: - So you had four lousy years, Frank, but you certainly have made
up for them in grand style. Actually they were not real lousy
years, but Picker-less years, that time span when Mid*Week was
your only game in town. For the past six years Barn Star has
fielded a double-header that has been building in attendance and
dealer sales and it appears that 2003 has set new records.
Mid*Week in Manchester drew its largest gate since its inception,
and it sent away a bunch of very happy exhibitors. Footprints
from the dealers departing both the convention center and the
tent at The Wayfarer Inn were still fresh when the next set of
exhibitors moved in Thursday night, August 7, for The Bedford
Pickers Market scheduled for the next day.
It is well-known that if you give a dealer four days to set up a
booth at an antiques show, that is how long it will actually
take. Give them a portion of one evening, and nine hours into the
next day, and they will be ready to sell. That is how The Pickers
Market takes shape -- dealers rushing objects and furniture into
their assigned spaces and still having time to scout about to
check on the inventory of fellow exhibitors. The dealers are few
and far between who do not make the rounds before the show opens
to the public.
As with Mid*Week, two lines form well before the announced
opening. It appears more people are interested in first shopping
the tent, then to visit the convention center. It may be a
favorite dealer is in there, or it may be because there are more
exhibitors in the tent. In any case, the rush is on at both
locations when the 9 am early buying is announced. And the line
did not shrink when a mild shower passed by prior to the opening.
Umbrellas of every color brightened up the line and the mood of
excitement did not dampen.
That excitement was very much in evidence during the first hour
or two, as witnessed by the fast growing crop of sold tags on the
floor. One person was overheard asking a dealer, "Did you sell it
to a collector or to a dealer? Is there a chance that it will be
back on the market?" It was that terrible feeling of being just a
step too late.
Christopher Stanley of Walpole, Maine, wasted no time in flagging
a green painted apothecary, black trim with 21 drawers and brass
knobs, with a sold tag, and Overlook Farm Antiques of
Westminster, Mass., had written receipts for a one door wall
cupboard in gray paint and a portrait of a father and son against
a reddish background. Also sold were a pie safe with six tin
panels in the front, one drawer on the bottom, green surface, and
a Hudson Valley cupboard with one paneled door, cutout base and
old red wash.
Charles Muller Antiques of Groveport, Ohio, came with a load of
Shaker material, including a number of chairs. Two rockers from
Mt Lebanon, N.Y., sizes 0 and 5, had the same tape seats and
backs. A four-door cupboard was of pine, and a footed and
dovetailed document box was dated 1862 with the initials BM.
N.N. McFarland, Union Hill, N.Y.
There did not seem to be a shortage of pie safes at the show.
One with ten tin panels in walnut, Davis County, Ky., circa 1850,
came from the collection of Dick and Ron Taylor of Burton, Ohio,
and was offered from the booth of Marsha's Antiques of Ellwood
City, Penn. A jelly cupboard in old blue from Lancaster County,
Penn., circa 1850, two pinned doors and square nails, was also
available. Sold were a wall shelf and a wall cupboard, one door, in
blue paint.
A cotton sateen quilt, green on rust, circa 1920, 68 by 781/2
inches, hung in the booth of Dennis Scott Antiques of East
Greenwich, R.I. He also showed a three-drawer blanket chest with
molded top, bracket feet, late Eighteenth Century, southern New
England, possibly Newtown, Conn.
Quarter Cape Antiques of Rockport, Maine, had a sign announcing
the Ye Music Shop, silver lettering on black ground, and a sign
for a tin shop. A pair of ornate corbels framed a sheet metal
three-masted schooner, and paintings showed a pair of oxen with
yoke and a cow and calf in a meadow scene with a stream.
A painting of people in several rowboats enjoying a Fourth of
July celebration of fireworks hung in the booth of From here to
Antiquity, Bethany, Conn. The scene was on the Claverack River
and the artist was Benedikt Franz Hess, circa 1850. Another oil
on canvas, "Along The Shore," was by Emma Lampert Cooper, late
Nineteenth Century, depicting a rock-lined shore with sailboats
on the water.
A good number of silhouettes hung in the booth of Donna East,
Worcester, Mass., and furniture included a pie safe in yellow
paint, 7 feet 2 inches tall, with a screen in the top section and
two drawers and one door in the lower portion. Deborah Ferguson
Antiques, Canterbury, Conn., had sold a banister back armchair in
black paint and a candlestand in old paint with a cut-corner top.
An interesting collection of treen was also shown in this
display.
Among the furniture sold from the display of Out of Hand Antiques
and Custom Design, Claymont, Del., were a New England dressing
table dating from the Eighteenth Century, and a York County
table. The booth also included a salmon and burnt umber
sponge-decorated single bed with mushroom turnings from Lancaster
County, Penn., and an Empire painted chest from Vermont, circa
1840.
Brandegee Antiques from Pittsburgh was having a good show, helped
by the sale of a large carved black figure with a bunch of
bananas. It is reported to be a trade sign and was found in
western Pennsylvania. It had not been offered for sale for the
past 25 years. Cane collector George Meyer, with a fondness for
snakes, was seen leaving this booth with a folk art document box
covered with carved snakes and leaves. Both the front and the
back of the box, as well as the top, had two snakes, while the
ends each had one. A carved and painted eagle with a wingspan of
27 inches, New England origin, dated circa 1840-50.
Zollinhofer Antiques of Medina, Ohio, had one of the strongest
painted pieces of furniture in the show, a two-drawer blanket
chest, circa 1840-50, with paint and vinegar decoration. A ladder
back armchair dated circa 1720, a shoe-foot hutch table was in
Windsor green paint and a sold tag was attached to a one-door
cupboard with old blue painted surface.
The Captain's Quarters of Amherst, Mass., brought enough nautical
paintings to cover three walls. Against the back was a William
Stubbs, signed lower left, of The Mertle L. Perry, oil on
canvas measuring 22 by 36 inches. Among the China Trade pictures
was the USS Wachusett in a Pacific storm, oil on canvas,
18 by 24 inches.
Adding to the Pennsylvania furniture on the floor were Bob and
Priscilla Brown of Hope, Ind., with a step back cupboard with two
six-light doors and one long drawer in the top, two doors in the
lower section. The case was dovetailed and the piece dated circa
1850. An oversized head of a man, papier mache, looked down from
a shelf and was once used as a prop for the Lyric Opera in
Chicago, according to Bob Brown.

Rena Goldenberg Antiques, Orange, Conn.
T.L. Dwyer Antiques of Barto, Penn., offered a yellow painted
washstand and a slant front desk in figured maple. The desk dated
circa 1770 and descended in the Marshall family of Harpswell,
Maine. Gregory Carraher of Ann Arbor, Mich., offered a colorful
crib quilt with pinwheel pattern, and a sponge decorated,
two-drawer blanket chest. Signs covered a good portion of the walls
in the booth of Tomilson Antiques, Alexandria, Minn., including
ones advertising Ice Skates Sharpened, Pay Checks cashed here, E.A.
Perry Groceries, This Safe Is Open and Spruce Inn.
A Chippendale desk from the Connecticut River Valley, circa
1770-90, 371/2-inch case, untouched red surface, came from a home
near Brattleboro, Vt., and was offered from the booth of Bill
Kelly Antiques of Limington, Maine. From the same area came a
decorated blanket chest with the original brasses, circa 1760,
with large swirl decoration.
It is hard to imagine that, after attending all of the events
during Antiques Week in New Hampshire, that people had any energy
or interest by the time The Bedford Pickers Market rolls around.
But the energy and interest is definitely there, its contagious,
and a great many visitors do, as the ad for Pickers says, "End
their week with a great antique."