle on display at the show. Recovered from the wreck of the
T’Vliegenthart which was a 145 ft long barge. The Flying Hart
left the Netherlands on her doomed course for the East Indies on
February 3rd 1735 with 167 seamen, 83 soldiers, and 6 passengers. She
was loaded with a large amount of gold and silver coins intended for
trading for precious stones, spices and silks at the destination. The
Flying Hart however never made it out of Dutch waters. It was
shipwrecked, driven onto a sand bar by strong winds, she sustained
severe damage causing her total loss. There were no recorded survivors.
The wreck was recently found intact and the insides of the ship were
examined and showed how the onion bottles were stored for transport in
early Imperial Age Dutch merchant marine ships. As
I mentioned before, Pete's bottle still has its original contents. Pete
told me that if they were to open the container they would have to
drink the liquid very quickly, and that if you went back for second
glass it would taste different, more acidic and the liquid would very
rapidly oxidize and become an entirely different flavor.
The
quality of the wine found in centuries old containers is drinkable, but
Pete explained to me how quality of the wine or spirits depends on a
great many factors. If bacteria get in, it's vinegar. If dry air caused
the cork to shrivel and let oxygen into the vessel, the spirits are
dead. If it was stored in too hot or too cold conditions, it's dead. And
if it's been exposed to long periods of bright light, it's dead. If
it's a wine that was never meant to be aged, then, well, it's not gonna
be much good at all.
Waiter! This is old wine! Take it away and bring us some fresh wine! - Steve Martin
Here are some staff and bottle collecting legends that make the Toronto Bottle Show
Here's Melissa Clare
doing the announcements and not freaking out when I got right up in her
face and snapped this shot as she was speaking to the entire hall on
the microphone. Melissa Clare 905 area 839 4645
You can email Melissa at show_inquiry AT canadianbottlecollectors DOT com
And here are some venerated experts Carl Parsons and Jamie
BIRDS OF SPRING
IRONSTONE TABLEWARE
Monday, April 18, 2011
The 2011 Toronto Bottle Show
Posted by Robert Campbell at 2:19 PM 0 comments Links to this post
Labels: Gold Star Stamps, Michael Rosman, ornithological art, Solnhofen Stone, stoneware, sublime pastels, Superior Orange Marmalade, T'Vliegenthart, tea kettle ink, The Flying Hart, William Hessin
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Lost Creek under Toronto's Streetcar Condos
While excavating the property at 510 King St East in Toronto, workers
discovered a lost creek which was heaped with trash - some of which is
now treasure.
Recently
Dumpdiggers admin were treated to a fascinating account of valuable
antique glass bottles and early Canadian pottery being recovered from
construction site in downtown Toronto. The building project at 512 King
St E is owned by a hip property developer called Streetcar.
The site is located on the north side of King St. at River St which
almost as far east on King as you can go – its opposite St Lawrence
street which is the north western extremity of the massive River City
condominium development.
By comparison, the relatively small
'Streetcar condos' building project on the north side of King St is well
under way, and will probably be completed by the summer of 2011. But
back when this property was still being excavated, in July 2010, the
developers found plenty of evidence of a small creek that ran above
ground here, up until the early 1880s. This creek was yet another
tributary of the mighty Don River that was buried by man before the turn
of the century.
Evidence of a lost creek under Toronto
The old glass jars and cream coloured stoneware beers floating on the top of the puddle at the bottom of the excavation are all that remains of a centuries old dump site that served industrial age Toronto. You can see the water is being sucked out of the hole by sump pumps. When these photos were taken, the spring water was drained into the storm sewers on the south side of the property and bottles were popping up all over the place.

The construction site manager was very helpful and accommodating, and was himself an expert in the history of the site. He shied away from my camera of course; posing for pictures on a job site can be risky. But to his credit, he was very forthcoming with good information. ‘The creek has no name' he said in provocative tone, and his words echo in my thoughts.

While pointing outside from behind his comfortable desk in the heated office trailer, he told me how the north facing wall of the excavation, and now the building's foundation is engineered with specific water collecting apparatus to channel the accumulation into nearby municipal storm sewers.

A good storyteller, the construction site manager recounted the hot July days when the backhoe operator dredged out several tones of metal debris that had been dumped and incinerated over a hundred years ago. Back then the natural water system was deliberately buried under the heaviest man-made materials available; industrial age iron scraps, building stones, broken bricks and cement was dumped here to suffocate the spring. The refuse also contained wagon loads of hundred year old household trash. The rubbish was incinerated in keeping with period legislation about dump maintenance with respect to hygiene, so only the strongest, luckiest bottles survived.
Q.S GRAINGER HOTEL KEEPER TORONTO CANADA 1880 BEER BOTTLE
The Dumpdiggers reader who contributed information to this story reported that this Q.S Grainger stoneware beer bottle came from this dig site. It was hand-turned on a pottery wheel by an unknown local potter in the 1880s. There are only a few remaining with this stamp, and every specimen is unique. He also wrote that, "There was an assortment of Toronto blob top pint & quart soda water bottles, many medicine bottles from Canada & USA, glass & stoneware, ink bottles, stoneware jars & pottery items. There was even one amber & one aqua glass fire grenade bottles! A few pot lids from the UK. A total of about 300 blown bottles that date from 1870 to 1905. This lot had a creek running from north to south of the property and it was filled in through many years with ashes. Mixed in the ash were numerous bottles. The workers only picked up the embossed bottles that were worth money and left the unembossed ones that were not worth someones time to clean."
Origins of the lost creek and its path to the Don River,
The lost creek originates from a natural spring just north of the
excavation site. In the 1880s it was on the surface and ran south
through this property and what is now the River City condo developments
property, the future site of the Pan American games in 2014.
The lost creek fed into the Don River.
The Don River Straightening Project helped Toronto become a better city, but it also created rich pockets of good historic trash for Toronto diggers to unearth for centuries to come. Let me tell you a story about the Don River in Toronto in the late 1800s. The people of this great city have had a love / hate relationship with the Don since the origins of the British settlement in the 1790s.
One
hundred years later, desperate to stop the flooding, and to provide a
shipping channel and to create additional industrial land near the lake,
a vast scheme known as "the Don Improvement" was carried out in
Toronto. The project straightened the river south of Gerrard St to make
room on either side for railroads, roads and other urban infrastructure.
Ashbridge's Marsh was drained and filled, eliminating a public health
concern, while providing acres of new industrial land in the Port Lands.
The expansion of the city in the early 1900 buried the last traces of
the creek that once ran across 512 and 510 King St East. Are these posts the remnants of a small bridge?

As you can see, wooden posts were visible at the bottom of the hole. Let me remind you that the bottom of the hole was almost ten feet below the surface of present day King St East. Were these wooden posts part of a small bridge across the lost creek? Picture that if you can, and its easy to see residents walking and talking... No doubt some of the antique glass soda bottles were discarded by the users themselves immediately after consuming the contents. Soda bottles are exactly the kind of rubbish that get's pitched by hand, while the milk bottles and medicines are more typical of a systematic municipal trash disposal program at the site.
One
of the best bottles that was recovered was this amber Warner's Safe
Cure which was a popular patent medicine. Because it has the names of
three cities embossed in the glass, its what's known today as a 3 city
Safe Cure.3 CITY NERVINE 1/2 PINT 1889
WARNER’S ~ SAFE ~ NERVINE ~ LONDON - ENGLAND (LEFT SIDE) TORONTO - CANADA (RIGHT SIDE)~ ROCHESTER ~ N.Y. U.S.A. HALF PINT, AMBER, DC. This bottle's value is approximately $500 as per the Werner's Reference Guide blogspot. The website is definitely worth perusing if you have any Warner bottles in your collection.
Another excellent source of information on Warner Patent Medicine bottles is the Warner's Safe Cure Blog which is the product of a skilled writer that lives his passion for this specific type of antique glass. I've just spent three hours reading sixty posts on his site.
Posted by Robert Campbell at 9:55 AM 5 comments Links to this post
Labels: 510 King St, condo development, excavation site, historic, lost creek, Nervine, patent medicine, Q.S Grainger, River City, Safe Cure, Streetcar, Toronto
Thursday, November 25, 2010
American Pickers is a new cable TV show about buying and selling old stuff

Good
news for Dumpdiggers all over the world – US cable television audiences
have rediscovered a love for antiques and collectibles! Now there’s
more than just Antiques Roadshow on the boob tube to educate and entertain collectors. 
Much like the TV show Pawn Stars,
the new TV series that I watch at 10pm on Tuesday nights on History
Canada mines the drama of bartering, and the human exchange of words and
emotions as buyers and sellers try to find common ground.
Unlike
Pawn Stars, which is a cable TV show that's coloured by people who want
or need the money, Mike Wolfe and Frank Fritz, the American Pickers
travel great distances to deal with people who're usually more than a
little reluctant to sell. And there’s the conflict. TV and indeed all
storytelling mediums require somebody versus somebody or something to
make interesting drama. Pawn Stars has a dysfunctional family dynamic
going on, and The Traveling Antiques Road Show often pitted experts and
against collectors. Here its different – the conflict comes from Mike
and Frank and their desire to buy commodities that are not for sale. And
therein lays the biggest single problem with the show. It’s just not
real enough, and the numbers don’t quite add up.
These two experts
travel around Iowa, the greater Midwest, and the Southern United States
in a white panel van that’s emblazoned with their red and black Antique
Archaeology business logo. Unlike real pickers who peruse antiques
barns, yard sales and estate auctions, these guys show up uninvited at
people's houses and attempt to buy their cherished antiques and
collectibles. They are assisted by Danielle Colby-Cushman, who works
remotely from a home base in LeClaire, Iowa to help them run their
business.According
to the site’s web copy, Mike Wolf has earned a reputation as one of the
country's foremost foragers, traveling coast to coast in search of
forgotten treasures. Where other people see dilapidated barns and
overgrown yards, Mike sees goldmines packed with rare finds and
sensational stories. Wolfe and Fritz go prospecting in the homes of
casual collectors, hoarders and people who have inherited large deposits
of their ancestors junk.
What do the guys pick up exactly?
The
Antique Archeology duo seems to get real excited by old musical
equipment, vintage kitchenware, all manner of advertising signs and rare
bits of scrap metal. They like old automobiles evn if they're only good
for auto parts - they'll even buy old rusty bicycles. Fritz has a
fondness for antique toys, antique oil cans, and Honda motorcycles.
The
secret to being a picker is having a strong base of curious customers
that can fuel such prospecting expeditions with ready cash. Mike's
clients include interior designers, art directors, photographers and
collectors. And although it’s probably the most important part of the
business – it’s significant that we never get to see these people. When
the acquisitions are finalized and the items are being loaded into the
van, the producers of the show will flash graphics showing the amount
paid and the amount at which the item has been valued… well anyone
that’s actually in this business knows that’s just a hopeful guess. Not
every item sells and in their business model the margins are so tight
that if one item fails to sell it will ruin their month! I know... its
just television.
These
images are snapped from my TV set during the "Super Scooter" episode.
The half hour shows how the pair works together. Wolfe is nearly
drooling over a Vespa Ape scooter. The owner wants $5,000 for it, and
Wolfe offers $4,500 -- which is rejected.
Season 2 premiered June 7, 2010 and turned into a real monster Monday hit for History when it was paired with Pawn Stars. American Pickers
debuted with more than three million viewers and this month has
approached four million, placing it among the 20 top-rated shows on
cable.
see also
http://www.rcreader.com/news/american-pickers-feature/
and because Frank is my favourite of the two pickers, here's a link to his site:
http://www.frankfritzfinds.com/
Posted by Robert Campbell at 7:51 AM 2 comments Links to this post
Labels: American Pickers, antique picker, cable, collector, Frank Fritz, History TV, Mike Wolfe, TV show, Vespa


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