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This is a carved walnut Savonarola chair made in Italy about 1875. It sold at New Orleans Auction Galleries for $1,100.

Kovels – Antiques & Collecting: Week of Feb. 15, 2010

This is a carved walnut Savonarola chair made in Italy about 1875. It sold at New Orleans Auction Galleries for $1,100.
This is a carved walnut Savonarola chair made in Italy about 1875. It sold at New Orleans Auction Galleries for $1,100.
Furniture names often are confusing. A Martha Washington sewing table was made in the 1930s, more than 120 years after Mrs. Washington died, and in a style with no resemblance to the sewing tables of the 18th century. A Governor Winthrop desk had nothing to do with the Massachusetts Bay Colony governor who lived in the 17th century. It’s a drop-front desk designed by Chippendale in the 18th century, but named Winthrop by a furniture company in the 20th century. The Savonarola chair is another misnamed piece of furniture. The design comes from the ancient Roman X-shaped chair that was very popular in medieval Italy. It can be plain or carved, solid or made to fold. Some are inlaid with ivory or metal, and some have a cushioned seat. The chair was given the name Savonarola in the 19th century, after Girolamo Savonarola, an Italian priest in Florence from 1494 to 1498. He preached against the excesses of the people, predicted the Last Days and organized the Bonfire of the Vanities in 1497. Mirrors, cosmetics, immoral sculptures, gaming tables, musical instruments, fine clothes and artwork were burned in a huge fire in the main square. When the Last Days didn’t come, his followers revolted, he was excommunicated and then, in 1498, he was executed. None of this has anything to do with the X-shaped chair that was given his name. But even stranger, the chair is called a Dante chair in Italy and a Luther chair in Germany. The form is still popular. An example from the late-19th century could sell for $1,000; a chair made in the 1980s might bring $150.

Q: I have a ceramic figural head that’s wearing a World War II soldier’s hat and has grooves like a Chia Pet. It has a “Robinson-Ransbottom” mark on the bottom. Can you tell me anything about it?

A: Robinson-Ransbottom Pottery Co. made two grass-growing heads in 1941. “Elmer the Doughboy” wore a soldier’s hat, and “Barnacle Bill,” a sailor’s cap. Robinson-Ransbottom was in business in Roseville, Ohio, from 1900 to 2005. Its pottery was marked “R.R.P. Co., Roseville, O.” The heads were sold with seeds for 59 cents each. Chia Pets were first made in San Francisco in 1982. The “grass” is chia (Salvia hispanica), which grows in Mexico. Elmer the Doughboy is worth about $35.

Q: I’m a retired elementary schoolteacher. I used to spend time in the spring teaching about bird migration, so through the years I picked up four old Audubon bird charts. They were originally painted in watercolors by Louis Agassiz Fuertes for the Massachusetts Audubon Society. They’re in very good condition because I laminated them years ago to protect them from the students’ handling. Each one is 27 by 42 inches. What can you tell me about the artist and the charts?

A: Louis Agassiz Fuertes (1874-1927) was an ornithologist and an artist who specialized in painting birds. Your charts were originally published in 1898, 1900, 1912 and 1924. The first two were published by the Massachusetts Audubon Society, and the last two by Milton Bradley Co. Original 19th-century prints of John James Audubon’s portraits of single birds can sell for hundreds and even thousands of dollars. Your charts are not as valuable, but the fact that you laminated them decreased their value even further. Still, a museum in your area might be interested in them.

Q: When I was metal-detecting a while ago, I found a 1934 North Carolina chauffeur’s badge. It’s metal with the embossed wording, “Licensed Motor Vehicle Driver Badge, Expires June 30, 1934.” What do you think it’s worth?

A: Starting around 1900, chauffeurs were specially licensed. Until the 1930s, a chauffeur was issued a paper certificate that was displayed in his car or a metal badge that he wore on his hat or jacket. Today, North Carolina does not require special licensing for chauffeurs. There are collectors who hunt for chauffeur badges. Most badges sell for about $20.

Q: My mother-in-law died unexpectedly, and I ended up with the job of cleaning out the house where she lived for 50 years. During that process, I found a pair of Mickey Mouse cufflinks about 2 inches long and 1 3/8 inches high. They’re cast in a silver-tone metal with an enameled Mickey in a running pose. His gloves and shoes are yellow, his shorts are red with yellow buttons, his face is silver and his eyes, ears, arms and legs are black. The back is marked with the copyright symbol and “Walt Disney Productions.” Are they old and valuable?

A: You have a pair of vintage Mickey Mouse cufflinks, probably made by the Dexter Manufacturing Co. of Providence, R.I. Dexter made Disney character jewelry, including cufflinks, starting in 1953 and continuing off and on into the mid-1980s. Your cufflinks would sell for about $10.

Tip: Beware of plastic jewelry. Some will change color, become brittle or even turn into a brown, sticky puddle. Any plastic that has an odor is deteriorating and should not be kept near other objects.

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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.

  • Britain guard and guardhouse toy soldier, hand-painted lead, guard’s right arm moves up and down with rifle, 1950s, 3 1/2 inches, $35.
  • Coca-Cola tip tray, 1916 calendar girl Elaine drinking a Coke, 6 1/2 x 4 1/2 inches, $143.
  • Steuben blown and applied crystal ship’s decanter, cut moon stopper, signed, circa 1942, 10 1/2 x 7 3/8 inches, $570.
  • Farmhouse Biscuit tin, figural, farm scene with animals, Huntley & Palmers, circa 1931, 4 1/4 x 6 1/2 x 3 3/4 inches, $605.
  • Redware pie plate, coggled rim with yellow slip bird in center, 19th century, 9 inches, $755.
  • Early American Windsor chair, painted maple, pine and hickory, sack back, continuous arms with scroll ends, turned supports, saddle seat, late 18th century, 37 inches, $1,920.
  • Coin silver pap boat, elongated body, C-scroll handles, stepped flange base, marked “J. Rafel N.O.,” New Orleans, 1810, 6 1/2 inches, $1,910.
  • Door of Hope policeman doll, wooden hands, carved face, blue uniform with appliqued collar, white hat with red fringe, 11 1/2 inches, $2,875.
  • Stevens & Williams cameo-cut vase, tall neck, white opal over russet-cut ground, embossed double-circles paper label, 1890s, 12 inches, $6,000.

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