Showing posts with label 1940s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1940s. Show all posts

Friday, January 31, 2014

✿ Flowers for sale ✿

Image Map  

I stocked the top of the shop with big, colorful flower brooches this afternoon. Just click on the brooches above to link to the listings! All of these date to the late 1930s-early 1940s . They are pot metal plated in rhodium with enamel and rhinestone details. This type of figural floral brooch was very popular at the end of the Art Deco period and into the 1940s. Women's clothing of the 1940s was, all in all, made of sturdier fabric than in previous eras and the jackets, blazers and coats were able to support large, heavy brooches like these. The calla lily brooch is marked for Coro and is a variation on a popular brooch (pictured in a reference guide below).


Thursday, November 7, 2013

Bakelite fruits and veggies

http://www.morninggloryantiques.com/collectfruit.html
http://www.ebay.com/itm/BIG-Vintage-1930s-40s-Hand-Carved-Orange-Bakelite-Wood-CARROTS-Pin-BROOCH-/370699315154?pt=Vintage_Costume_Jewelry&hash=item564f66a7d2

If you follow me on Twitter you probably saw a photo of some bakelite and wood dress clips a little while back. Well, I decided to sell them off-Etsy to a collector in New York (this guy) who maintains a website called The Bakelite Museum among other pursuits. The "museum" portion of the site has one of the best resource collections of bakelite photographs I've seen online. It was the only place where I was able to find examples of pieces similar to mine - carved wood, carved bakelite, "garden" subject. In fact, there is an entire section devoted to fruit and vegetable bakelite figurals. Have you ever seen a bakelite potato? How about beets? Or asparagus? It is worth a visit just to see the asparagus, trust me.

Images courtesy of The Bakelite Museum, ebay and Morning Glory Antiques

Friday, September 27, 2013

Falling in love with Miriam


It is happening. I'm falling in love with Miriam Haskell jewelry. I suppose it was only a matter of time.

I am fascinated by her designs and her craftsmanship. Beginning in the late 1920s, she created big, colorful, 3-D pieces that were desirable not for the materials used but for their elaborate, handmade quality. Women lusted after them. Many of the same women who wore Cartier and Tiffany also wore Haskell (Joan Crawford, the Duchess of Windsor, etc.). She had a completely different way of constructing her jewelry than other costumer jewelers of the time. Mainly, she never used glue. As described in the "history" section of the modern Haskell company website, "the [jewelry] element, no matter how diminutive, was threaded, encrusted, or wrapped by hand onto a wire, a chain, or handset into a channel or finding. It’s the tight embroidery of the elements-that bares no sign of the base underneath - that is one of the most distinctive features of Miriam Haskell jewelry."

This is a wonderful appraisal (video and transcript) of a collection of Haskell jewelry from the archives of Antiques Roadshow. The appraiser, Jeanenne Bell, does a great job of pointing out the things that make Haskell jewelry unique. Put on your diapers before you watch it.

Because her pieces weren't signed before 1940, collectors use different ways of authenticating early Haskell pieces. The use of Miriam Haskell advertisements, like the ones here, is one way to identify her earliest work. How cool is it to see the actual jewelry along with the ads?! You can see many more 1930s-1940s ads on this excellent resource page over at Morning Glory Antiques and Jewelry.

Friday, March 8, 2013

No surprise


I suppose I shouldn't be surprised that my love of chunky 1930s brass necklaces has extended to a love of retro necklaces, like this Brookraft piece I just stocked this afternoon. This is a new direction for me, both as a collector and a retailer. We'll see what comes of it!

Monday, March 4, 2013

1940s Shop update



I'm getting a bit into 1940s accessories - not all of them, but some of them. I especially like the heft of the necklaces. All of these pieces are new in the shop today!

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

My grandma's ring


Last week I took my Grandma Velma's high school class ring to Arendsen Jewelers to have it sized. My grandma (the tall lady with glasses in the photo) was born in 1926 and grew up on a farm in Iowa. She was the first person in her family to leave for college when she went to the University of Nebraska in the mid-40s. Her college roommate introduced her to her older brother, Paul - also an Iowan, also the first to leave the family farm for college - and they hit it off. Lucky for me, they both had the courage to leave home and get an education - otherwise I wouldn't be here!

The jeweler at Arendsen's is a gentle-mannered fellow named Mark. He took over for his father and has been in the business for almost 50 years. The shop is on the 16th floor of a building in Downtown Lansing. That day, he had the window open and he was working at his desk when I came in. When I told him about the ring, he asked if I would like to wait while he sized it right away. Of course I said yes. Step by step, I watched as he cut, hammered, melted, filed and polished it to the perfect size. Twice, because the first time the fit wasn't quite right. When I put it on at the end, I surprised myself by almost crying. I've never had a family ring passed on to me and it feels really special. Especially a school ring, since my grandma loved school (she was a teacher) and was so brave to strike out on her own and go to college, especially when her family didn't appreciate or understand her choice.

As I prepared to pay, Mark came around the counter and said "Please put your card away. This one is free." I argued but he wouldn't have it. I was floored by this kind gesture, and my service experience start to finish. It just adds another happy memory to this ring, which I haven't taken off since the moment I put it on.

Friday, February 17, 2012

This is what bakelite heaven looks like


My friend Amber has an absolutely amazing collection of bakelite jewelry. Just look at those colors! Those towers of bangles! I think the best part off Amber's collection is that she actually wears the jewelry - it's a part of her every day life. That is super inspiring to me. Can you guess what the most valuable piece is here?

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Snowflake Pairs

         

There are four pretty pairs of snowflake-style rhinestone pins headed to the shop today. Because the only thing better than one rhinestone pin this time of year is two!

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Christmas Day, 1940


As I was listing this locket tonight, I noticed the date of the engraving. What a sweet Christmas present! I wonder if "C.G." and "E.M." are still around/in love, sixty years later. And do you think that the photo in the locket is "C.G."? I do.

Friday, November 11, 2011

Look what I found today!

Old bracelet/watch display box (here w/the BRACKETS bracelet ) || Antique flower frog
Wooden highchair w/no tray (I've been looking so long!) || Wooden swan basket, for the nursery
Vintage Swedish tartlet tin set w/a bilingual recipe on the box || 1940s brass necklace
1940s leather handbag w/bow stitching || 1930s Uncas Manufacturing Co. baby ring (now on my pinkie!)
German porcelain mini-trays and antique tartlet tins || 1940s Japanese espresso cup . . . perfect for hot chocolate

I had an appointment this morning to get new glasses (I love them - can't wait to show you) and afterwards, I decided to do a little antiquing. Here are a few things that I found.