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This jasperware dish with fern and cattail decoration sold for $153 at Jackson's Auctioneers of Cedar Falls, Iowa.

Kovels – Antiques & Collecting: Week of June 29, 2009

This jasperware dish with fern and cattail decoration sold for $153 at Jackson's Auctioneers of Cedar Falls, Iowa.
This jasperware dish with fern and cattail decoration sold for $153 at Jackson’s Auctioneers of Cedar Falls, Iowa.

Several museums have “What is it?” exhibits that display unusual items in the hope that someone will recognize a rarely used specialized tool or a pot for an ethnic dish unfamiliar to us today. Recently we saw a 12 1/2-inch-diameter jasperware dish with an 8-inch-high cover sold at auction as a “pancake server.” It looks very much like a 19th-century English dish made to hold a round of Stilton cheese. Or it could be a pottery cake dish and cover similar to the plastic cake carrying dishes made today. Research in books and online and conversations with experts have not provided a definitive answer. We are still not sure how the dish was used, but perhaps it was used in several ways. Large ceramic covered cheese dishes that hold a full wheel of cheese are not popular for household use today. But they were produced in the 1800s by many English firms, including Wedgwood, Spode and Minton, as well as Dudson Pottery, which made a large number of cheese dishes. The dishes were called cheese stands in 19th-century ads. The cheese was kept covered on the table to control its strong odor, stave off mold and keep insects away. A pancake server is similar in size and shape, but it has a small hole in the cover to let steam from the stack of hot pancakes escape. A cake might be kept under the cover of a similar dish, but cakes were usually kept on open pedestal-style cake stands. The covered jasperware dish we saw identified as a pancake server auctioned for $153. It’s the same size and shape as a cheese dish.

Q: I have a spoon with a mother-of-pearl bowl and handle and a metal piece connecting them. I would like to know what it was used for and what the approximate value might be.

A: You have a caviar spoon. Caviar spoons are usually made of mother-of-pearl, although you can also find them made of bone, glass and other non-metallic materials. This is supposed to keep the caviar from picking up a metallic taste. Since caviar is packed in metal cans or in glass jars with metal tops, experts think metal spoons are actually OK, although caviar tarnishes silver. However, if you want to follow tradition and avoid using a metal spoon, a mother-of-pearl caviar spoon is a nice touch. New ones cost about $40. Old ones sell for a little less unless marked and made by a known artist.

Q: I have a green ceramic candy jar shaped like the Marshall Field’s clock. Does it have any value?

A: When a Chicagoan says, “Meet me at the clock,” everyone knows which one. The landmark 12-story Marshall Field’s and Co. department store was built in downtown Chicago between 1892 and 1914. The Great Clock was installed on Nov. 26, 1914, on the corner of Randolph and State streets. Norman Rockwell immortalized the clock when he painted it for the Nov. 3, 1945, cover of the Saturday Evening Post magazine. Your jar was originally sold containing chocolates. It’s worth $100 to $300. Much to the chagrin of the residents of Chicago, Marshall Field’s became “Macy’s on State Street” in 2006.

Q: “Mitchell Vance and Co.” is the name on the paper label on the back of my brass wall-sconce light fixtures. I found them in the basement of the 1904 house I just moved into. The fixtures are wired for electricity, although they have cardboard “candles” that must have used a flame-shaped light bulb. Should I clean the fixtures? How old are they?

A: Mitchell Vance and Co. was in business in New York City by 1860. It made gas and electric light fixtures and chandeliers. Your fixtures with the fake candleholders are a type popular in the 1920s and ’30s. Old fixtures, especially groups of two or more, sell easily to those restoring old houses. It was common to have one fixture on each side of the space above the fireplace. They can be cleaned, but it’s probably best to have it done professionally. Then have them lacquered so they do not discolor again. A single wall sconce in usable condition sells for about $150 in an antique shop.

Q: Who made the Little Red Riding Hood cookie jars?

A: Hull Pottery Co. of Crooksville, Ohio, made the Little Red Riding Hood line of dishes and accessories patented in 1943. But pieces were sent to the Royal China and Novelty Co. of Chicago to be decorated. Then they were sent back to Hull to be sold. Some experts argue that only a few of the Little Red Riding Hood shapes were made by Hull and that the rest were made by Regal China Corp., a subsidiary of Royal. These experts say the china from Royal was whiter, and some Red Riding Hood cookie jars have a white body rather than Hull’s creamier body. At least 30 different decorations were applied on the cookie jars. A recent reproduction is marked “McCoy.”

Tip: Don’t store fabrics in plastic bags. Use a well-washed white pillowcase. Plastic holds moisture, and the fabrics should “breathe.”

Terry Kovel answers as many questions as possible through the column. By sending a letter with a question, you give full permission for use in the column or any other Kovel forum. Names, addresses or e-mail addresses will not be published. We cannot guarantee the return of any photograph, but if a stamped envelope is included, we will try. The volume of mail makes personal answers or appraisals impossible. Write to Kovels, Auction Central News, King Features Syndicate, 300 W. 57th St., New York, NY 10019.

Need more information about collectibles? Find it at Kovels.com, our Web site for collectors. Check prices there, too. More than 700,000 are listed, and viewing them is free. You can also sign up to read our weekly “Kovels Komments.” It includes the latest news, tips and questions and is delivered by e-mail, free, if you register. Kovels.com offers extra collector’s information and lists of publications, clubs, appraisers, auction houses, people who sell parts or repair antiques and much more. You can subscribe to “Kovels on Antiques and Collectibles,” our monthly newsletter filled with prices, facts and color photos. Kovels.com adds to the information in our newspaper column and helps you find useful sources needed by collectors.

CURRENT PRICES

Current prices are recorded from antiques shows, flea markets, sales and auctions throughout the United States. Prices vary in different locations because of local economic conditions.

  • Reddy Kilowatt keychain flashlight, plastic, brass chain, flip-open cover, Reddy’s image and name in red, unopened, 1950s, 3 inches, $30.
  • Three Little Pigs playing card deck, titled “Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf,” 1930s, by Delarue, pair, $100.
  • Glass candy container, radio shape, raised lettering, “Tune In,” three simulated dials, speaker horn, marked “U.S.A., VC J’ne’t., Pa.,” gold accent, 1930s, 2 x 4 1/2 inches, $125.
  • “Our Betty Jane” glass toy baking set, heat-resistant ovenwear, 1950s, nine pieces, $145.
  • Cracker Jack toy, horse-drawn delivery wagon, white metal, Cracker Jack package on each side of wagon, early 1900s, 1 3/4 inches, $185.
  • Nakara jewel box, burnt-orange tones with original lining, tea scene on lid, hinged, square, 4 inches, $350.
  • Pieced wool quilt, 12 squares with geometric-shaped segments in shades of red, gray, gold, tan and yellow, red cotton fabric, 1920s, 77 x 59 inches, $535.
  • Vogue Ginny “Crib Crowd Baby” doll, hard plastic, bent limbs, lamb’s-hair wig, brown sleep eyes, rosy cheeks, organdy dress and bonnet, celluloid duck, 1950s, 7 inches, $950.
  • Cast-iron sugar kettle, flared lip, deep circular body, American, 1890s, $1,415.
  • Worktable, burl veneer, lift top opens to compartments, interior with adjustable work surface, frieze drawer below, circa 1825, 31 x 22 inches, $2,490.

Depression glass and dinnerwares of the 1920s to 1990s are important collectibles today. Learn more about prices, makers and patterns of glass, ceramic and plastic dishes in “Kovels’ Depression Glass and Dinnerware Price List,” 8th edition. Available at your bookstore; online at Kovels.com; by phone at 800-571-1555; or send $16 plus $4.95 postage to “Depression Glass,” Box 22900, Beachwood, OH 44122.
© 2009 by Cowles Syndicate Inc.

Caption:
This jasperware dish with fern and cattail decoration sold for $153 at Jackson’s Auctioneers of Cedar Falls, Iowa.