Category: Christmas Collectibles

Christmas SALE – Dec 7-14!

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Ready to do some serious Christmas shopping for yourself or names on your list? I’ve decided to cut the prices considerably on these items for the next week!

How about a retired Russ Berrie “Catch the Spirit” Ice Sculpture Figurine for a Christmas collectible? Priced at $15.00, take 25% off until December 14th!

Kwaker Cream Pitcher ready for that special collection. Priced at $25.00, take 25% off until December 14th!

Indian Tree Cream and Sugar Set – a pretty vintage collectible. Priced at $20.oo, take 25% off until December 14th!

Or an adorable and rare Carnival Glass Santa Claus originally priced at $49.00, selling for only $39.00 until December 14th!

A beautiful set of King’s Crown Snack Plates and Cups to make a pretty vintage Christmas table for two. Priced at $29.00, selling for only $19.00 until December 14th!

All collectible Reindeer Entertaining Pieces – 10% off until December 14th!

All vintage jewelryfree shipping- until December 14th.

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Vintage Holiday Collectibles

From Halloween to Thanksgiving to Christmas, vintage holiday collectibles can be found for collecting or decorating. In fact, I’ve noticed now-a-days,  starting in September, you can see all three holidays displayed in the stores at once! I looked across Lowes this past weekend to see large Halloween mummys staring across the aisle at the brightly decorated Christmas trees and behind them were fall wreaths!

Here’s a black “Halloween Tree” from an about about.com article – a creative idea by Lisa Joens.

Lisa Joen's Halloween Tree

Lisa Joen's Halloween Tree

One antique and collectible discussion forum that I belong to: iantiqueonline, has a group that I moderate just for Vintage Holiday Collectibles. This week, we have several entries on Halloween collectibles. Christmas collectible discussions are popping up too.

Another group boasts of creative ideas for decorating with vintage collectibles – including holiday. Antique malls, little gift shops and grandma’s house to name a few – will be showing off their collections this time of the year. It can inspire the rest of us to give those vintage holiday collectibles a place front and center for a few weeks.

What’s in your closet? Or how have you decorated for the coming holiday seasons?

 

Bing & Grondahl Christmas Collector Plates Continued…

Jule Aften 1978 Christmas Collector Plate

Jule Aften 1978 Bing&Grondahl Christmas Collector Plate

In my opinion, the Bing & Grondahl Christmas Collector Plates capture the meaning and sentiment of Christmas like nothing else. Each plate is in the traditional blue and white – Henry Thelander design, using the Scandinavian majolica style.

Replacements, Ltd gives an interesting historical account of the beginning of all collector plates…and it all began with Bing and Grondahl. “The first recorded Limited Edition collector plate came from the Bing and Grondahl factory of Denmark in 1895. Titled “Behind The Frozen Window,” it was the first known commemorative plate to be limited in production with date and title information fired on the plate itself and was followed by a second plate the following year as the first Annual Bing and Grondahl Christmas plate titled “Jule Aften 1896.” An annual plate was produced each year thereafter and still is today under the Royal Copenhagen name.

Behind the frozen window bing and grondahl

“Behind The Frozen Window,” circa 1895. First collector plate ever!

Valued $6999.00. Photo courtesy of Replacements, Ltd.

From 1904 until post WWII, other Scandinavian and German companies introduced annual Christmas series plates including Alumunia, Royal Copenhagen, Rosenthal and Konigliche.

By 1949, as interest in the famous blue and white Danish plates rose, plates were being imported and sold in the United States through dealers and auctions. It wasn’t long before demand for earlier issues created a collector plate market and prices began to increase on out-of-production issues. As the collector plate market grew, other European companies produced and exported Limited Edition plates to North America.

By the early 1970’s, J. Roderick MacArthur saw an opportunity to organize the buying and selling of collector plates by telephone just as stocks and bonds were bought and sold. Thus began the Bradford Exchange, the leading dealer in first-issue collector plates. By the 1980’s, the Bradford Exchange was fully computerized with over 11,000 transactions each day. By this time, Lalique and Orrefors had produced Annual Crystal plates, Limoges, Royal Doulton, and Wedgwood were producing fine china Collector Plates and American companies such as Reed & Barton produced silver and pewter plates.

As the theme of Collector Plates grew from Christmas to children, to birds, flowers, animals, famous people, movies, rhymes and tales and so on, so did the number of manufacturers. These included Anna-Perenna, W.S.George, Edwin M. Knowles and Dominion China of Canada. The first Chinese collection called Beauties of the Red Mansion and the first Russian collection called Russian Legends became instant best-sellers and remain popular collector plates today.

Because Collector Plates are traditionally taken from fine works of art from such notables as Norman Rockwell, Donald Zolan, Lena Liu, Sandra Kuck, Edna Hibel, etc, the trend of buyers is to collect the whole series of any one title. This created the Secondary Market of Collector Plates as buyers actively sought out first issues no longer in production and available only through dealers, auctions, second hand shops the Bradford Exchange and now over the Internet. Values fluctuated with demand almost daily during the highest activities of the 1970’s, 1980’s and early 1990’s.

Limited Edition Collector Plates have recognized standards to maintain for would-be collectors. All plates are limited in production and once closed, are never produced again. They are usually taken from signed works of art, produced by reliable companies of quality workmanship, are usually sponsored by a prestigious institution, may have some commemorative importance and usually form part of a theme series. Maintaining the original paper work including the Certificate of Authenticity (if produced), is important for most collectors. Original boxes for storing and shipping are also handy but do not usually affect the value.

Today, collector plates are still in production by many companies and older, long out-of-production issues are bought and sold on the Secondary Collector Plate market by buyers starting a collection or replacing broken or lost plates.”

Add a collector plate to your collection today! Grandma’s Treasures Online offers an AFTER CHRISTMAS SALE 25% Off for each one!

 

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