Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Ted Williams memorabilia to be auctioned in Boston

BOSTON (AP) -- He was a skilled fisherman, a veteran of two wars and an accomplished hunter. Oh, and Ted Williams also played baseball.
Fans seeking to buy items once owned by the legendary Red Sox slugger will flock to Boston's Fenway Park beginning Wednesday for a preview of the first major auction of sports, military and personal memorabilia documenting Williams' life.
The preview, open to the public, is set to last through Friday at the world's oldest baseball park and home field of the only team that Williams played for during his 1939-1960 major league career. The auction will be Saturday and some of the proceeds will benefit The Jimmy Fund, a charity affiliated with Boston's Dana-Farber Cancer Institute for which the slugger helped raise money during his lifetime.

Williams, the last major league hitter to bat .400 — posting a .406 average in 1941 — enjoyed a diverse life, including as a U.S. Marine in World War II and the Korean War, a member of the fishing hall of fame and a skilled and accomplished hunter. He flew 39 combat missions in Korea and took enemy fire three times, including during an encounter that forced him to land his stricken jet on its belly.
"There're not many elements of his life that did not exude the same excellence as he did on the baseball field," said David Hunt, whose firm, Hunt Auctions Inc., is selling the memorabilia on behalf of Williams' daughter, Claudia Williams of Hernando, Fla. "And that is really unique ... He's sort of like the John Wayne of baseball and sports of that time period and I think that's evidenced by all these artifacts that documents his life."

Among the nearly 800 items up for auction is a baseball in pristine condition that Babe Ruth autographed for Williams with the inscription "To my pal Ted Williams, From Babe Ruth." That unique ball is expected to go for between $100,000 and $200,000, Hunt said.
The ball, which was stolen from the family's Florida home in the 1970s and not recovered until 2005, had a special place in Ted Williams' heart, his daughter said.

"Of course, the one item in the sale which meant so much to him as a baseball fan was the personalized baseball given to him by Babe Ruth," Claudia Williams said in an email to The Associated Press. "It influenced his personalizations to so many kids in the future, as he always loved the way Mr. Ruth signed the ball, 'Your pal.'"
Others items include Williams' 1949 American League Most Valuable Player award valued between $150,000 and $250,000, a silver bat for winning the American League batting championship in 1957 valued between $100,000 and $200,000, as well as bats and jerseys that the slugger used, Hunt said as workers unpacked the memorabilia for display at a luxury suite at Fenway Park.

"These objects really just chronicle this man's life and, I think, show how great he was, not just as a baseball player," Hunt said.
Claudia Williams says her dad's intent was always to auction the items for charity.

"I'm rather certain, in his last year with the Red Sox, he earned less than $100,000," she said. "So, my dad was always amazed at the sale prices garnered from sales of sports memorabilia.
"It is dearly important to me to include The Jimmy Fund in this event as it was at the center of my father's heart for so many years."

Hunt said the auction caps a process that began nearly six years ago when his firm did some appraisals for her.
Williams' daughter, Hunt said, had discussed selling some of the items with her father and brother, who both supported the idea. That occurred before Williams died in 2002, followed by his son in 2004.

The 10-year anniversary of Williams' death at age 83 and Fenway Park's ongoing 100th anniversary celebrations provided an ideal timing for the auction, Hunt said.
"Claudia kept things that are important to her, donated things to museums ... Why not do this in celebration of his life, benefit the charity that he loved and make it a positive thing for everybody," Hunt said.

Claudia Williams said: "I am incredibly proud of my father. My father lived a wonderful life, and did all he could for his fans, his country, and his family."
Source:  Written by Rodrique Ngowi  from the Associated Press.

Friday, April 20, 2012

Rare 1909 Honus Wagner baseball card sells for $1.2 million in online auction

ST. LOUIS - A New Jersey man has paid $1.2 million for an extremely rare 1909 Honus Wagner baseball card.
The buyer placed the highest of 14 bids in an online auction that ended Friday.

Missouri collectibles dealer Bill Goodwin, who auctioned off the card for a Houston seller, says he is thrilled by the sale price. He says the seller wishes to remain anonymous and the buyer hasn't decided whether to come forward publicly.

Only about 60 of the 200 cards that were made are believed to still exist. Many are in poor condition, but Goodwin says the card sold Friday is among those in the best condition.

Arizona Diamondbacks owner Ken Kendrick paid a record $2.8 million last year for the highest-graded Wagner card.

Source: The Associated Press & Yahoo! News

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Stamp Collecting Software to Choose From

The traditional way of compiling of stamp collections requires more effort in arranging and distributing the types of stamps. The most common tool that is used to organize a stamp collection is the album list. Today, there are software that can easily help a collector in filing, securing, detecting, upgrading, and providing information about the stamps. These software are now used to make the collection easier to manage. There are many software that are now advertised in the market. Here are some of them.

1. StampManage 2006 can catalog and file all stamps that came from Canada, USA, and UK. This software can contain 30,000 stamps in its database and can feature 21,200 images. These are all compiled in Scott numbering system. This numbering system is standardized and was introduced by the SCOTT Company. They provided the license to StampManage to practice this kind of numbering system. The 2006 latest edition now features an integrated report designer that has the ability to document personal reports. These Reports can be transferred through HTML, PDF, and Excel.

2. The Stamp Organizer Deluxe software can recover and view all information about a stamp. The software shows great efficiency and accessibility to gather all information in a compiled data. The stamps could be arranged in various ways. The collector has his options on how he can organize his collection using this software.

3. The Stamp Collection Wizard 1.04 can create personal records and accumulate reports about the stamps origin, price value and other informative data. A collector may enjoy the benefit of being updated and informed using the stamp collection database of the program. It has also the capacity to store and track the price value and the date of all special stamps.

4. The Report Label Wizard can easily determine and print various kinds of reports listed on this software. There are specific sets of wizard catalogs that allow a user to determine the report category. The stamps can be defined according to color, graphics, size, perforation, and margins. He may also outline the report using headers and footers. To save any of these program settings, he may index it using templates.

5. Customized Display Data Software can set any settings displayed on the windows regardless of the size and amount of data information. A collector has the option to choose from what type of size, color, and font to use in compiling the collection in the organizer. He may change the information on the data entry controls by determining the customize reports on the program.

6. Stamp Collector Professional 3.0S can compile and arrange all personal stamp collections. This program helps a collector to have an organized compilation of those special and rare stamps that may have a good price value. It also identifies and shows all records and information about the date issuance, place of origin, characteristics, theme, and the price value of the stamp.

7. The Specialized Data Fields Controls can speed up any new entry records on the database. It can also create new command responses related to the data entry. Any graphical features are scanned from the List Box program, which also sets up a particular element from the first category of characters. This software also features a Date Field calendar, Email Field Integrated, and a Data Field with calculator.

8. The Organized Deluxe Designer can modify and upgrade the structure of any stamp. Similar to other organizer programs, it has the functionality to determine different kinds of data fields where a user would like to store huge number of compilations.

9. The StampManage Canada 2005 specializes on stamps that came from Canada. This program catalogs and files all information about Canadian stamps. It has a special software that determines all Canadian and provincial stamp data that features images and report data fields about the compiled information.

10. The Web ready View Page Software can update and read all record fields on a section basis. Ha may display his file collection of stamps from the database to the web page of the site. They can be featured with complete background images using the browse page to edit all the necessary information that he may add on the web page.
Source: www.Amazines.com

Friday, April 6, 2012

GOMES ESTATE ATTRACTS STANDING ROOM ONLY CROWD

Dedham , MA-  Never before has the Dedham gallery of Grogan and Company Fine Art Auctioneers and Appraisers been so alive and filled to capacity, as it was for the March 24th auction of property from the Estate of the Reverend Peter J. Gomes.  The large collection of fine art, antiques furniture and decorations from the Reverend’s two residences: Sparks House, Cambridge and Oceanside, Plymouth, Massachusetts, brought friends, colleagues, collectors and admirers together and realized over $350,000 for the Estate. 
The Reverend Peter J. Gomes (1942 – 2011), Plummer Professor of Christian Morals and Pusey Minister of the Memorial Church at Harvard University, has been described as one of the most distinguished Christian preachers in the history of the English-speaking pulpit.  Born in Boston and raised in Plymouth, Massachusetts, Reverend Gomes was a self professed anglophile who had a passion for collecting.  “Not only do we bring other people’s things into our world and make them, however, temporarily, out own, but we are also possessed by that which we possess and seek;” writes Gomes in an article titled “An Unruly Passion for Things”, published in Every Room Tells a Story, Tales from the Pages of Nest Magazine, edited by Joseph Holtzman, “Thus does the past live, recreated by our hands.  Collecting is the ultimate redistribution of wealth and beauty.”

 Highlights from Reverend Gomes Spark’s house collection included a Scottish Tall Case Clock, circa 1820, that he acquired in 1970 for  $500, which sold for $4,425 to a former student of Peter’s.   His Harvard chair commemorating his 25 years of service sparked competitive bidding before it finally sold to a local woman bidding from the back of the room for $3,068, and an American school Landscape depicting a Native American by a Lake at Sunset, sold for $3,245 to another former student of Gomes.  The five piece American Tea Service that Gome’s used at his coveted Wednesday tea parties, sold for $3,245 to a local antiques dealer, within it’s $2,000-4,000 presale estimate, while an American Silver Chalice, monogrammed PJG and inscribed Good Life December 2002, was bought for $3,068 by one of his closest friends.  The chalice will be donated to the Bates College Chapel, which is slated to be renamed this fall in memory of Peter J. Gomes.

 Property from his Oceanside Plymouth residence included a Gilt Metal and Crystal Twelve Light Chandelier, once gracing the dining room, which sold for $7,080 and a George III Inlaid Mahogany Secretary Bookcase, estimated at $3,000-5,000, which brought $6,490.  The living room’s Oushak Carpet sold for $5,310 and a pair of Gothic White Painted Iron Hall Benches, exceeding the $1,500-2,000 presale estimate to sell for $4,425.    “The auction attracted a large number of new clients,” commented President and Chief Auctioneer, Michael B. Grogan, “Many of them expressed how pleased they were to purchase a memento from Reverend Gome’s collection.”  

 The second session of the auction was held on Sunday, March 25th and was comprised of property from various estates and collections.  The 450 lots of Fine Art, Furniture and Decorations, Silver, Jewelry and Rugs, achieved over eight hundred thousand dollars, more than 70% of the weekends total.  

 The most exciting moment of the sale occurred when two pairs of Imperial Russian Porcelain Plates from the period of Nicholas I soared well beyond their $5,000-7,000 pre-sale estimates.  Fifteen phone lines competed with bidders in the room, when the Pair of Gold bordered plates from the Imperial Porcelain Manufactory of St. Petersburg, came up.  The bidding opened up at $4,000, however quickly soared to $25,000 when a New York dealer jumped the bid.  The fierce bidding continued between Moscow, New York, London, Germany and Florida before finally acheiving for $79,650.  The next pair, with Green border, from the same manufactory, sold to the same phone bidder from Moscow for $76,700. 

 The top fine art lot was 19th century French artist, Emile Munier’s Girl with Kitten, an oil on canvas circa 1878, which sold over the phone to a dealer for $70,800, against a pre-sale estimate of  $20,000-40,000.  Other highlights included contemporary Greek artist Spyros Vassiliou’s Figures with Ship Masts, a large oil on masonite, which brought $15,340 and Spanish artist, Emilio Sanchez Perrier’s Figures in a Rowboat, a small oil on canvas, which sold for $14,160. 

 A set of three Rhode Island Revolutionary War period documents pertaining to military appointments for William Jones, former Governor of Rhode Island attracted significant presale interest, which resulted in several phone lines competing against each other before it finally sold to a Rhode Island collector for $11,800 (presale estimate $3,000-5,000).   Other highlights included a 19th century French Silver Coffee Service by Alexandre-Auguste Turquet, which sold for $11,800, against a $10,000-15,000 pre sale estimate; and a Second Phase Native American Chief’s Blanket, from the Navajo tribe, circa 1870, once in the collection of Irene Jewett Lunt, former restorer of Navajo Rugs for the Denver Art Museum sold for $8,850 (presale estimate $6,000-9,000).    Internet bidding was brisk, with a Pair of Continental Neoclassical Demilune Console Tables selling for $10,030 and a Steinway Piano brought $9,440 to bidders using Artfact Live.   

A complete list of auction results can be found at www.groganco.com.  For more information regarding upcoming auctions, consigning or appraisal services, please call the gallery at 781-461-9500.  Prices include buyer’s premium.

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Princess Diana Photographs: New Unseen Antique Picture With Her Boys Revealed

The BBC's Antiques Roadshow surprised its viewers on Tuesday by revealing an unseen photograph of Princess Diana posing with her barefoot sons.
The photograph was presented to the program by the personal assistant of Lord Snowdon, the former husband of Princess Margaret.

Estimated at £400 - £500 ($615 - $770,) the photograph shows Diana with a radiant smile and her two sons Harry and William, kneeling at her feet.

"It really is fantastic. It's an odd one, because the boys are dressed in sort of country casuals and don't have any shoes on, and their nanny has not given them any socks as far as I can see. But the Princess of Wales is dressed up to kill," Antique expert Clive Farahar, told the Daily Telegraph.

Diana is glowing in the picture wearing a pink dress embroidered with gold intricate lace stitching. "So Mum went out of something casual, slipped into something formal and got the boys in. I love the story behind that. It shows how unstuffy she was," Farahar added.

 The photograph has not been released before and according to Lord Snowdon's personal assistant, the Royal archives do not even have a copy of it.

 There were other photos presented from Snowdon's collection. One was of a formal picnic scene featuring Princess Diana, Prince Charles, Harry and William, but Farahar was far less impressed by this shot, saying it was too posed. Another black and white photograph showed Prince Harry in Princess Diana's arms, taken at the end of his christening. 

 The picnic scene was valued at £200 to £300 and the christening picture at £500 to £800.

 Lord Snowdon, now aged 82, was divorced from Princess Margaret in 1978 and from Lucy Lyndsay-Hogg in 2000.

 Royal Dresses

 Meanwhile, Princess Diana's royal dresses will go on display at The People's Princess' Exhibit at the Michigan International Women's Show in May, Patch reported.

 "Showgoers will see a replica of Princess Diana's wedding gown as they enter the show and the gown she wore dancing with John Travolta at a White House state dinner in the exhibit,"  Beth Anderson, executive show manager of Southern Shows told Patch. "The display has photographs and video covering a retrospective of her life as princess, mother, fashion icon and humanitarian.

 The exhibition will tell the story of Diana's life through the possessions she auctioned off to charity. Informational panels will also be held as a part of the show between  May 3-6.

 The exhibit will be spilt into different sections, according to Patch:

1.       Entrance: A 15 minute introductory documentary tells Diana's story.

2.       Diana's Childhood: Diana's ancestral background, early childhood experiences and lineage that factored into her future relationship with Britain's Royal Family.

3.       Engagement and Wedding: A video story of the engagement announcement and Royal wedding, which was viewed by more than 750 million people worldwide.

4.       A Princess of Style & Charity: Video, graphics, sketches, notes and commentary from Diana's favorite fashion designers tell the story of Diana's legendary transformation from ingĂ©nue to style icon.

5.       The Servant Princess: The story of Diana's tireless approach to her duties as a "princess with purpose" as she ascended to global humanitarian, highlighted by the perspectives of those who benefitted from her compassion and generous use of her royal platform.

6.       Goodbye England's Rose-The Painful Passing of The Princess: Video of her brother's eulogy as well as the Royal Family's reaction to her death and ultimate honoring of her life. Guests can leave words of endearment and tokens if they wish.

7.       Finale Royal Dresses: Five dresses from Diana's wardrobe will be on display, including three by one of Diana's favorite designers, Catherine Walker:

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Product Spotlight - Primitive Hand Drills & Wood Planes

RI Picker has 3 antique hand drills and 2 old wood planes. The wood planes are made by Bailey and Hercules. We are offering all pieces for just $9.99 each. Full descriptions and additional photos can be found on www.RIpicker.com. Any questions can be sent to Sales@RIpicker.com or by calling 401-405-1480.

Monday, April 2, 2012

Finding Antique Auto Parts

There are thousands of people in the auto industry who are antique car buffs and there are actually many reasons to get involved with collecting antique cars. Not only are antique cars worth a pretty penny if they are in pristine condition, but they are also hot collector's items if they run and meet certain criteria. Furthermore, many people love collecting antique cars because they like to restore them to their original condition; however, many times this requires some auto parts that are needed for various systems throughout the automobile.
On the other hand, if you or someone you know has ever tried to get their hands on some antique auto parts then you already know how much of a pain they can be to find. Indeed, the reason that antique auto parts are very hard to find is because normal auto parts retail stores hardly ever carry them or anything else that's related to antique cars. The main reason for this is that there is very little profit in doing so, except from the antique car collectors themselves.

In order to find antique auto parts, many people are forced to search high and low for these much sought after parts. These auto parts are definitely needed, though, in order to restore an antique car to its original condition. However, one suggestion to find these antique auto parts is to ask around through connections that are forged and acquaintances that are met through antique car shows. Most people, especially antique car owners, will be more than happy to divulge the information since there is no profit in hiding the information and keeping it a secret.

Another suggestion that one has to find antique auto parts is the resources on the World Wide Web. There are many specialty groups that can be found online and one of these groups is devoted to antique auto parts. You may be very surprised to find out that there are a great deal of antique car owners that are located on the web for the sole purpose of connecting with other antique car owners and to start up antique car groups throughout the whole United States. Within these antique car groups on the internet, though, there is bound to be some antique auto parts resources that one is able to use in order to help restore their antique car they're working on.

On the other hand, its very possible that the antique auto part that you are looking for is no longer available and there's nobody that is carrying the part anymore. If this situation arises then the very next best thing to do would be to make modifications and adjustments to the antique auto parts that you can find that will nearly do the trick.

All in all, even though some antique auto parts are very hard to find, there are always going to be options and alternatives available in place of the antique auto parts themselves. Even though it may be difficult to grasp the notion that no part is available anywhere, life must go on and the restoration of the antique car must continue if one is to succeed with the goal of getting it back to pristine and working condition!