This year's dates for the Antiques Roadshow have now been published, and are listed below. Those in bold are the events I will be attending as a specialist on the Miscellaneous or Collectables tables. Dig out your treasures and I hope to see you there!
Thursday 19 March - Lincoln Cathedral, Lincoln
Wednesday 25 March - Hopetoun House, Queensferry, Scotland
Friday 3 April - Blackpool Tower Ballroom, Lancashire
Thursday 23 April - Bath Assembly Rooms, Somerset
Thursday 14 May - Stanway House, Gloucestershire
Thursday 21 May - Burghley House, Stamford, Lincolnshire
Sunday 31 May - Brooklands Museum, Weybridge, Surrey
Tuesday 9 June - Saumarez Park, Guernsey
Friday 12 June - Samarès Manor, Jersey
Thursday 2 July - Abbotsford, Melrose, Roxburghshire
Sunday 12 July - Bletchley Park, Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire
Thursday 16 July - Aberglasney Gardens, Carmarthenshire
Thursday 27 August - The Bowes Museum, Barnard Castle, Co. Durham
Thursday 3 September - Leeds Town Hall, Leeds, Yorkshire
Thursday 10 September - Somerleyton Hall, Lowestoft, Suffolk
Thursday 17 September - Blists Hill Victorian Town, Ironbridge, Shropshire
Thursday 1 October - Old Royal Naval College, Greenwich, London
Doors open at 9.30am (although queues start earlier!), and Roadshows run until 4.30pm, but providing you're in the queue by 4pm, you'll be able to see a specialist.
Saturday, 21 February 2009
Wednesday, 18 February 2009
Radio Waves

I was lucky to be joined by eminent Lalique and Art Nouveau glass expert and dealer Mike Moir, who makes the perfect accomplice. Along with cheery presenter Sue Dougan, the banter, information and valuations just flowed out. Callers rang in with everything ranging from an Art Deco opalescent vase, which will be brought to the fair for proper appraisal, to a 19thC chemist's carboy bottle, to a 19thC gilded and cut rummer, and a Mary Gregory type bud vase. Values ranged from £30 up to over £500!
If you missed the phone-in, don't miss the event itself. It's undoubtedly one of the best fairs in the country, with an enormously varied range of glass from the 18thC to the 21stC. It's also welcoming, fascinating and hugely enjoyable. I'll be there, and I hope you will be too.
Sunday, 15 February 2009
BBC Radio London

The lofts and drawers of London's residents certainly didn't disappoint this morning. Items listeners called in about included a boxed Parker 51 pen and pencil set valued at £50-70, a set of six late 19thC Coalport handpainted cup and saucers valued at around £30 each, an Edison phonograph valued at over £200, and a set of Royal Doulton 'Snowman' figurines that could fetch up to £800!
Friday, 6 February 2009
Alfie's Antiques Market

That place is certainly Alfie's Antiques Market in north west London, where I have just spent an extremely enjoyable and fruitful two days. Whatever it is that you collect, you're bound to find it here. In fact, I challenge you to browse without being tempted.
The first point of call has to be Beth Adams, on the ground floor, slap-bang in the middle of the Church Street facade. Her panoramic windows are packed with an colourful variety of quality stock from jazzy Art Deco ceramics, to 1930s chintzware and nursery ware, to gorgeous 20thC glass, and more traditional ceramics. Beth's prices are nothing if not reasonable and fair, which explains why her stand is always so busy, with plenty of new treasures to see each time. (Below, from left: Beverley, Mark & Beth)


On the way back down the stairs, don't forget to visit Geoffrey Robinson for amazing 20thC glass and ceramics, as well as Wesley for yet more fine quality traditional ceramics, and Victor Caplin for all your bead needs - but more on them next time. Just like I have found, once bitten, you'll be smitten. You're sure to add this to your list of regular haunts!
Tuesday, 3 February 2009
Frantisek Zemek's Glass Designs

Starting his career as a glass cutter for the Inwald group, he went on to study at the Zelezny Brod glass school, and then under the renowned Professor Karel Stipl. He worked at the Chrìbska factory in 1949, followed by the Zelezny Brod factory from 1952-57. He was also concurrently the head designer for the Mstisov factory from 1956-59. His early death in a motorcycle accident in 1960 cut off what looked to be a promising career, given his influence in the 1950s.
His most notable designs produced on a large scale were the multi-coloured 'Rhapsody' of 1956 & 60, and the green and blue 'Harmony' of 1959, but he also produced cut designs for Moser, and pressed designs for Hermanova. All were exported across the world. Today, his work is typically mis-attributed to factories on Murano, but things are changing and his contribution is beginning to be recognised.
This particular vase, devised in 1957, is an early example of his designs and was deemed important enough to be included by Josef Raban in his landmark book 'Modern Bohemian Glass', published in 1963. As well as being typical of Zemek's hot-worked designs with its curving, organic form and applied trails, it also hints at machinery with its resemblance to propellers and spun screw threads. For its date, as well as for its country of origin, this design is highly Modern and progressive.
The example shown in Raban's book was made at Mstisov, but this example is more likely to have been made at Zelezny Brod during the 1960s judging by the yellow (Citrine) and brown colouring and the precise form. They're not all that common, and can be found in a range of colours, sizes and variations in proportions. I really rate Zemek as a good buy for the future, and think this early design is well worth looking out for. Expect to pay anything from £5 to £30 right now.
For more information about Zemek's designs, and those of his contemporaries, see Hi Sklo Lo Sklo, published by Mark Hill Publishing.
Sunday, 1 February 2009
Alexandra Palace Collectors' Fair


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