Dr. Daniels Veterinary Medicine oak display cabinet

Dr. Daniels Veterinary Medicine oak display cabinet

One of the most common questions in the antiques marketplace is, “What’s hot right now?” At Prices4Antiques, we always see lots of searches for country store items, the kind of things that lined the counters and shelves of old general stores, and in the past seven days, we’ve seen searches for a National Cash Register Model 542 register with an oak base, a Nelson Baby Powder tin, an Enterprise Manufacturing Company countertop coffee grinder, a Coca-Cola barrel-form dispenser, and a Dr. Daniels’ veterinary medicine cabinet. These were the top five items viewed in our country store category this week, but people searched for thousands of other antiques and collectibles at Prices4Antiques.

Browse more country store antiques in our price database.

Flag Day, June 14, commemorates the adoption of the flag of the United States. Here’s a look back at some great historical flags that have sold at auction:

34 star American flag carried into the Civil War battle of Shiloh by William Shallenberger

Rare and historic printed silk 34 star American flag carried into the historic Civil War battle of Shiloh by William Shallenberger, Company D, 55th Regiment of the Illinois Volunteer Infantry

A 13 star American Navy flag with hand-sewn stars belong to Anna Rowell Philbrick Decatur wife of Stephen Decatur

A 13 star American Navy flag with hand-sewn stars belong to Anna Rowell Philbrick Decatur wife of Stephen Decatur

American Centennial flag, circa 1876, wool, printed and machine sewn, with "1776 1876" in the canton

American Centennial flag, circa 1876, wool, printed and machine sewn, with "1776 1876" in the canton

Abraham Lincoln & Andrew Johnson 1864 campaign flag. Unusual style with stars in the upper right-hand quadrant

Abraham Lincoln & Andrew Johnson 1864 campaign flag. Unusual style with stars in the upper right-hand quadrant

A circa 1850s 13-Star and Anchor flag

A circa 1850s 13-Star and Anchor flag

Reference & Further Recommended Reading:


To search the Prices4Antiques antiques reference database for valuation information on hundreds of thousands of antiques and fine art visit our homepage www.prices4antiques.com


Ronald McDonald Lego figure point-of-purchase countertop display

Ronald McDonald Lego figure point-of-purchase countertop display

One of the most common questions in the antiques marketplace is, “What’s hot right now?”  At Prices4Antiques, we always see lots of searches for advertising and in the past seven days, we’ve seen searches for a Shell Gasoline milk glass pump globe, a Coca-Cola bullet-style trash can, a McDonald’s countertop display of a Lego Ronald McDonald, an Old Gold Cigarettes tin sign, and an Anheuser-Busch lithograph of “Custer’s Last Fight.” These were the top five items viewed in our advertising section this week, but people searched for thousands of other antiques and collectibles at Prices4Antiques.

Andrew Clemens folk art sand bottle with rose over McGregor, Iowa, Oct. 1892 caption

Andrew Clemens folk art sand bottle with rose over McGregor, Iowa, Oct. 1892 caption

Also see: A World in a Grain of Sand: Andrew Clemens’ Sand Bottles

It’s always exciting when research brings new things to light and because of a lecture given at the Midwest Antiques Forum, I’m able to revisit something I’ve written about before – the sand bottle art of Andrew Clemens (1857? to 1894) of McGregor, Iowa (originally covered in our May 2011 newsletter).  Clemens, left deaf and mostly, it’s believed, mute by a bout of encephalitis as a young boy, made incredible works of art like the one here by positioning sand one grain at a time.  Recent research into Clemens by Wes Cowan of Cowan’s Auctions (also star of PBS’s History Detectives and a frequent guest on Antiques Roadshow) has identified around 50 bottles (he believes he knows of at least another 50 or so), and this process has allowed us to see how the bottles changed over time.

One myth that the lecture dispelled was the belief that Clemens collected all the sand himself, that the colors were all naturally occurring in the Picture Rocks area near McGregor.  Most of the sand was naturally occurring, but some colors, blues and greens, for instance, were so rare that it would have take far too long to collect them solely from a natural source.  Closer examination reveals “filler” and artificial color, as well as the use of bits of charcoal for blacks and greys used in shading.

Perhaps, however, the most amazing discovery is some documentary evidence relating to the creation of the sand bottles.  Cowan’s research has uncovered a printed price list, offering everything from flowers to eagles to steamboats, with prices ranging from 50 cents to around five dollars.  This seems like such a small amount for such amazing, precise work, until placed in the context of one of the only known surviving letters from Clemens to a customer, discussing his process for the work and telling him that for a jar of the type requested, it normally took him just about two days….

-Hollie Davis, Senior Editor, p4A.com

A Civil War Union regulation artillery shell jacket made by the Cincinnati Depot

A Civil War Union regulation artillery shell jacket made by the Cincinnati Depot

Begun as Decoration Day in the wake of the Civil War, Memorial Day has become a day to remember all who have died in service to their country, but for many collectors, this sacrifice is remembered every day through the artifacts they gather. At Prices4Antiques.com, we see many searches for military- and service-related objects prized by buyers, including amazing things like a Japanese tank crew helmet from World War II, a U.S. one-pound Ketchum hand grenade from the Civil War, a complete set of cast-iron armor for a German machine gunner in World War I, and a Noble Brothers six-pound Confederate cannon from the Civil War. One need only to look at an object like a Civil War lieutenant’s frock coat found next to the body of an officer on the battlefield at Spotsylvania to be reminded of the cost of centuries of protecting freedom.

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