Sunday, November 26, 2017

Collecting Antique Pottery And Glassware As An Amateur

By Anna Cooper


Professional antiques dealers and buyers will usually specialize in a particular field. They will deal with specific sellers and highly rated traders with excellent reputations. These buyers will have the knowledge and network to know where and when a special item is going to be available. Being both useful and attractive, antique pottery and glassware is often a highly demanded item, so a lot of people seek to collect these.

Unlike the professional antique dealer, most amateur collectors will be found at garage sales, estate auctions and flea markets. They will look for the most unusual or eye-catching piece and consider if it's worth the asking price. They will be thinking about adding to an existing collection and how good the item looks.

Knowing what you are looking for, how much you are willing to pay for it and where the best place to find it, is all things that the part-time collector will take into account. If they know what to look for, they may pay attention to marks on the item which will denote its origin or maker, the skill with which it is made and the weight of it, to be able to separate a fake from a genuine article.

Flooding the market with a particular item would decrease its collectible value quite significantly as a collectible is valued by its scarcity. It's a safe assumption that anyone who assembles any kind of collection harbors the secret fantasy of one day achieving fame and accolades for being the person who found a rare and wonderful work of art hidden in the dusty corner of a junk shop in the middle of nowhere.

A collector may only be after certain things, such as perfume bottles or wine glasses and constantly seek to fill a gap on their shelf. A dinner table set with an eclectic collection of wine glasses in varying colors, sizes and shapes holds its own beauty.

Glass cookware like Pyrex is also highly sought after. The revival of interest is due to the demand for all things from the past, or vintage goods. Originally designed with form and function in mind, the lovely pastel shades of glassware now grace many a modern kitchen. Their functionality is still evident as many people use the dishes daily.

Pottery, not to be confused with ceramic, can often by identified by the type of clay that is used. As pottery clay is porous, it would be glazed to make it waterproof for use. One of the better recognized pottery would be Chinese, as the patterns are unmistakable and well-known, but the chance of finding something that special at a boot sale is unlikely. The market is frequently flooded with counterfeit goods so any collector would have to do a lot of research to know what to look for.

Unless you are an expert in the field, buying a piece as an investment is bound to end in disappointment. If you collect things that are beautiful, that make your heart sing, you will never be let down. Those items that you have in your collection will forever bring you joy.




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