Kitchen & Household

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Copeland triple frog spill vase having cobalt bulbs

Copeland triple frog spill vase having cobalt bulbs

Man may have mastered fire millennia ago, but until fairly recently, historically speaking, fire and fire-tending have involved a great deal of equipment and attention.  As with many things, we tend to take for granted providing light and heat, illuminating a page, heating up a meal, achieving an accurate temperature to bake bread, but getting a fire started wasn’t always so easy.

Especially after oil lamps and gas lights started to become more common in homes, offering a steady source of a small flame, household mantels began to sport objects known as spill vases.  “Spills” were twists of paper, longer than today’s kitchen matches, that were intended to burn long enough to transport flame from lamp to fireplace and to allow the lighter to reach far enough into the fireplace to light a fire.  Spill vases, since they were typically intended for a home’s more public rooms and/or were in a position of display on a mantel, are typically very decorative, often some sort of ceramic form with paint decoration.  Staffordshire made thousands of them in just about every imaginable form, from courting couples to hunters, whippets to elephants.

Spill vases should not be confused with match holders, which are smaller containers, often of a later manufacture, although often every bit as decorative as spill vases.  Usually manufactured as small, individual or connected double containers, match holders come in a variety of forms, from simple glass containers to figural ones in all sorts of shapes.  (This one with a figure of a small boy putting on his socks is particularly cute.)  Forms like boots or shoes were popular, but many are in animal or insect form: flies, owls, a donkey hauling baskets.  Match holders are also occasionally found with several other small containers meant for use as a smoking set that is designed to hold cigarettes and other tobacco-related paraphernalia.  Smoking sets, often manufactured by the same companies that sold desk sets, like this gleaming example from Tiffany, can be elaborate, beautifully decorated objects.  Both spill vases and match holders occasionally utilize some natural design in order to create a design with multiple holders, like the terrific Majolica spill vase with frogs and lilypads pictured above.

We’re up to our ears in match holders at the moment, after a recent specialty sale by Whalen Auction of over 550 match holders from a single owner’s collection, so there are certainly many examples in the database.  A category/type search in the Prices4Antiques database for “kitchen and household”/”match holders” will show you the most recent examples, including the ones from this incredible sale!

-Hollie Davis, Senior Editor, p4A.com

Cast iron Horseshoe match holder, Good Luck 1895

Cast iron Horseshoe match holder, Good Luck 1895, sold at Whalen Auction, April 2010

A single-owner collection of match holders put together over a 45-year period was sold on April 15, 2010, by Whalen Realty & Auction, Ltd. The sale was held at the company’s auction gallery in Neapolis, Ohio.

The cataloged auction featured approximately 570 lots that were sold without reserve. There was no buyer’s premium.

A relatively sparse crowd of roughly 40 bidders participated from the floor, competing against a fair number of absentee bidders. The seller, an Arkansas collector in his 80s, passed the goods to a younger generation of buyers. “He decided to sell what he had, and he didn’t care what it brought,” said auctioneer John Whalen.

Prices were mixed throughout the day. “The match holders brought a lot of activity and a lot of interest.” Whalen noted that the better examples brought more than he expected. “The rare ones went above the price and the cheaper ones went below.”

-p4A.com contributing editor Don Johnson

Octagonal Wrought iron foot warmer, pierced compass star and TC

Octagonal Wrought iron foot warmer, pierced compass star and TC

You don’t have to wander around in an old house for very long before you’re aware of the chilly eddies of air around your ankles! Foot warmers make perfect sense, and I’m willing to bet that they’ve been around in some form as long as people have had cold feet.

Foot warmers mostly come in two forms – stoneware containers meant to be filled with hot water, forerunners to the modern hot water bottle, and portable metal and/or wood boxes meant to be filled with hot coals.  Stoneware foot warmers tend to be valuable based on the uniqueness of their form and condition, with examples like this Rockingham oval foot warmer by J.L. Rue bringing hundreds of dollars.  The completely metal box forms also seem to be popular with collectors, like this beautiful brass Dutch example or the wrought iron example pictured above.  My favorites though are the little stoneware ones in suitcase form – perhaps so you can think about packing your bags and moving somewhere warmer!

-Hollie Davis, Senior Editor, p4A.com

Pennsylvania wrought iron cookie cutter with incised trailing vines on handle

Pennsylvania heart-shaped wrought iron cookie cutter

Is there anything that gets the holidays started like making Christmas cookies (or eating them)?  Everybody has their favorites – molasses, chocolate chip, oatmeal raisin, but Christmas is the one time of year that most people take the trouble to roll out sugar cookie dough and cut it up into fancy shapes.  You can certainly have your choice of fancy shapes at any gourmet store, but many of us still have the cookie cutters that we used when we were little, ones that might have belonged to our grandmothers.  Take a look through the database, and you might think twice about tossing them out in favor of non-stick silicone 3-D shapes!

19th century Pennsylvania tin cookie cutter in the form of a standing elephant

19th century Pennsylvania elephant form tin cookie cutter

Not many of us are fortunate enough to find a 19th-century wrought iron heart-shaped example like the one pictured here in our kitchen drawers, but for the most part, early cookie cutters are very collectible and affordable.  You have your choice of common Christmas shapes like Santas and reindeer or even an ingenious cookie cutter with a multitude of shapes in one cutter. As always, there are rare shapes that command top dollar, such as a chimney sweep, a woman’s leg or an elephant, but there are plenty of everyday shapes like horses and butterflies to go around.  Collectibles that you can use – what could be better?  The only caveat is that such objects, simple shapes made of common materials, are easily reproduced, so be sure to educate yourself before wading into the more expensive end of the market.

-Hollie Davis, Senior Editor, p4A.com

Griswold No. 50 Hearts & Star cast iron muffin pan

Around this time of year, the house starts to get chilly, and I start looking around for reasons to leave the oven on.  I have to admit, there is no better dividend for heating while baking than skillet cornbread!  There is a short but vital list of things that cannot be accomplished without cast iron, and a cast iron skillet is a must for every kitchen.  And, if they look like they’ve been around forever, they probably have!

Cast iron actually became possible around 500 B.C. in China and 1100 A.D. in England, and its durability quickly made production soar.  By the 17th and 18th centuries, cast iron was indispensable to a household, and both cast iron stoves and cookware were appearing in homes.  (Rumor has it that George Washington’s mother loved her cast iron so much that she made a special bequest in her will regarding it!)  Companies like Griswold and Wagner were born, and cast iron continued to boom until the early 20th century, when lighter materials became more desirable.  But there’s still plenty of it out there, probably because short of melting it down, it’s pretty hard to get rid of.

Some of the most valuable are the large sugar kettles, like this 42″ one that brought almost $10,000, and early forms, like this tea kettle, also bring good prices.  Collectors are also fond of muffin tins, like the hearts and star one pictured above, and even traditional forms like skillets and dutch ovens can bring more than you might think, depending on marks and condition.  Rusty old cast iron might actually be too valuable to cast away!

-Hollie Davis, Senior Editor, p4A.com

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