Archive for January, 2010

FLOW BLUE CHINA

Have you ever squinted your eyes while looking at a city’s lights from distance or an array of Christmas lights displayed before you and noticed the blurred beauty it can bring? That’s what happens with design where the blue color has slightly blurred the lines to create Flow Blue. It enhances the scene!

Flow Blue China and Porcelain Information & History by Schiffer Books gives great background on the beautiful product, ” Flow Blue china was made from the early 1800s until just after the turn of  the century. ..

Flow Blue Bowl

Henry Alcock Flow Blue Delamere Bowl on sale in Grandma’s Treasures Online

Since the 1700s, English pottery makers had tried to copy Chinese porcelain which exhibited many characteristics of what was to become known as Flow Blue. Chinese porcelain was quite expensive at the time as a luxury item. English potteries developed a type of salt-glaze earthenware which looked somewhat like porcelain due to the unique white hue that they produced. It could then be decorated with Chinese inspired designs and sold at much lower cost than Chinese porcelain. Transfer printing was invented around 1775 as a new method for decorating pottery. A copper plate was engraved with the design and warmed, at which point paint was rubbed onto the plate and any excess removed with a small knife. Damp tissue paper was then pressed carefully against the plate, then lifted up and pressed onto the pottery to which the transfer was being made. The transfer was then rubbed in using flannel after placing the pattern to be transferred in the correct position. Then, the piece was placed in water where the tissue paper floated off, leaving the design transferred to the piece. It was lightly heated to dry the paint, then glazed. While some firms had their own engravers who produced the designs, most smaller companies used engraving firms specializing in such services.

Because the Chinese porcelain that they were seeking to emulate had blue designs, the English also used blue, the only color they were certain would survive the glazing. The Staffordshire region had well over 100 potteries producing this ware by the early 1800s, originally pioneered by Josiah Spode. Cobalt oxide is the base pigment used in Flow Blue, discovered in the mid 1500s. They discovered that cobalt oxide dye would sink into the porous earthenware and blurred further during the glazing. Around 1820, they also discovered that the flow of the blue dye could be enhanced by using lime or ammonia chloride in the glazing process. The degree of blur varied greatly among manufacturers, and the flowing effect conveniently hid most manufacturing flaws in the blanks. Josiah Wedgwood is generally recognized as the creator of Flow Blue pottery in the 1820s. Early Flow Blue designs were mostly oriental although other scenics were also produced. Scenes of all types were usually romanticized visions of foreign lands, often mixing cultures and with the sole purpose to create desirability in the products. After 1850, styles became quite ornate and the scenes depicted even more fanciful. While some think that Flow Blue was discovered by accident, most experts believe that the development of the blurring technique and its use in production was quite intentional, a technique which produced works still in high demand today.”

Flow Blue Creamer

Flow Blue Cream Pitcher on sale in Grandma’s Treasures Online

Mary Frank Gaston the author of Collector’s Encyclopedia of Flow Blue China, Second Series, wrote from a 1993 vantage point noting that Flow Blue had experienced 10 years of steady incline of popularity.

Today if you search online you will find that Flow Blue china is still fetching strong prices.

 

Vintage Sheet Music

I have lots of vintage sheet music! How about you?

Research shows that sheet music produced from the 1890s on featured favorite songs from the stage. Later, movies and radio were the agents to spread popular music even further into American homes.

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Many times, performers associated with the original musical presentations were shown on the cover of the music. (See Floyd Cramer with Last Date sheet music in the photo below standing up at the back of booth display.) Many collectors today count this as an important benefit! And if it is autographed, you have a gold mine!

Sheet Music was so popular, many sold more than one million copies when first issued. Collecting Paper by Gene Utz tells us that two million copies were sold of A Bird in a Gilded Cage in 1900.

Let Me Call You Sweetheart and Down By The Old Mill Stream both sold five to six million copies in 1910.

This widespread popularity during the beginning of the 20th Century explains the lower value when collecting. Most vintage sheet music sells between $4-8 each.

There are some names that are in high demand that will bring much more. Anyone know what those titles would be?

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For a great online selection of vintage sheet music, go to: Shelly’s Vintage Sheet Music!

 

Ice Crystal

The ice crystals hanging off my roof and the ice fog over the river near my house this week, reminds me of the beautiful vintage crystal that sparkles in the light as well.

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Crystal icicles on a winter day in northwest Colorado

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Crystal Cut Glass Spoon Dish

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Ice fog over the White River in Northwest Colorado

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Vintage Avon Crystal Stemware

Loving sparkling vintage crystal inside and ice scenery outside!

Items pictured are for sale on Grandma’s Treasures Online.

 

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