HEADS AND CUTS AT BOTTOM OF RELEASE
HEADS AND CUTS AT BOTTOM OF RELEASE
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Weston antiques show OCtober 2007
By dss
WESTON, VT. â Nestled in the small historic hamlet on the far corner of the townâs charismatic green is the Weston Playhouse, one of numerous buildings in town listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and home to the annual Weston Antiques Show. Now in its 49th year, Weston has developed a cultlike following among the throngs of people in attendance, some of whom routinely travel from as far as California.
Show manager Patti Prairie is one of the driving forces behind the popular event, the first of a series of five shows to open between October 4 and October 7, and it is, according to management, the anchor of what has come to be known as Vermont Antiques Week.
Management reported a record crowd on hand for the opening of the show on Thursday evening, boosting out last yearâs record attendance. Among those at the front of the line for preview were Charles and Boo Cook, collectors from St Louis who have been attending the Weston show for the past 30 consecutive years. âWe wouldnât miss Pattiâs show,â stated Charles, adding that it is an elegant event. âWe just love it,â added Boo, who listed a hooked rug decorated with a St Louis theme and a tinsel painting among their numerous purchases.
With the entire village of Weston listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the attitude in the region is somewhat different than one might expect from other towns hosting antiques shows. Community members are out in force, volunteering to work the show in any manner they can. While their civic awareness and participation are certainly welcomed and appreciated by the dealers, it is also somewhat self-serving for the volunteers, as the show is a benefit for historic preservation. The Weston show raises half of the funds needed annually to maintain the Weston Playhouse, the Farrar-Mansur Museum and the Old Mill Museum and Dam.
The crowd on preview night consists of a mainly retail crowd, although sales were reported as âstrongâ by many of the dealers. The crowd, heavily peppered by a large contingent of dealers, continues throughout the weekend. A huge line of enthusiastic shoppers was witnessed on Friday morning as the show prepared to open to the public. âIt took 15 minutes to get everyone in line into the show when we opened the doors,â stated an elated Prairie.
Shoppers were elbow-to-elbow and sold tags began appearing right away. Charles and Barbara Adams reported âstronger than usual salesâ with several pieces of blue spongeware moving right off the bat, including a rare soap dish with the hard-to-find undertray still accompanying the piece. The dealers also reported the sale of a âwonderfulâ advertising tin and a paint decorated shoeshine box that had the name âJackâ colorfully painted on one side and â5 Centsâ on the other.
Barrett Menson also reported good sales, including a nice Hepplewhite bow front chest with vibrant veneer, several paintings and numerous country smalls. Columbia, Mo., dealer Douglas Soliday was also busy throughout the show writing sales slips for a variety of items.
âDealers just love this show,â commented Prairie. Ester Gilbert, now run by the late Esterâs daughter, Sue Kozub, has been participating for 37 years. A nice selection of art added depth to the display, including a Lester Stevens oil of a Vermont farm, a Jane Peterson attributed oil titled âNorth Shoreâ and a reasonably priced trompe lâoeil on an old artistâs palette.
Peter Papp is another of the old-time dealers taking part in the show, with 22 years under his belt. The Oriental carpet dealer has a prime location, using the entry way into the playhouse theater. The rows of seats make for great props on which to display the carpets, and in good weather the dealer expands out of the doorway at the side of his booth, draping carpets over the stone wall that separates the playhouse from the scenic waterfall and babbling stream below.
Steve German of Mad River Antiques commented that he had a âstealthâ sale on preview night. âI had a customer come back after the show had closed on Thursday evening and buy a ship in a bottle. He quickly left his card and told the dealer to have it wrapped up and that he would be back in the morning. The buyer explained to German the following morning that he has 65 examples of ships-in-a-bottle, and said âhis âwife would kill himâ if she found out he bought another one. He plans to slip it onto a shelf with the others and hopes it will go unnoticed.â
Antique scientific instruments filled the booth of Sarasota, Fla., dealer John Forster with a grand selection of barometers displayed. One of the most interesting from the assortment was a rare âDuke of Wellingtonâ commemorative barometer, circa 1852, that celebrated his life through symbolic carvings. Adorned with a British officerâs helmet at the top, cannons, cannonballs, the stock of a rifle and the hilt of a sword, medals and a carved bust, the fanciful piece captured the attention of several at the show. An early walnut stick barometer, circa 1710, with a carved acorn at the top and engraved scale was also attracting looks.
Show manager Patti Prairie is promising even greater things for next year to coincide with the Weston Antiques Showâs golden anniversary.
The Weston Antiques Show, The Anchor of Vermont Antiques Week
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Stephen-Douglas, Rockingham, Vt.
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John Forster Fine Antiques, Sarasota, Fla.
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A record crowd was on hand for the preview on Thursday evening.
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Barrett Menson, Ashby, Mass.
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Brennan & Mouilleseaux, Northfield, Mass.
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A rare âchest-on-chestâ in the booth of Hanes and Ruskin, Old Lyme, Conn.
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Peter Papp Oriental Rugs, Dublin, N.H., uses the scenic area outside his booth to display a large grouping of carpets and runners. âThe Weston Antiques Show
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A selection of English silver from the booth of Martin Chasin, Fairfield, Conn. âThe Weston Antiques Show
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David Allen Ramsey, Cape Porpoise, Maine âThe Weston Antiques Show
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Turkey Mountain Trades, Scottsdale, Ariz.
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Charles and Barbara Adams, South Yarmouth, Mass.
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Jane McClafferty, New Canaan, Conn.
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Paul and Karen Wendhiser, Ellington, Conn.
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Drakefield Antiques, Longmeadow, Mass.
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Judd Gregory, Dorset, Vt.
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The Weston Playhouse provides a pleasing atmosphere for the antiques to be displayed
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Ester Gilbert, Southampton, Mass.
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Henry Callan, Sandwich, Mass.
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Mad River Antiques, North Granby, Conn.
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Autumn Pond, Bolton, Conn.
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Michael Whitman, Fort Washington, Penn.
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Kate Alex, Warner, N.H.
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Peter Tinkler with a rare Abraham Buteux silver coffee pot, London, circa 1734. The Silver Vault, Woodstock, Ill.
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Donna Kmetz with an oil on canvas landscape by Wallace Weir Fahnestock titled âDorset Spring.â David and Donna Kmetz, Douglas, Mass.
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W.M. Schwind, Jr, Yarmouth, Maine.
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Michael and Carol Kellogg, Hudson, Ohio
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Sylvan Hill, Grafton, Vt.
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The Hanebergâs, East Lyme, Conn.
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Show manager Patti Prairie looks on as the crowd enters on preview night.
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Show manager Patti Prairie, left, with St Louis collectors Chuck and Boo Cook. The Cooks have been attending the show for the past 30 consecutive years.
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Douglas Soliday, Columbia, Mo.
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A collector looks over a marked Bennington bowl in the booth of Mad River Antiques.
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Barrett Menson, right, recording one of his many sales.
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