Category Archives: Family Items | Page 2

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Category Archives: Family Items

Snoopy Home Run Mug

Baseball season ends today. Let the post-season games begin. At the end of 1973 baseball season Snoopy was trying to beat a home run record. He was challenging Hank Aaron for Babe Ruth’s then-record of 714 home runs. Snoopy was in the batter’s box. It was the ninth inning of the season’s last game. But, [...]
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Antiques on the Green in Amherst, NH

This weekend I went to Antiques on the Green in Amherst, New Hampshire. It’s an annual event sponsored by the Historical Society of Amherst. For an entrance fee of five dollars, you could bring an item and have it appraised. Jason Hackler, owner and manager of New Hampshire Antique Co-op in Milford, NH, looked at [...]
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Pitcher designed by Adolf Loos

Adolf Loos was a 20th-century architect who hated ornamentation. He wrote about his disdain for it in a 1908 essay; in English it was translated as Ornament and Crime. This pitcher is a perfect example of Loos’ aesthetic style. Straight lines, simple curves and smooth surfaces. Adolf Loos designed it in 1931 for Viennese glassmakers, [...]
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Mermaid Collection

I took the following pictures of my mom’s mermaid collection. I thought it would be nice to post this time of year.
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4th of July Dandy Horn noisemaker

Here’s a holiday noisemaker from 1921. This Dandy Horn was found in my great aunt’s trunk. It now sits on top of the mantel at my house. I’ve tried to do some research, but can’t find anything about it. If anyone knows who made it, its rarity, etc. please let us know. In the meantime [...]
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1970s Fender Stratocaster

This Fender Stratocaster was bought by an uncle of mine for $75. He bought it off a guy who found the abandoned instrument. It was only when my uncle brought it home did he realize the value — at least a thousand dollars. The serial number on this guitar shows it was made in either [...]
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Goebel Friar Tuck Monk Collectibles

First, there were Hummels. Then, came the Monks. The Goebel company introduced Hummel figurines in 1935. These handcrafted, decorative collectiblies sold by the millions. Collectors just couldn’t get enough. In the early 1950s the company introduced the Friar Tuck and Red Cardinal series. And before you could say, “Holy Smokes!” Monks and cardinals were flying [...]
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Sheldon W. Peavey (1938-2010)

My dad passed away on February 23rd at the age of 71. He battled pulmonary fibrosis and fought the disease with courage and faith. He never smoked and never touched a drop of alcohol. These are two things on a short list of things he didn’t like. Here are a few things he did like: [...]
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NASCO China set (USA)

I’m having a hard time finding anything about the NASCO company. If you know please send a comment and I’ll post it. In the meantime, here’s how this set ended up in the family. It was most likely the 1940s and Bendikte Olsen and her daughter Helen went to a neighborhood social in Brooklyn, New [...]
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Patches from the 1970s

Patch or badge collecting is called scutelliphily. In Latin ‘scutellus’ means ‘little shield.’ ‘Phileein’ in Greek means ‘to love.’ Scutelliphily is a hobby world-wide and goes back hundreds of years. In fact, Geoffrey Chaucer mentions pilgrims and the various badges they acquired in his classic work Canterbury Tales. The patches in this posting were aquired [...]
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