:"We had our best opening with over 300 in line, more than double
last year," John Bruno of Flamingo Promotions said following the
close of his Start of Manchester Antiques Show, August 9-10. His
wife Tina added, "We planned on five years to really get the show
up and running, and we are about there, having just closed our
fourth year." According to management, over 50 percent of the
dealers were well pleased with the show and "we expect most
everyone to return next year."
Liberty Tree, Rockland, Me.
The show, 35 dealers strong, is staged in the air-conditioned
Event Center at C.R. Sparks, with all of the exhibitors on one
level. Presenting a nice selection of early advertising items was
Sheppheard's Antiques of Bedford, Penn. In near mint condition was
a De Laval Cream separators sign from the Chicago-based company,
and a country store hardware cupboard measured 71 inches high, 12
inches wide and 4 inches deep. A wood rocking horse with the
original paint and red decorated rockers, leather saddle, was well
treated by its owners and in perfect condition.
A grained chest, two short drawers over two long, in pine with
turned feet, dated circa 1875 and was shown in the booth of
Aberdeen & Co., Asheville, N.C. A German bee skep was circa
1900.
West Lebanon, N.H., dealer Dog Gone Antiques offered a child's
Adirondack settee and pair of chairs, a barrel butter churn on
stand in blue paint, and a large carpenter's work bench complete
with holes for tools and vice.
A red-painted cupboard with raised panels, circa 1830, was roost
for 13 wood carved decoys in the display of Miller-Robinson
Antiques, Ashville, Mass., along with a two-board top tavern
table, scrubbed surface.

William & Teresa Kurau, Lampeter, Pa.
One of the best quilts in the show was a child's album quilt
with eagle, flags, birds, heart in hand and flowers in the booth of
American Heritage Antiques of Frankfort, Ohio. A buttery, taking up
all of one wall, was from an 1820 cape in Vermont.
Nutmeg Treasures of Glastonbury, Conn., showed a large sawbuck
table, two-board top, with a set of four ladder back side chairs
with tall finials and splint seats. A Pennsylvania pie safe in
old blue paint and a black decorated pie safe, found in
Connecticut, were among the other pieces of country furniture.
Paint was the standard for The American Collection, East
Hartford, Conn., with a selection of firkins, pantry boxes, large
wooden bowls, yellow dry sink, green sawbuck table and blue dry
sink with zinc liner.
Shelton Galleries & Fine Silver from Nashville, Tenn., lined
the walls with paintings and covered every inch of the tables
with silver. A portrait of a young boy seated on a log and
holding his cap, in a mountain landscape, American School oil on
canvas, was signed and dated lower right, F.H. Keeley, 1856.
An English School portrait of a race horse in its stable, oil on
canvas, was signed lower left by the late Nineteenth Century
painter E. Millard. One silver tray was filled with sterling
silver presidential julep cups, JFK and Eisenhower.
Century House Antiques, Alfred, N.Y., showed a New England,
Worcester County, dome top box painted with swags and dated
November 1837. A Diamond Dyes cabinet was in perfect condition,
and a child's sled was painted red with deer head decoration.

Platypus Antiques, Dix Hills, N.Y.
"Coke, six bottles for 25 cents," was on an advertising sign
in the booth of Cotton's Pickin's, Indianapolis, Ind., over an
eight panel pie safe with punched tin panels with eagle decoration.
Of New England origin was a two-drawer blanket chest with red and
black swirl decoration, circa 1820, shown by Period Antiques,
Scottsburg, Ind. A sign in the form of a goose advertised "Goose
decoys, $8 Per Dozen," and seven large carved and painted wooden
bowls just fit inside the top of a dry sink. "Van Heusen &
Charles, Albany, N.Y." was marked on a kerosene lantern in
mustard paint with red and blue striping, circa 1860.
Filling both sides of the entrance way to the show, as well as
the booth of a person who had to cancel at the last minute, were
Don and Marta Orwig of Corunna, Ind. Their booth is crammed with
advertising pieces and childhood objects, such as a pig carousel
figure by Hein in the original park paint, and "Charger," a
child's sled decorated with a house and landscape. Trade signs
advertised just about everything, including "Rochester Root
Beer," "Winchesters," "Taxidermist," "Rich's Ice Cream," "Coke,"
"Haircuts at 25 cents," "Sweet Spanish Onions," "Woolsey's Mixed
Paints," stoves and ranges and tricycles.
"We hope to make Start even better next year, continuing with a
two-day run," John Bruno said. There are some changes, however,
in the wind. The second Flamingo show, The Granite State Antiques
Show, will now be only one day, Thursday, and The Granite State
Book and Ephemera Fair will move from the JFK Coliseum in
Manchester to the Sparks facility. That show will also be cut to
one day, Friday. "We like the Sparks Center and will now have all
three of our New Hampshire shows at one location in 2006," Tina
said.