Scratching the surface of Roseville Pottery
Roseville Pottery was founded in Roseville, Ohio, in 1890. A second Roseville plant opened in nearby Zanesville in 1898. Early Roseville pieces were decorated with handwork, including sgraffito designs. Sgraffito is a method of scratching or carving a design into wet clay. Roseville vases with sgraffito designs are the most expensive Roseville vases today. Later pieces were molded, and many were made with raised decorations of flowers and fruit. Almost every piece was marked with some form of the word “Roseville” or “Rozane” (a combination of the names of the two cities where the pottery’s plants were located). But be careful. Other potteries in the town of Roseville used the word “Roseville” in their marks, and there are many modern fakes of old Roseville vases. A vase covered with raised fish designed in 1906 by Frederick Hurten Rhead, the company’s art director, sold for $3,125 at a June 2012 Rago Arts auction in Lambertville, N.J. It was marked “GA” by the unknown artist who carved the fish. An almost identical vase marked “ED” is known. There was a set pattern for the artists to follow for these vases, part of a Roseville line called “Della Robbia.”
Q. I’m trying to find information on the C.M. Bott Furniture Co. of Buffalo, N.Y. I have a piece by the company and can’t find any information. Can you help?
A. C.M. Bott Furniture Co. was founded by Charles M. Bott and was in business in Buffalo, N.Y., from 1914 to about 1931. The company specialized in making moderately priced dining-room furniture.
Q. We have a Cheerful Oak stove made by Channon-Emery Stove Co. It’s stamped with the number 1900, which may be the year of manufacture. Can you give us an idea of the stove’s value? It’s not in good condition.
A. The Channon-Emery Stove Co. was founded in about 1880 by Joseph Emery and William Channon. The company, located in Quincy, Ill., manufactured various types of heating and cooking stoves and ranges. The Cheerful Oak model is listed as a “heater” in an 1895 issue of “The Metal Worker,” a trade journal. The Cheerful Oak was made in three sizes and was designed to burn wood or coal. Your stove, if in poor condition, would sell for about $300.
Q. I read an article about old collectible cereal boxes in the Farmers Forum of Fargo, N.D. I have two Wheaties boxes picturing the 1987 World Champion Minnesota Twins. Both boxes are in perfect shape and have never been opened. What are they worth?
A. A friend has one of the 1987 boxes, too. A single box, even in perfect condition, would sell for $10 to $15. If you decide to hold on to your Twins boxes, store them in archival bags. Open the boxes carefully from the bottom and empty out the cereal to prevent damage from insects.
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Tip: Never wash a tobacco “felt.” The small flannel flags and other flannel premiums were packed with cigarettes in the early 1900s. They lose value if washed.
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Current prices are recorded from antiques shows, flea markets, sales and auctions throughout the United States. Prices vary in different locations because of local economic conditions.
• Cracker Jack toy paint set, Mysticolor, stop light on box cover, $10.
• Frankoma Christmas plate, “The Annunciation,” marked, 1973, 8 1/2 inches, $18.
• Table, mahogany, brass gallery, tripod base, round, 22 x 15 inches, $30.
• Popeye toy tank, Popeye shooting gun, Olive Oyl, tin lithograph, windup, c. 1950, 2 1/4 x 4 inches, $125.
• World War II poster, “A careless word, a needless sinking,” Office of War, Anton Otto Fischer, 1942, 37 x 28 inches, $210.
• Spool cabinet, countertop, shape of horizontal spool, four drawers, painted, J.P. Coats, 18 x 22 inches, $420.
• Writing table, Louis XV style, burled satinwood, bronze, three drawers, cabriole legs, France, 32 x 63 inches, $1,180.
• Shearwater Pottery vase, black-and-white slip glaze, geometric pattern, Walter Anderson, 1930, 5 3/4 inches, $2,440.
• Sterling silver water urn, George III, engraved crest, inscription, London, 1801, 11 3/4 inches, $2,990.
• Sinumbra lamp, brass and bronze, entwined serpent standard, cut and etched glass shade, prisms, gilt, c. 1850, 31 inches, $3,345.
Write to Kovels, Observer-Reporter, King Features Syndicate, 300 W. 57th St., New York, NY 10019.