Bruce Cherner Antique Silver
$50.00
$50.00
length 8 5/8 inches, some slight wear to high points but fine overall condition, monogram EAG script with flourishes, shell drop, weight 1.47 oz. Troy.
Bruce Cherner Antique Silver
$50.00
$50.00
length 8 7/8 inches, one has a stainless blade which sadly has been set in with lead solder (the handle rattles a bit; there's a minor dent), the other an original blunt s/p blade, monogrammed "BHS".
Bruce Cherner Antique Silver
$50.00
$50.00
length five inches, excellent condition, monogrammed "MC" script reverse of bowl, weight .68 oz Troy. Items with this mark would appear to be scarce.
Bruce Cherner Antique Silver
$50.00
$50.00
1587 pages, hardbound, some minor staining on exterior but fine overall condition. Maybe your father or grandfather is in here, somewhere...
Bruce Cherner Antique Silver
$50.00
$50.00
length 4 1/8 inches, excellent condition, no monogram, marked as shown in second enlargement.
Compare on ebay (item 283431332903) @178.00
Bruce Cherner Antique Silver
$48.00
$48.00
length 6+ inches, weight 1.00 Troy ounce, gilt bowl, excellent condition, no monogram, marked as shown in 3rd enlargement.
Compare on ebay @75.00!
Bruce Cherner Antique Silver
$45.00
$45.00
A fine, heavy piece in excellent condition. Measurements: 3 3/4 by 2 inches; marks: Kerr trademark / STERLING / 2719; no monogram.
Bruce Cherner Antique Silver
$45.00
$45.00
Chickering & Ross, 196 pages hardbound, new, with dust jacket, pub. Boston Athenæum. A well illustrated and informative catalogue of the 1994 exhibition. Includes biographical data, descriptions of life in Gardner, reminiscences of individual crafstmen.
Bruce Cherner Antique Silver
$45.00
$45.00
length 7 1/4 inches, monogrammed "May Young" (obverse) "from A.Y. '95" (reverse), excellent condition.
Bruce Cherner Antique Silver
$45.00
$45.00
length 5 1/8 inches, excellent condition, monogrammed "Loy" (script, obverse), and for those who are interested in truly arcane details retailed by Stevensons Sons.
Bruce Cherner Antique Silver
$45.00
$45.00
length 5 5/8 inches, excellent condition, no monogram. An old and lushly detailed piece of repoussé of a quality which is becoming increasingly hard to find.
Bruce Cherner Antique Silver
$45.00
$45.00
Most every culture has a version of, well, corn meal mush. In Italy, it's polenta. Among the Native American tribes of Florida, sofkee would be the name, and this spoon designed by Greenleaf and Crosby circa 1900 is supposedly a scale model of such a porridge-making utensil. Length 5 3/8 inches, no monogram, excellent condition, weight .79 oz Troy.
Bruce Cherner Antique Silver
$45.00
$45.00
length 5 1/2 inches, weight .66 oz. Troy, no monogram, some light scratches in bowl which we've exaggerated here but excellent overall condition.
The Watson Company of North Attleborough, MA made a wide-ranging series of high relief floral patterns in the early 1900's. Designed by Eustace Crees and Charles Court, they rank as some of the finest representations of nature in American silver flatware.
Bruce Cherner Antique Silver
$45.00
$45.00
Bergen circa 1930, length 3 3/4 inches, total Troy weight 1.41 ounces, no monogram, immaculate original condition. For those of you who are not familiar with this mark, 830S = 83% silver.
These would make a splendid hostess gift, especially if your hostess happens to be of Scandinavian descent. Price is for the six.
Bruce Cherner Antique Silver
$45.00
$45.00
length 6 5/8 inches, weight .37 oz Troy, no monogram, excellent condition.
Unlike many of the other examples which one may find on this world-wide web, this is original, not "made up" out of a teaspoon.
Bruce Cherner Antique Silver
$40.00
$40.00
of regional interest, length 8 1/4 inches, monogrammed "L.J.K." (script, obverse), fine condition. This broad fiddle pattern is typical of the Louisville/Cincinatti region. Marked "J.S. & S. COIN"; see second photo.
Bruce Cherner Antique Silver
$40.00
$40.00
Length 7 1/4 inches, fine condition, monogrammed "G" (or is it "T"?) Old English style. Surely someone amongst ye Internet Legions is in need of a Watteau fish fork?