Shops Active In This Category
|
|
Silver:Coin Silver:Flatware:Fiddle-Handled - page: 3 Previous
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next 4
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Auctions click on pictures for all lots
|
Ladle by newly identified silversmith in Pottsville, PA
Silver: Coin Silver: Serving Pieces
North Hill Antiques 
894 $225
William Brady marked this piece, and also marked the location of his shop. Without the town name, it would be assumed that Brady worked in NYC, as shown in the literature. This ladle has a broad downturned fiddle handle, c1820-30 -- high pointed shoulders, and a unique semi-circle drop on the bowl back. The handle is reverse tipt, and the mono is a feathered script E L. It is 9-1/2" long with a 3" oval bowl, and is in excellent condition.
|
|
Set of 12 coin silver spoons from Galesburg, IL
Silver: Coin Silver: Flatware: Fiddle-Handled
North Hill Antiques 
344 Set of 12 $360
Marked A. S. DEVONDORF. Almond Smith Devendorf was a "merchant" in Galesburg from c1845-70. As such, he retailed these teaspoons to O. McBride. According to John McGrew, the bust in an inverted heart suggests that they were made in Connecticut. All 12 spoons are in mint condition -- probably never used. The handles are in the forward-tipt fiddle pattern, with flared shoulders. Length is 6-1/4". Weight is 7.25 T. oz.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Set of 5 tsps by George Franciscus Jr., Baltimore, 1815
Silver: Coin Silver: Southern
North Hill Antiques 
666 Ea. $75, Set of 5 $300
Downturned fiddle handle, no shoulders, drop, shaded old English S on front; 5-1/2" long. Condition is excellent. Franciscus worked in Baltimore from 1810-18, and from 1819-40 in Lancaster, PA. These spoons are fully marked with a shield, the dominical letter A (which denotes 1815 as the year it was made), and the head of liberty. It is rare to find Franciscus silver so clearly associated with Baltimore, the city of his birth.
|
|
|
|
|
Pair coin silver teaspoons by W&A Cooper, OH & KY
Silver: Coin Silver: Southern
North Hill Antiques 
674 Ea. $100
Interesting double-swell fiddle handles, unusual for midwest and southern silver; pointed shoulders, feathered script mono I S B on front; 5-7/8" in length. Excellent condition. Boultinghouse lists William and Archibald Cooper as forming their partnership in 1836 in Cincinnati, probably moving across the river to Louisville the next year. The mark on these spoons is terrific (see pic), not shown in Boultinghouse.
|
|
|
Silver:Coin Silver:Flatware:Fiddle-Handled - page: 3 Previous
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next 4
|
|
|
Silver, Coin Silver, Flatware, Fiddle-Handled
|
"Hollywood Boulevard at Night".
vintage postcard. California, 1940s
|