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Useful Collectibles: Antique Tins

02.29.08By The Dean

If you are living in one of our colder climate states as I do, spring and garage sales cannot come soon enough. Even estate sales seem to be few and far between in this colder, snowier year. With the seed catalogs arriving in snail mail, we are thinking spring and hoping that a good crop of antiques will follow.

Seed Catalog

While it is fun and informative to browse antique malls, learning by observing price tickets, checking tags for manufacturer’s names and talking with sales people or an occasional dealer doing restocking, it takes a great effort to find good bargains. That’s the case for either one’s own collection or for resale purposes. Garage sales often have limited amounts of goods but it’s easy to run through 10-15 places on a Saturday morning.

Estate sales offer a much better chance to find goodies, especially if you are willing to dig. Wifey always heads for the expensive collectibles, decorative items and jewelry, usually located within sight of the checkout station and watched over by helpful staff. I am more inclined to start in the garage or basement, where advertising antique tins or stacks of paper are often hiding. And wifey joins me in the basement. It’s always the location where the estate seller places things they have little interest in and will frequently undervalue.

Tabacco Tins

I have prowled through many a basement work shop or root cellar for tins, often buying the canister and discarding the washer, nuts or bolts they contain. (My own workshop is already loaded with full coffee tins.)

Tin collectors are a special breed. Many will purchase an example in poor condition, rather than pass up one that’s not in their collection. While condition affects price, rarity trumps condition every time. Many collectors focus on the artistic graphics on old tin. Tobacco tins are the easiest to find and come in a vast array of shapes and sizes, and with rare exception, if you heard of the brand, it is most likely quite common.

When hunting, check under and around all work areas, peek into medicine cabinets, fruit cellars, pantries, attics, closets and garages. Antique tins hide in all these places. And I have been known to inquire about items not marked for sale, sometimes “Yes” produces a super buy.

Our personal collection is very modest and centers around talcum powder tins. They sit on the sink top in our guest powder room and create the look of the 1930s. Antique tins are handy storage containers. That’s why many survived but where they are stored can also lead to condition problems. Holding “things” on a basement shelf may have saved it from the trash bin but basement dampness can destroy the graphics. Sunlight will fade the colors and proximity to chemicals in the garage can bubble the printing.

Tins are easily placed on shelves, a window sill or on furniture, Powder Tintheir bright colors and graphics create a wonderful display. Tins were used for a great many products beside tobacco and powders, including candy and cookies, other food products, chemicals, oils, spices, coffee, prophylactics, hardware items and even industrial components.

Starting a collection requires a small investment, and I suggest that should include a reference guide to acquaint yourself with the relative price structure. This book is our guide to rating rarity with prices in broad terms and reflecting a range of conditions. It’s from Collector Books, a division of Schroeder Publications and is available from on line sellers, just search Google = Antique Tins by Fred Dodge.

Book Antique Tins

Good hunting, and if you have an anecdote on tin collecting give us a comment.

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Vintage Easter Collectibles

04.08.07By Deanna Dahlsad

Vintage German Tin Easter EggFirst it was Christmas decorations, then vintage Halloween items — now, vintage Easter items are growing in popularity.

We just can’t seem to get enough of buying back our holiday memories, can we?

When it comes to Easter collectibles, one of the most popular areas is antique postcards. (I know, you thought it was the Easter bonnet; but it’s not.)

The Golden Age of Postcards was from 1898 to 1918, so these are the most sought after, but cards of all eras are increasing in popularity.

The most popular Easter postcards feature bunnies, chicks, lambs and kittens.

Vintage Easter Postcard with Kittens(Somewhere along the way, we’ve stopped putting kittens on our Easter things… They lost their mittens; they got no pie; but not on the cards, oh why?)

Other popular designs include religious designs, eggs, and comical kids (including comical kids dressed as eggs). Also popular are photographs of cherubic children.

Vintage German Easter Postcard (Children Dressed Like Eggs)Collectors of Easter postcards will find themselves competing with other postcard collectors — and there are a lot of them. (Deltiolgy, the study of postcards, is currently the third largest collectable hobby in the world.)

Because these old postcards are most loved for their graphics many collectors find themselves with many foreign language postcards. And in fact, among the most popular and sought after postcards are those which were published in Germany.

Vintage German Postcard Easter GirlsJohn O. Winsch of Stapleton, an American publisher, had cards printed in Germany and imported to the U.S. John Finkenrath of Berlin (P.F.B.) was a German company with U.S.A. patents. Gottschalk, Dreyfuss, and Davis had several studios but the postcards were made in Germany. The ever famous International Art Publishing Company and Raphael Tuck & Sons also had their printing done in Germany.

Vintage Paper Mache Easter RabbitLike Halloween, Easter also brings us candy and so collectors seek vintage candy holders.

The most popular of these are vintage tin and paper mache pieces from Germany (which is also true of the Halloween candy holders — those Germans sure made a lot of money off world holidays once upon a time).

Popular themes are eggs, rabbits, duckings and chicks.

Some designs are easily identified as candy holders. For example, bunnies with baskets on their backs and eggs with tops that lift off are easy to notice.

Others are a bit trickier.

For example, this paper mache rabbit’s head pops off (eeeiwwww) exposing a hollow inside in which to hide treats.

Vintage German Paper Mache Easter Bunny Candy Holder

Details to look for with vintage paper mache pieces include flocking, tin or glass eyes, and paint which is not too chipped or worn.

Other decor items, such as paper mache bobble heads and decorated tin eggs are also popular.

Again most of the oldest and most desireable were made in Germany. The most sought after pieces are circa 1920 - 1940.

Collectors of any Easter items will find themselves also competing with other collectors. For example, those cards and candy holders which feature rabbits will find themselves vying with general bunny collectors.

Vintage German Paper Mache Easter Bobble HeadSo if you want to get in before vintage Easter items become as high priced as Halloween and Christmas collectibles are, you’d best hop to it!

(Think of it as a life-long Easter Egg Hunt!)

For more, read:

Bonnie A. Shockey’s Vintage Easter Postcard Collection

Postcard Collecting Terms

Paper Mache Conservation & Restoration

Click any photo to fing out more — or to buy!

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