Chinese porcelains pose challenge to identify, date
Chinese porcelains are among the hardest for an average collector to identify and date. They have been made for centuries and it is considered a tribute, not an attempt to fool a customer, to copy a piece perfectly including the original mark.
Unfortunately, today there also are some who deliberately make and sell excellent copies of antiques.
The pictured vase is named “Five Boys.” It is a piece of “famille rose” porcelain and has a six-character mark on the bottom. The boys are climbing or standing on the vase. One has a ruyi scepter; the others are helping each other to the top.
The famille rose decoration could be several hundred years old or new. The color and clever three-dimensional figures helped the vase sell for $1,476, its decorative value. If it were 300 years old, it would sell for much more.
Q. My small bottle that pictures James Madison has a quote about him on the reverse and is amber carnival glass. I’m in Melbourne, Australia, and I’m wanting to get a value on it to sell.
A. Wheaton Glass Co. was started in 1888 by Dr. Theodore Wheaton, a country doctor who wanted to make quality glassware.
In 1967, a division of the company began to make commemorative decanters, flasks and bottles. The first limited-edition presidential bottle was issued in 1969. It had John F. Kennedy on it, and other bottles with presidents from George Washington through George H.W. Bush followed.
Forty-four were made through 1989. Each 31/2-inch canteen-shaped bottle was machine-made and had an image of a president with his birth and death dates on one side and a quotation or slogan and a facsimile signature on the other. Different colors were used, many with an iridescent finish resembling carnival glass.
Other series were made that featured great Americans, patriots and American military leaders. In 1996, Wheaton Glass Co. was sold and renamed Lawson - Mardon - Wheaton. As with many limited editions, prices are low. Your James Madison flask is worth about $5 in the U.S., probably even in Australia.
Q. I have an opportunity to acquire two vintage sperm whale teeth authenticated as more than 250 years old. They are uncarved. They are treasured collectibles and will not be sold. Can I import them?
A. Sperm whales are protected by the Endangered Species Act and the Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972. Whales’ teeth are a hard form of ivory. According to the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service website, it is illegal to import whale ivory (whale teeth), or items made from whale ivory, except by special permit. Your whale teeth are not decorated (scrimshawed), so all of the laws may not apply, but you should check with the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service before importing them. Breaking the law can result in heavy fines or jail time.
Q. My six flat silver butter knives are stamped “Pat. Apld. For Puritan Silver Co.” Are they sterling silver? Are they worth anything?
A. Puritan Silver Co. is a trade name used by Oneida Silversmiths on silver-plated flatware. Silver-plated flatware doesn’t sell well. Some people don’t want to bother to keep it polished, and it doesn’t have the meltdown value sterling silver has. Silver-plated butter knives sell for about $1 each.
Q. My Rookwood mug is old, dated 1884. It is covered with line drawings of what look like comic-book figures. The name Cranch is in block letters, and the usual Rookwood marks are on the bottom. It is yellowish white with black lines. Who is Cranch?
A. E. P. Cranch was a lawyer in Cincinnati, Ohio, who also was an artist working for the Rookwood pottery from its beginning, as well as a poet, a storyteller and an artist.
Cranch used the words and often humorous pictures of activities described in ballads and folklore. He remembered a ballad sung to him by Noah Webster’s nephew 50 years earlier, and wrote it down and illustrated it.
Cranch seems best-known for his Rookwood pieces decorated with the Uncle Remus stories. His art appears on beer mugs, pitchers, jugs, plates, bottles and vases, most made in the 1880s. Although they are very different in style than most early Rookwood, with colored glazes and realistic decorations of flowers or perhaps Indian portraits, Cranch’s work sells quickly. A 63/4-inch-high Cranch jug sold recently for $1,610. It was decorated with scenes and the words of the poem “Three Wise Men of Gotham Went to Sea in a Bowl.”
Tip
Marble will scorch. A marble statue very close to the heat of a 100-watt lightbulb may be damaged.
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