hi everyone. i bought this yesterday in a thrift store. it had just hit the floor. i think it's a very cool old photograph of a championship...
i kinda' figured this would get eyes on it. i feel a little bad, because it really isn't that funny.
thank you for this input. i hadn't thought of this angle, or reference point in considering this piece. i had thought the dentist might be...
yeah, it's definitely dumb. but, it's extremely off-color and, i think, over-the-top. let me say, too, it was a slow day.
hi everyone. i hope i'm not breaking any rules by posting this on this forum. i found this today and thought it might be worth a few bucks. i'm...
thank you both for your help. i was focused on the quality of the weaving, and assuming that because it was nicer and was tighter, with more...
hi everyone. i have this little Navajo weaving that i guess would best be described as a "sampler." it measures 30" long and 26.25" wide on one...
thank you all for your input. i guess it might be just me, but when i look at this piece i get excited. i don't see 60s or 70s art. i see 100...
Yes, but to your first point, above, aniline dyes and aniline yarns were certainly available in the late 19th century. Navajo weavers were...
thanks for your input, how can you tell?
hi everyone. this is another one of my recent thriftstore finds. i think it's stunning. it's a pillow with all of its stuffing removed. to me...
i found this in a thrift store for $12.99. i didn't notice it the first time i walked by that area because it was on the bottom shelf. i saw it...
yes, and thank you for that. note that it does have a braided top edge.
there's this one too. what can be said conclusively is this type of design did exist in the 19th century. it's just no very common. [ATTACH]
The basic shape would be described as a bowl, but does not seem to be a real common type of Pima basket. Most are more flared, or more shallow. I...
the problem is, i don't really know what i'm looking at. this is something i'm definitely not an expert in. i just took some more pics. i think...
i probably need to get a better close-up of the base from the inside. there's a lot of what i'm assuming is some sort of old food material worked...
that's who i initially showed this to, someone online that deals in this sort of thing. were there no Pima baskets prior to the 1890s?
hi everyone. i found this basket a few days ago. It stands approximately 8.25 inches in height and 10.5 inches across at the top from outside...
thank you. there is acid burn on the backside and along the outer edge, but outside of the image itself, like the picture above. the paper is...
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