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POSTED May 14, 5:55 PM
There is nothing in the antiques world like the opening of the largest show in the US in Brimfield MA. It's an overload of sensory perception, a carnival of the unusual, a mind boggling plethora diversity, and that's just the people! Seriously, there are over 5000 dealers that set up over the course of a week. The show runs on Tuesday through Saturday May 13th - 18th this year. The show comes to Brimfield 3 times a year, May, July, & Sept. and always starts on the 2nd Tuesday of the Month and runs until Saturday. Tents and displays are set up at more than 20 massive farm fields along RT 20 in Brimfield. There are 19 on the official roster, but there are a few renegades as well. I'm lucky enough to live just 45 minutes from the town of Brimfield, so being an antiques auctioneer, I naturally get to it at least once per season. I usually go as a buyer, not to sell. This year it was fun to cover the event as a blogger, allowing me to view it from another perspective. It was refreshing to cover the event without the concerns of purchasing items and promoting an upcoming auction, which are my usual motives for attending. I covered 2 fields for this trip and will be going back later on in the week, here are the results of my first visit. One of the strangest things I've ever seen at Brimfield or anywhere else for that matter, was a Corona. Upon hitting the first field, (Brimfield Acres North) I saw several hundred people looking straight up in the air at a rainbow around the Sun. I'd never seen one before and it was breathtaking, I'm still rubbing my eyes however. If you think a rainbow around the Sun is strange, the site of a field full of people looking up in the air all at once is even slightly more so! See kids, antiques are MAGIC! The state of the antiques market seems to exist in it's own world that operates outside of the normal economy, and here's what I found to be the buzz topics of this show.
Items and asking prices.
Here are a few things I found interesting and their asking prices. The dealers contact info appear next to the item if I was given permission to print that. Wendy & Chuck LaVigna of Stone Cottage Antiques did well and had the following items for sale. stonecottageantiques.net A wonderful faded yellow painted primitive foot stool $165 Super pair of Torino mfg Chrome Retro Lamps $375 A large Petit Point of a Biblical? scene. $375 A dealer from Maine offered one of the nicest spool cabinets I've seen. Belding Bros. 3 foot tall spool cabinet, $1500 George Clark spool cabinet $1495 The Great American Game an early tin Baseball Game by the Hustler Toy co. of Sterling Illinois. $295 There was a companion Football game priced at $295 as well Antique Slot Machine $1500 Dennis Carlson Antiques of Moodus CT had a very interesting display which included the following A circa 1920s Mr Wood boat model $850 A fully working 3 foot long Railroad Steam Engine circa 1920s - $4250 From dealers who did not wish to have contact info published I found. A Hurdy Gurdy cart fully working at $950 An antique motorcycle, (the dealer was not at the booth, and this item did not have a price tag A miniature hand-made cupboard $475 A White's 4 gallon crock with cobalt blue floral decoration $485 Clark Jr Crock of NY also cobalt blue decorated $475 An Oak bow-front curio cabinet with applied lions, $1295 What I took away from the show was this.
Thanks for reading. AW For a complete 2008 Brimfield Shows Schedule click here. |

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