Archive for Antiques

Jul
22

Your own Antiques Business ~ Before you start

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Your own Antiques Business Part 2, Before you start

OK, You have decided you want to be an antiques dealer. Today I’m going to discuss a few ways into the business and things to think about before you start.

Different Types of Antiques Dealer

One of the attractions of the antiques trade is that you be very flexible with how you run your business.  Antiques Dealers can be part time or full time. Trade from their own shop, at Fairs, Car Boots, Antique Centers, on-line or a combination of these. I will discuss each one of these venues in more detail in part 6 of this series. The decision about where to trade is down to the individual however it is influenced by the type of stock you choose to sell

Art Deco Jewellery

Art Deco Jewellery

Expertise and Specialisation

So what type of stock should you choose to sell as an antiques dealer? Firstly I would say choose to deal in what you are interested in, what you love and what you collect. You are going to spend a lot of time with your stock. To be successful you need to become an expert in your area, you need to have enthusiasm for your items to sell them. This would be quite difficult if you are trying to deal in something which you do not care for.

When I first started I knew that I wanted to spend all day working with beautiful old things but was not sure what to specialise in.  I had hear advice from long term dealers to learn about one or two areas and specialises but found it difficult to choose.  I bought all kinds of stock from small furniture, textiles, glass, ceramics and even modern collectables. This gave me a great broad grounding which serves me well today however I would probably have been more successful sooner if I had specialised sooner. The choice is yours. Having said that specialisation is the best way to be successful as an antiques dealer there are many thousands of general antiques dealers who will just buy up any stock as long as it is cheap and then pass it on with a small profit. It can be great fun but it requires an awful lot of hard work and long hours to make a living.

When you are choosing your specialisation think about the requirements of the different types of stock. Furniture needs a lot of space and a Van, Ceramics need to be stored and moved careful so they dont break and high end Antique Jewellery requires a lot of capital and very good security. Paper ephemera needs to be kept somewhere damp free – just to give a few examples.  On-line trading needs good computer skills and you need to be very organised if you are going to make a living that way . Think about the stock and how you are physically going to handle and store it and the special needs your stock might have.

The type of stock you deal in will also influence where you trade from.  The average antiques and collectables fair tends to be full of stalls selling ceramics, glass, Jewellery, textiles and smaller furniture. High end antiques fairs which set up over several days have more furniture as do the larger trade fairs such as the Newark antiques fair.  If you are selling small specialist items then the Internet is a good choice as you can reach a far wider international audience.

Specialist Ceramics ?

Specialist Ceramics ?

You need cash to buy stock

I know this is obvious but the amount of money you have to start with will influence the type of stock you can trade in. You can of course raid your own collection for your initial stock or sell off some stuff you have around the house and is no longer required. Most dealers start off with a small investment in stock and gradually build up over time. You can go a car boot sale with just a few pounds in your pocket and hopefully make a small profit on what you buy. Starting so low is going to take a long time to build up enough stock to fill a stall at an antiques fair or an antiques center. It is pointless setting up your own website with less than 100 good items but you can sell just one or two pieces on eBay.

You will also need to invest in a few other things besides stock. Storage boxes and bubble wrap for ceramics and glass. Furniture polish? A trolley and for doing fairs. Display stands and price labels. Personally when I started my biggest investment besides stock was in reference books . Many of the specialist books can cost a lot of money. Starting at about £5 for a cheap reference book you can look to pay up to £50 or £60 each for the better specialist books which you will find invaluable even in these days of free reference on the Internet. Most selling venues will require cash up front too. This applies to setting up a shop, taking a stall at an antiques fair or center , your own website and eBay.

Knowledge and How to get it

To be a good antiques dealer you need knowledge including knowledge about your stock, where to buy and sell that particular type of stock . Its good to know other dealers in your area as well.  Much of this knowledge takes years and years to acquire.

How to learn about antiques. There are courses, there are books, there’s the Internet (including this blog). Probably the best source of information is to find a dealer to teach you although you may find that their is a huge reluctance to just give away their hard to acquire secrets of the trade. I know a few people who have started by taking a job as a porter in an auciton house, that could be looked upon as an apprenticeship.  For some the route into antiques dealing is via a fine arts degree for others its working in an antiques center. I started by doing a little trading and attending lots of courses. Next week I intend to write a specialist article on how to acquire the knowledge about vintage jewellery including courses, books and websites. 

For general antiques courses you can look for evening classes locally. I went to an antiques evening class one night per week for about 6 years when I lived in Nottingham. Look in your local area . I also took a correspondence course in antiques and also undertook professional training to become a qualified jeweller.

The books you buy will to some extent depend upon your area of specialism but here are a few good general antiques reference works.

Millers price guides both the antiques price guide and the collectables ones.  The values quotes are often a bit wide of the mark but they are great for just looking at objects which have been identified.  Eric Knowles wrote a great beginners book called Discovering Antiques, I think this costs less than £10.

If you are looking at dealing in ceramics I suggest you invest in a marks book. Goddens is the best for British Pottery and Porcelain marks. For Precious metals and Jewellery you need a hallmark book such as Bradburys Book of Hallmarks.

 

Websites.

Clearly I am going to recommend www.antiquesavenue.com as a source of information. eBay can be great for finding the price an items actually sold for by using the completed item price search. I use Google a lot both to search out specialist websites and to look up individual items. For example type in Vintage Jewellery and you will find antiquesavenue quite high up . Type in “antiques blog” or “vintage jewellery blog” and up comes this site. 

Want to talk to Antiques Dealers on-line. Both Facebook and Twitter have active antiques communities. You can find me on face book as Anne Haile and on Twitter as AntiquesAvenue. On both social networking sites you can find other dealers who are looking to learn and to share knowledge.  On twitter try following #antiques and on facebook look for groups / pages with antiques in the title. This equally applies to specialist areas just replace Antiques with the specialist of your choice.

Networking

As mentioned above you can now find other antiques dealers and enthusiasts on line. Those you meet in real life may well prove to be more useful and can become great sources of stock and knowledge.  You can get to know other dealers by trading with them regularly, its easy to start up a conversation with a dealer if you have just bought something from them at a quiet antique fair. Hang around at real life auctions week after week and you will start to see familiar faces and get to know folks in the trade.

A big Mistake

I have known many people make one fatal mistake when starting in the antiques trade. They do not put their business on a legal footing. Trading on the black market is not the way to go if you want to grow your business.  By setting yourself up as a proper business you can grow, failure to do so means that you stay very small. You can only take cash if you dont have a bank account for cheques or paypal payments and only taking cash can be very limiting.  If you are selling items for more than a few pounds you need to be able to write out a receipt if you are asked to. 

 Talk to the tax man and trading implications for you. Learn how to do business accounts or get an accountant if necessary. I have seen so many traders who can only stick at the lowest levels of this wonderful business because they live in fear of the tax man.

That’s a few pointers before you start your career as an antiques dealer. Next week I will be talking about finding stock and about how to learn antique and vintage jewellery.

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Apr
01

Buy Vintage – Save the planet

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Buy Vintage – Save the planet (and that goes for antiques too). 

 

These days we are all being urged to go green and save the planet.  Switch off lights for earth hour, use nasty low emission light bulbs ( so very dull) , buy cars with reduced fuel consumption, recycle ( so much tedious washing of containers and tins) and reuse ( yes I’ve bought re-usable supermarket bags but I keep forgetting them). All of these “Green ” things mean giving something up or  they are uncomfortable, unpleasant or at the very least inconvenient. But here’s a secret you can go green and indulge in a little luxury too.

vintage glass

vintage glass

Think about it, we who are used to handling vintage and antique items know that there is plenty of stuff available which we could incorporate into our every day life which is wonderful, stylish, not available in the shops and ( by the way) just happens to be re-cycled too. This is not your average nasty tatty re-cycled stuff you see at car boot sales, there are lots of wonderful vintage and antiques out there which are of brilliant quality, exquisite style and quite often cheaper than new too. Whats more if you buy your vintage and antiques on-line you are saving the planet a second time as on-line shopping has a lower carbon footprint than shopping in the high street.

I am not suggesting that you throw everything you own out and replace it all with antique or vintage items. You dont have to throw out your Ikea or Next furniture and replace it with nasty tatty brown stuff thats 7o years old.  Just next time you need something for yourself or your home to think about if an antique or vintage item might just be be the right thing – more stylish, more unique, quite possible cheaper and greener too.  Antique and Vintage items can look great in a contemporary setting, worked in with modern items to give an eclectic look and feel or select items which tone in colour to give great interest to your surroundings.

So what are these wonderful antique and vintage items which can help us save the planet? I will be taking a look at the top 10 tomorrow here on antiquesavenue antique vintage blog.

Categories : Antiques, News
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Jan
28

Is it vintage or Antique?

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Antique or Vintage

Antique or Vintage

Have you seen my poll asking about if you prefer vintage or antique items? For the purposes of the poll I defined antique as pre 1920s and vintage as 1920s to 1970s with anything after 1980 as being modern. Is this right? Is the 1920s Nutcracker in the photo vintage or antique?

Strictly anything Antique should be a hundred years old or more making all things Edwardian now in the official Antique category. Lapada ( The association of Art and Antiques Dealers) runs fairs which dateline at pre 1940 for all things antique (so this Nut Cracker would fit in) whilst Bada ( British Antique Dealers Association ) still seem to stick with the hundred year rule and so they would reject the Nut Cracker.
So my definition which runs half way between the two cant be far out. Certainly items made in the 1920s and 1930s seem so similar in their art deco styling that it would be wrong to set a date of 1930 and create an artificial split in styling.

Does it matter? Or perhaps this is splitting hairs? After all all things which are now vintage will eventually become antiques if they survive long enough. This is partially why I named this site AntiquesAvenue – things that are on the road to becoming Antiques!

Categories : Polls
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The rich Victorians loved to have an array of specialist cutlery at the tables of their large banquets and developed a piece for every possible use: Salt spoons, Caddy spoons, butter knives, cheese knives, fish knives, ladles, scoops and picks. Here’s a pretty piece of Victorian silver I thought you would like to see:

Victorian sugar sifter

Victorian sugar sifter

This is a sugar sifter spoon – made so that you can add a delicate sprinkling of caster or powdered sugar to your desert. This special collectible spoon has a pierced bowl and an Apostle finial to the handle. It is fully hallmarked for Birmingham 1897. It measures about 9.5 cms long and weighs about 8 grams
So what is an Apostle spoon? According to Wikipedia these are:

An apostle spoon is a spoon (usually silver or silver-plated, but sometimes of other metals, such as pewter) with an image of an apostle or other Christian religious figure as the termination of the handle, each bearing his distinctive emblem.

Originating in early-fifteenth century Europe as spoons used at table (often produced in sets of thirteen), by the sixteenth century they had become popular as baptismal presents for god-children, but were dying out by 1666. In some communities this tradition continued until at least the mid-twentieth century. Shakespeare refers to it in Henry VIII, Act 5, Scene 3, where Cranmer declines to be sponsor for the infant Elizabeth because of his lack of money. King Henry banters him with “Come, come, my lord, you’d spare your spoons.”

Sets of the twelve apostles are not common, and complete sets of thirteen, with the figure of Jesus on a larger spoon, are still rarer.

Want to own this silver sugar sifter – I am currently offering it for sale on eBay. 23/12/ 08 Update sorry this is now sold

Categories : Silver
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Safely homewith your newly acquired treasure bought at auction? Here are a few of sugestions based on my experiences.

  • - unpack these and examine them careful as soon as possible. If you have bought a large lot just to acquire one special piece this is particularly important as there may be other items of value  in the lot which could be sold on.
  • - Keep the receipt from the auciton house . This will help if ever you need to claim on your insurance following theft or damage to your antique.
  • - Do not go mad on cleaning up you antique with modern day cleaning materials you can easily spoil it. Leave it until you find the correct way to clean your piece or get a specialist to do this.
  • - Enjoy and go out and aquire even more!

The next part of my mini series on bidding at antiques auctions will be the conclusion and include a few special tips on specialist situations

Categories : Auctions
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Dec
10

Antiques Auctions – The bidding process

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Here is part seven of my guide to real life antiques auctions – “During the sale – The bidding process”.

 

So are you ready for the sale? Viewed, researched and decided what you want to bid on and how much you are willing to pay? You’ve registered, got your bidder number and you know how much commission you will pay on top of the hammer price?

 

 

Dont worry about attending the sale :
  • - you will not win a lot just by fidgeting or scratching your nose. Infact at some busy, crowded auctions you will have to wave hard to attract the auctioneers attention at all. Once the auctioneer recognises that you have a serious interest in buying he /she will keep a look out for you. Be polite and turn off your mobile phone before the sale starts – you will regret it if it rings once the auction is under way.
  • - A common myth is that an individual cant buy anything if there are a lot of antiques trade in the saleroom. Remember the antiques dealer needs to make a profit to survive, they are not going to outbid you unless they believe that the item is worth more and they can be wrong too.

 

1. Listen to the auctioneer.
Hopefully you have a few lots to wait before the first lot you want to bid on and can tune your ear in to the pace of the auction. If you are new to the sale rooms I suggest that you just watch the auctioneer for now and ignore everyone else in the room. How fast is he / she going? Does the auctioneer start with a high bid and when no one bids immediately reduce the opening bid by half ( many do). You will frequently hear:

One hundred pounds for this wonderful widget, who’ll give me one hundred pounds? No? Well fifty then, Fifty pounds surely its worth fifty pounds? twenty pounds then?

As you can see the auctioneer has created a sense that this is worth well over twenty pounds, maybe it is and maybe it isnt. You have written down the maximum price you are prepared to pay so stick to it and dont be influenced by the expert salesman on the rostrum.

 

2. Know when to put your bid in
I prefer not to be the first person to bid on a lot but if it goes as low as half of what I am prepared to bid and no-one else has shown an interest I usually get tempted to put my hand up.

Dont just put you your hand or bidding card and leave it their until the end of the lot – I’ve seen this happen many times and it indicates to the whole room that you have plenty of money and are going to buy the lot at any price. Remember that the vendor may be in the room, they may be an experienced vendor and there is nothing to stop them bidding against to to raise the maximum price.
Bid clearly and then take your hand or card down until it is your turn to bid again.

 

3. Know when to stop bidding – dont get carried away ( Auction fever)
Stick to that limit you wrote for yourself and dont go past it. If you have done your research properly the price you have written down should be one not to go beyond. Another wonderful antique widget will turn up in a few weeks / months time.

 

4. Upon a successful bid
Congratulations, the wonderful antique widget is yours! Once you are the lucky high bidder you will need to show your registration card number to the auctioneer. All the lots you are interested in have been sold you then go to the pay desk to settle your bill (see part 8 of this series on antiques auctions).

Categories : Auctions
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Nov
24

Can you value my antique for me?

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Every day I receive a few requests for valuations of peoples precious antiques and collectables. As I have mentioned before this is not a service you can expect to have carried out for free.  A proper valuation takes time and research, it is like asking any tradesman to offer their services for free:

  •  People wanting a valuation are normally convinced they have a real treasure and they get upset and argue with me over my opinion on the value of their antique or collectable
  • A valuation done properly is quite time consuming and the help I offer here free of charge. Valuations and selling of antiques are two different areas of the antiques and I choose to concentrate on selling them and writing about them.

So how can you get your pieces valued?

  • If you have a lot of items I would suggest that you contact your local auction house, they normally offer verbal valuations free of charge
  • If you just have a small number of items you can research prices similar items have fetched on the internet. eBay is a brilliant source of prices items have fetched over the past couple of weeks and should give a good indication of the value of your antique

How to value an item using eBay:

Use the eBay search facility. Down the left hand side is a check box for completed items. Enter a description of your antique into the search box and  ensure you tick the completed items box.  Once ebay has returned results of the sale prices of similar items you can sort these results in price order by clicking on  priceallong the top row.

For example: A lady wanted to know the price of some 1960s tiles she had. I entered the word “Tile” into the search box and checked the complete items box. This returned hundereds of results and so I narrowed the search by selection only tiles from the antiques category ( this excludes all new carpet tiles, wall and floor tiles).  Now I scrolled down through the pictures until I found some similar to the ones the lady wanted to know more about.

Practice this a few times with items you have around you and you will soon get the hang of being your own antiques valuer.

 


Categories : Uncategorized
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If you take a look at the left hand side of my blog you will see I have added some new features. There is the latest news on Antiques from the UK as found on the BBC . I have also added the latest news on Antiques from the USA as reported in the New York Times. On the far left there are the latest articles on Jewellery from Ezine.

I will keep monitoring these to see how interesting and relevant they are and also try and bring in more relevant information from the internet for example related blogs. Perhaps a page of antique, collectables and Jewellery related videos?

Categories : News
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