Tips from an Antiques Market


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Here are a few tips on buying Glass at a market or Antique Store.
(I used to run a stall in an Antiques Market so this really IS from the Horses mouth !)

1 - Read all about the exact item you are thinking of buying.
Some items come in different sizes and usually larger one are worth more.

2 Carefully note down the Measurements - Why ?
You need the measurements because a fairly common practice is to have chips or scratches ground off professionally. This usually happens on expensive glass only as it is costly to have this done. If there are chips or scratches or even a piece knocked off the edge of the top or bottom of the glass the when it is ground down this will be right around the piece and it will either be shorter (if the nick is at the top of the glass) or narrower (If it is on the base). This means the dimensions will have changed from the original.There may also be some frosting around the rim (if it is not done carefuly) This drastically reduces the value of the piece.Check the pattern - a common way to remove a scratch is to engrave a frosted area over it. What SHOULD the piece look like - consult the internet for photos of what you are looking for - especially in a large antiques market like those in Lille,Paris or London Portobello Road where you will see many copies of rare glass pieces.
Some people tell you to run your lips around the edge of a glass piece but I do NOT recommend that - for two reasons - You might cut your lip and secondly have a think for a moment how many other collectors. and dealers have recently done the same (shudder !) - I dread to think where some of those mouths may have been....

3 inspect carefully for scratches or other marks. They seriously devalue any piece. Ciips can sometimes be ground down professionally but breaks generally are worthless

4 Look carefully at the signature. Signatures are not an easy thing to check. You need a linen tester to check them (they only cost a couple of dollars and slip into a pocket or handbag easily)
Some glassmakers signed all their work. Others had the person actually making the piece sign for them. (This is why there are so many different Lalique signatures)
Every glassmaker had different ways to sign pieces. Pantin for instance did not sign or mark anything while Lalique had many signatures and markings. You should read up about your favourite glassmaker before you buy. What I do is to photocopy Lalique signatures from books and take thse with me when I am buying.
I really must scan them onto a pda !

5 Fakes often include fake signatures too. Czech and Romanian Fakes often take the easy way out and have sandblasted signatures.Early Glass was either ACID ETCHED (deeply) or engraved.

Romanian copies often have the word Tip engraved alongside the copied signature.
This is often removed with a dental or craft drill by unscrupulous stores but leaves a blank area which if you study it carefully does not look quite right. This often happens with expensive reproduction lamps of Daum and other leading makers.

Remember - the more expensive the piece, the more likely it is to be forged ! Forgers usually only fake expensive pieces.
Everyone gets caught out by buying a forged piece eventually - even experienced dealers and Museum Curators !

I can be regularly found in smaller antiques markets,fleamarkets and arcades of antiques stores.
The latter are good sources as many of the dealers displaying in showcases do not specialise and it is from them that you will usually find the best bargains.

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Lalique Chandeliers

This is a beautiful Lalique Chandelier - but the chances of finding one in a fleamarket are fairly slim.(not impossible so keep looking !)

Feuilles (Leaves) by Lalique

Feuilles (Leaves) by Lalique

Lalique Chandeliers

It is much more likely that you can find an Art Deco Lalique Chandelier (everyone looks for Art nouveau examples ..)
So when you are looking for Laliqe or other majore makers it might be sensible to check out those sometime 1940s chandeliers .

Lalique produced many chandeliers - here are some you may find in your searches.

This is by no means an exhaustive list but has most of the lalique chandeliers that you may come across.

Alger - 7 Winged Chandelier Clear with appled birds and leaves

Atlantique - has 4 Glass Support with clear discs supporting a glass opal box with
Geometrical cubes below - Art Deco

Bandes de Roses - Frosted Pink Glass circular bowl with 4 hoops in pink

Boule de Guy - Froste Orb with applied Mistletoe

Charmes - Circular with leaves in relief

Chrysanthemes - Clear circular glass with a stunning swirl of opal chrysanthemems
and leaves swirling from centre of bowl

Coquilles - Clear glass bowl with opalescent Cockle Shells all round

Coquelicots- 4 support hold octagonal glass box with scallops

Dahlias - Colander shape with large frosted glass dahlias between leaves
in lcear of pink lighty frosted glass

Deux Sirenes - two nude mermaids cavort below a frosted hemisphere -stunning piece.
In clear or Amber Glass (unmistakeable lalique )

Douze Figures - frosted sections of glass with raised nymphs on each section

Eglantines - White frosted bowl with stunning mouldings of sweet briar roses

Etoiles -STUNNING clear Disc with undreds of Gold Stars all over it and dome in centre

Fougeres - Modernistic looking frosted glass with Wings of glass

Gaillon - Frosted bowl with pendant frosted cups

Grande Fleur - Pink opaque bowl with huge single flower and central seeds

Hirondelles - Frosted bowl with panel contasining swallows projecting from the sides

Feuilles de Charmes - Frosted bowl with leaf pattern perles - Lookes like an upside down cake stand .
Radiates to Pearl -like glass beads on both top and bottom parts.
Frosted with clear rim
Lausanne - Frosted Bowl with fruit/birds and leaves

Lierre - Frosted glass opalescent bowl with reliefs of ivy.

Madagascar - (my favourite lalique chandelier) a stunning opaque pale umber dome with a frieze
of beautiful monkey heads all around

Madrid - 4 wings of clear glass with leaf patterns on each

Monnaie du Pape - clear bowl with pattern of leaves.

Moineaux - 4 support of clear glass rings above a square box with frieze of birds and leaves.

Nanking - Geometrical frosted bowl made of interconnecting triangles each with more triangles within itself.

Noisetier - Pendant Dome with frosted glass base and leafy wings above.

Palmes - single support with glass discs holds 4 attached boxes with palm leaf pattern on outside of each

Papillons - Drum Shaped with frieze of butterflies with radiating bowl beneath.

Papillons Plaques - Clear glass bowl in sections with moulded opaque butterflies

Passiflore -Glass opaque ball with passiflora flowers (passion flowers) protruding stamen from each flower.

Ravenne - Art Deco frosted glass looks like a square crinoline with bands.
Pendant border of glass marble like beads and a miniature copy of itself below.

Rinceaux - Art Deco style curves overlapping each other all over the dome. Clear or Gold

Ronces - white or pink frosted bowl with appliqued brambles

Soleil - Blue of clear bowl with geometric pattern and clear domes all over it.

Stockholm 1 - Art Deco Pale yellow bowl with horizontal pyramidic leaves and support of clear glass rings.

Stockholm II - similar to Stockholm I but with geometrical pattern below

Vendome - Elegant saucer-like chandelier with bamboo like support above.

Ville Neuve - Golden Bowl with 4 swags of white opal glass al round. Beautiful.

Veronne -Yellow Opal Glass with leaves and petals like water lily all overlapping

Prices vary wildly.Errors and ommissions excepted. There are reproductions around of Lalique Chandeliers.
I saw many reproductions for sale in the September market in Lille France.
I also saw fake Lalique Chandeliers for sale in Paris fleamarkets last week March 2009 (shiny,shiny - too shiny !)

Remember - if a Lalique chandelier looks new and comes in a sealed box it is probably a reproduction.

I saw several fakes at a Brocantes Fair in Paris last week - and a good few Daum copies too.

Lets be honest about this - a tatty vendor in a Paris fleamarket is really unlikely to have found three Lalique chandeliers (looking like new ) in his travels unless he was very,very lucky !
Regrettably he took in two tourists while I watched (come on now a Lalique Chandelier for 80 dollars !).Caveat emptor folks...

This Article is COPYRIGHT (C) 2009 Keith Jones www.greatfrenchglass.com

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Wine Labels and Famous Artists

Wine and Famous Artists
Lucian Freud has just deigned a new wine label for
Chateau Mouton Rothschild 2006.
While the wine is obviously superb, the label by Freud
adds an exotic upmarket touch.
It is of course a Family Tradition in the Rothschild Family.
Baron Philippe de Rothschild commissioned Jean Carlu to design a label in 1924 for the first vintage
bottled entirely at the Chateau.
He also commissioned a label with V for Victory at the end of World War II
Other labels by Marc Chagall,Francis Bacon ,Andy Warhol and Wassily Kandinsky also grace his wine Labels.
It is delightful to see fine art in conjection with the finest of wines.
Also it is rather interesting that many other vineyards have now adopted the similar system of ungrading their wine labels with collectable Art.(not that any Chateau Rothschild wine even remotely needed upgrading of course !)

Among the other famous Artists who have designed WIne Labels are :
Picasso,
Dali,
Haring,
Balthus,
Georges Braque,
George Baselitz,

I have even seen wine Labels featuring paintings by the Great Masters of the Past including Leonardo da Vinci
But which glass to use to drink them from ?
I tend to favour Baccarat myself ...

There is a rather jolly website offering to produce your very own wine labels (with wine of course !)
and I quite fancy designing my own labels for some of my friends.
Thats at : http://www.stoneycreekwinepress.com/

Here is another article about Artists and Wine Labels:
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601093&sid=aIw2ZclFW50k&refer=home
I forgot to mention that many famous artists (including myself of course) (well famous for 12 miles in any direction !)- prefer to be paid in wine - a pretty good deal for those chosen to design for Chateau Rothschild I think !

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Lalique Dragons

Part of the new range of Lalique figurines are Dragons.

These beautiful Oriental inspired dragons would make a great addition to any Lalique or French Glass collection

Although Dragons were originally from the Far East, these Oriental beauties seem quite happy here.

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Oh Oh - Chipped figurines !

I have no connection with the following company but thought it might  help you with any chipped or broken pieces.

Recently in France at an antiques market I saw several lovely Lalique figurines that I passed by as I thought they were too badly chipped... so I left them there (and no I won't tell you where it was   I'm going back soon ..<grin !>

I was browsing the web today and came across this company:
http://www.brueningglass.com

One of the services they offer is to repair chipped lalique and other glass.
They also do repairs to:
Barometers
Broken Decanters
Chandeliers
Chipped Glass
Chipped Stemware
Lalique and other fine Glass
Glass Glueing
Panel Lamp Repairs.

They have some very impressive before and after repair photos on their website and its worth bookmarking this page to fix anything you may get broken (by next doors cat of course !)

They sound interesting - if you have had any glass repairs done by this company then a review here would be nice... if you have a moment.

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New Lalique Museum Announced

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , — Keith @ 6:47 am
  • Lalique has announced their planned Museum of Jewellery and Glass by Rene Lalique.

    This will be the first Lalique Museum in France and will be in Alsace.

    Full details can be found on our sister site Here :
    LaliqueArtNouveau.com

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  • Rene Lalique

    Rene Lalique

    Rene Lalique

    Rene Lalique

    One of the Founders of two great Periods -
    Art Nouveau and Art Deco. Two Revolutions in Art and Design that brought forth highly successful artists and sculptors to the delight of the world.

    Rene was the foremost Jeweller and Glassmaker of both Periods.
    Lalique Glass is highly collectible.
    It includes Bowls,Vases,Figurines,Perfume Bottles and trinkets.

    His necklaces are some of the most collectible jewellery on Earth.

    When we think of Art Nouveau Jewellery or Art Nouveau Glass the first name that comes to mind is Rene Lalique Jewelery.

    Although Lalique was primarily a Glass Designer he was equally known for his beautiful Jewels.

    He began as a jeweller and developed into glassmaking.

    He is particularly renowned for his designs of Lalique Crystal Vases,Chandeliers,perfume bottles and art nouveau jewellery.


    Rene was born in Ay in Marne,France in 1860, throughout his childhood he loved nature and in his early teens he began to paint and the flowing forms of nature.

    At the College Turgot. Rene Studied Drawing and Design and used his love of nature to develop a unique style of his own.

    Renes mother realised how much he loved painting and design and apprenticed him to Louis Aucoc a Jeweller in Paris.

    Rene was always a hard worker and a good student eager to learn.

    At the same time He also studied at the Ecole des Arts Decoratifs in the evenings and later subsequently studied at Sydenham College in London England at a very fortunate time.

    In England it was the time of the birth of the Arts and Crafts movement and Lalique would have been very interested in their designs .

    During his holidays back in Ay he drew sketches of nature and wildlife and this influenced his work throughout his life.

    England was the the very centre of the Arts and Crafts movement and he was inspired not only by the artists of that movement but also by what he saw at the Crystal Palace Exhibition.

    In 1880 he returned to Paris where he studied Jewellery manufacturing and then sculpture under Justin Lequien at the Ecole Bernard Palissy.

    This time influenced his later work as much of Palissy Pottery was relief decorated and had realistically modelled fish,lizards,snakes and plants.

    From this background of Art and Design, he evolved flowing and often erotic designs and the influence of Palissy is shown in his vases such as the Sauterelles and Martin Pecheurs designs .

    His most famous single work of the time is probably the Perruches bowl from the 1920s which had a frieze of beautiful moulded parakeets on Opalescent Glass.
    Lalique Crystal has become synonymous with high quality figurines and vases.

    In later years he became famous not only for art nouveau Glass but also for Art Nouveau Jewellery.

    One of the most famous of the pieces of that time is the Bacchantes Bowl which is still in production today.

    He has also been called the Art nouveau Glassmeister. He was truly the master of Art Nouveau and Art Deco Glass and Jewellery.
    Here are a few Lalique Links from our store :

    The Bacchantes Vase - A veritable Frenzy of Passion
    http://www.greatfrenchglass.com/lalique/bacchantes-vase

    Lalique Big Cats - stunning sinuous big cats by Lalique
    http://www.greatfrenchglass.com/lalique/Lalique-bigcats

    Lalique Perfume Bottles -Coty are the most collectible ones.
    http://www.greatfrenchglass.com/lalique/lalique-perfume

    Lalique Dragonflies - wonderful observation

    http://www.greatfrenchglass.com/lalique/lalique-dragonfly

    (C) 2008 Keith Jones www.greatfrenchglass.com

    A Similar Article about Rene Lalique also appears on our other French Glass site at :
    http://www.laliqueartnouveau.com

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    Meisenthal Glassworks

    Meisenthal Glassworks

    Meiesenthal is an Historic Glassmaking Village where Emile Galle studied and worked.
    The Meisenthal Glassworks was founded in 1704 and is a historical site in the region of Lorraine.

    It was a major part of the birth of the Art Nouveau Movement in Glass with the works of art in glass produced by Emile Galle between 1867 and 1894.

    Sadly the Glassworks of Meisenthal closed its doors in 1969.

    The factory faced an uncertain future despite the expert knowledge retained by its workers.

    The site rapidly began to look abandoned .
    This was a similar fate to the factories of other Glassworks of the region.Already the factory of Montbronn had closed in 1957,

    Cristallerie Lorraine de Lemberg in 1997,Cristallerie de Harttzviller in 2004 anhen the optical glassmakers Goetzenbruck in 2005.

    Now though the larger Glass Makers are beginning to fight back with Lalique and Cristalleries de St Louis producing original designs for the worldwide market.

    In 1978 an exhibition was held in Meisenthal with the copoperation of a number of Historians and experts in Glass together with the friends of the Museum of Glass.

    A Centre for Research into glassmaking was founded with the co-operation 0f the Townsfolk of Meisenthal and the seven villages nearby in the glassmaking area.

    The Centre CIAV International Centre of Art Glass of Meisenthal) was founded in the old Glassworks of the Glassworks of Meisenthal.

    Apart from displays of Glassmaking techniques, there is a historical research department and of the foremost glassware produced at Meisenthal.

    There is of course a large display of Art Nouveau Glass.

    The C.I.A.V. has an interesting website with information and lots of interesting videos.

    It is in French and well displayed and worth visiting for any Glass Collector.

    The website is at http://www.ciav-meisenthal.fr/site.html

    The website does require you to have FLASH installed and its a very glitzy interactive website with quite a lot more information than it would appear on the surface.
    The videos are very interesting but some are aimed at the French market and require payment by Telecharger (a sort of payment by phone popular in France)

    There were details of a Brocante (a kind of fleamarket come antiques Fair) in the streets of Meisenthal (this was in July 2008.)

    Brocantes are excellent sources of original French Art Nouveau and Art Deco glassware. A Magazine call Aladdin in France lists the more regular Brocantes to visit. Get there early for bargains !

    I hope this will be an annual event as it looks well worth visiting.

    It would certainly be necessary to visit the tourism links before visiting to ascertain opening hours and local resources like antique markets.

    There were very interesting Links -

    http://www.cc-verre-cristal.fr/

    http://www.halle-verriere.fr/

    http://www.ot-paysdebitche.com

    http://www.parc-vosges-nord.fr/

    email address : mailto:ciav@wanadoo.fr

    Tourism Links :

    http://www.moselle-tourisme.com

    http://www.tourisme-lorraine.fr/

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    Modern Paperweights

    Modern Paperweights

    These are often made by artisans working on their own rather than for a glass factory.
    They are often of very high quality especially by those glass makers making limited editions.
    Paul Stankard is famous for his paperweights with beautifully realistic flowers.

    Other Famous Paperweight makers of the 20th Century are :
    Lundberg Studios
    Correia Art Glass
    Orient and Flume
    Loton
    Parablle Glass
    Charles Kazuin
    Paul Ysart
    William Manson
    Peter McDougall
    Peter Holmes
    John Deacons
    Jim DOnofrio
    Chris Buzzini
    Delmo Tarsitano
    Debby Tarsitano
    Victor Trabucco
    Gordon Smith
    Rick Ayotte
    Melissa Dayotte
    Bob Banford
    Ray Banford

    There are many new High Quality glassmakers producing original and lovely paperweights right up to the present day.
    Some glassmakers produce an everyday range and a more intricate range of Collector grade paperweights.

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    Collectable Paperweights

    Glass Paperweights were originally designed to stop papers blowing away off desks.
    In former times papers just blew away in the wind or were blown away by room or desk fans.
    Manufacturers rapidly saw the potential in attractive Glass Paperweights and produced elegant
    and lovely ones for sale as decorative items or as gifts.
    These are still made today but the modern trend is towards acrylic paperweights which usually look pretty awful when placed beside a real glass paperweight.

    Paperweights usually have a flat base to stop them from rolling off your desk and many have faceted tops to display the contents more easily.
    Domed tops are still however the favourites.

    While Baccarat was the best known French Paperweight maker (and still is), Clichy and St Louis were the other two main manufacturers in France in the 19th Century.All of these glassmakers paperweights are avidly collected.
    Pantin also made a smaller range of beautiful paperweights.

    In Britain a company called Bacchus produced paperweights of high quality and so did the New England Glass Company in the USA.
    Paperweights from these companies are also very collectable.

    St Louis is also still an active paperweight maker.

    Paperweights are often thought of as just the Millefiori (from the Italian for 1000 flowers)
    and these are indeed quite collectable (the ones to look for are the Baccarat ones which have the letter b in the middle of one of the glass rods)
    Millefiori paperweights are composed of dozens or hundreds of glass rods which usually have pretty designs or flower patterns inside them and they are grouped together within a clear glass dome.

    There are also a group of paperweights called Lampwork and these have a glass figure within them shaped within them by a glassmaker using glass tubes and a gas torch.

    These often have delightful figurines of animals or other nature subjects within them.

    Swirl Paperweights have a central millefiori floret from which lots of coloured opaque rods spiral around.
    Victorian Paperweights featuring people or scenes also exist and these were made from milk glass discs and incoprporated within the Dome.They were often made from photos of loved ones.
    These are quite rare and most of them are in museums.
    Sulfide Paperweights have 3-D portraits or portrait plaques within them - they are also quite rare.
    Other collectable paperweights include those with embroidered or woven images embedded.
    Rarer still are early paperweights that incorporate early Victorian Advertising slogans .
    Paperweights in PERFECT condition are what every collector desires.
    Factorslike colour casts, bubles within the dome,striations or scratches will reduce the value.

    A good PRICE Guide is essential if you are buying expensive Paperweights.
    Apart from Auctions,the best places to look for old paperweights are thrift shops,fleamarkets and antique stores.
    Beware of modern imitations of Victorian paperweights made in Hungary,Czech Repulic or Taiwan.
    Some of these are quite good copies and you should handle real paperweights before looking at these so that you can judge by weight - copies are usually much lighter in weight and have no signs of wear on the flat base.

    Modern Paperweights are also collectable and I have a separate article on those.
    The most widely collected paperweights are the Walt Disney range of Paperweights featuring Disney characters - some of their early paperweights are surprisingly expensive.

    More about Paperweights:
    Paperweights

    Lalique Paperweights

    Baccarat Paperweights

    Books on Baccarat (lots of paperweight information)

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