Here is one of mine, picked up at a thrift a few weeks ago. The rest are at our other house. Top is taped on even though we have it out, to avoid...
The end comes to a point at an incorrect taper that looks from here too abrupt and not correct. Maybe different up close. And it shouldn’t be...
Looks late classical, from mid 19th century or so, but any value it might have had as an antique (which wouldn’t have been much) was destroyed...
Comb-back has become an antiquated term of the 20th century. Better name these days for US chairs of approximate first style would be high-back...
Free section in Craigslist also. I refuse to give Meta all my data for free so they can sell it to all buyers.
Strangely I bought two vintage Peacoats in the last few months to wear them, one from ww2 and the other post-Vietnam era, so went down the same...
No, but this link says radium first used on watch hands in “early 1900s”, so not 19th century. How far into 20th century would best come from your...
Given those labels, I think hands are for Waltham and Elgin pocket watches, not wristwatches.
Whoops, missed the Jersey setter comment, too busy looking at the spoons…
I love dragonflies. Was at a big simultaneous hatch this summer on a Maine lake where they were coming out of the water to hatch and learn to fly...
The only prop I have is from a crime show tv series. I would have had no idea, but it included an identifying slip of paper from the show along...
NHK streaming. I made many business trips to Japan from the US and am a huge fan of the country. Spent a lot of my free time at thrift and flea...
Agree. I think keeping them in your kids rooms while researching is a wonderful idea. Again, why are you in a rush to sell. And you will need to...
You should not sell to anybody without more research. The Cushee globe is not the early one you linked to, so it must be a later edition (note...
Thank you, much appreciated!!
That little, huh? Par for the course, I’m afraid. :arghh:
Yes, my wife is happy to point this out to me. Except for the forgivable part. :bored:
This is from a drinking glass I would like to buy more of. But the P mark isn’t sufficient. Does anyone recognize it? (P with tiny 26 below): [ATTACH]
No one asked what you got for it?
You could be right, but I disagree. This does not look homemade to me, it looks mid to late 19th century factory made to me. There was a...
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