Showing posts with label arts and crafts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label arts and crafts. Show all posts

Friday, October 20, 2023

Rare Blue Weller Pottery Arts and Crafts Woodrose Wall Pocket Vase


 


This rare and exquisite wall pocket vase is a stunning piece of art pottery that will add a 

touch of elegance to any space. The beautiful blue color and intricate floral design make it a 

perfect addition to any collection.


Crafted in the United States circa 1910, this Weller pottery vase features the woodrose pattern 

with a 3D effect and hand-painted decorative features, this Arts and Crafts/Mission Style vase 

is truly unique. It is perfect for displaying flowers or as a decorative piece on its own. 

It can stand or hang.


In very good condition with crazing typical period manufacturing flaws.

There are glaze pops, a glaze flake in one corner and some glazed over tiny chips.


See it in our eBay store here.

Saturday, July 15, 2023

Antique Craftsman Bungalow Style Fancy Wood Window Frame Arts and Crafts


 

This 1920's era, sturdy Antique Craftsman Bungalo Style Fancy Wood Window is worn, shabby and weathered. 

The distressed look is extremely appealing.

There is a 1960's era pane of textured, frosted, patterned glass in place currently.

This measures approximately 25 inches x 20.5 inches. A pair of hooks were added to the sides for hanging at some point.

Considering its age and utilitarian nature, it's in very good condition.

This item is heavy. Please check shipping rates before you bid.


See the 10 day eBay auction here.

Friday, June 9, 2023

Saturday, November 19, 2022

Gouda Zuid Holland Damascus Vase Arts and Craft Dutch 1920s Folk Art




Made in the 1920s this beautiful Gouda vase has a wonderful shape and a lovely polychrome glaze.
It is in excellent antique condition with no chips or cracks or crazing. There is the occasional tiny glaze pop, typical in the manufacturing of this type of pottery. Marked Damascus 0101S Holland. The vase measures 5 inches tall and approximately 4 1/2 inches in diameter.

Check it out in our Etsy shop here.

Saturday, November 22, 2014

Eilat Stone

Chrysocolla is an greatly colored copper mineral. Its shade can be among the strongest colors of natural blue gems. Chrysocolla’s attractive, stunning blue-green shade is often mistakenly confuse for turquoise because they share many visual resemblances. It can often be found intermingled with malachite, and azurite, creating a wonderful mixed diamond known as Eilat stone.
Eilat Stone derives its name from the city of Eilat where it was once mined, it is a green-blue inhomogeneous mixture of several secondary copper minerals including malachiteazuriteturquoisepseudomalachitechrysocolla. The Eilat stone is the National stone of Israel, and is also known as the King Solomon Stone.

Sunday, October 12, 2014

We are now on Pintrest

Starting a catalog of photos of all the amazing things that are currently in the shop or have passed through our hands. We hope we can help others with references and of course, sell more stuff!
http://www.pinterest.com/phoebeshiddentr/




Friday, October 10, 2014

Leaf peep your way to Otis, Mass ~ Artist Geoffrey Coelho Reception Next Saturday! Berkshire Co.


Steadman Pond in Early Spring Photograph
http://geoffrey-coelho.artistwebsites.com
Shop https://www.facebook.com/OtisGalleries/app_309028460694
 ~
Please join me at the Otis Library on Saturday, October 18 from 12:30 to 1:30 pm. I have 25 framed photographs on display, and a portfolio containing 48 additional images is available for inspection. Everything is for sale. Haggling is encouraged. 10% of the proceeds will go to benefit the library.

My work has been exhibited at the Knox Gallery in Montery, Sohn Fine Art Gallery in Stockbridge, and JWS Art Supplies on Railroad Street in Great Barrington. JWS also carries my hand made note cards. I've been invited back to the Otis Library for a November show, and will be opening the season for the Sandisfield Arts Center in May.

I'd love to see you all in Otis on the 18th.

If you can't make the reception, feel free to drop by turing library hours between now and the end of the month to see the wares. Tell your friends!

40 North Main Road, Otis Massachuetts
Saturday, October 18
12:30 to 1:30 PM
________________________________________

Geoffrey Coelho is a Berkshire County photographer whose work has been exhibited at local galleries and various small venues in the county.

His photographic interests are diverse and eclectic, but his focus is almost exclusively on the Berkshire region. He has produced traditional landscapes and scenics, architectural studies both exterior and interior, streetscapes and street candids, and most recently he has turned his attention to still life photography. Attracted to open spaces and abandoned places since childhood, he still seeks out these locales for much of his work. He has undertaken a comprehensive documentation of the buildings and surrounding land at Spectacle Pond Farm in Sandisfield across the four seasons, and he can often be found climbing over fences in places where he probably shouldn’t.

Among the things he has tried to accomplish with his images is the presentation of familiar scenes in novel ways, using light and color to draw out the essential character, as he sees it, of a thing or place.

He is a graduate of Clark University in Worcester, and has attended Clark University Graduate School of Management, and Westfield State University Graduate School of Education. He has been a paperboy, a dishwasher, a laboratory chemist, a hazmat spill responder, a corporate Vice President and a science teacher. He is currently a Postmaster, and the Officer in Charge at the Sandisfield Post Office, where he’s not allowed to take pictures.

Geoffrey Coelho resides in Otis with his wife of 30 years, Karen Amidon-Coelho, and their youngest son, Anthony. His oldest son, Daniel, is a combat veteran of the Afghan War and is currently a Non-Commissioned Officer serving with European Command at Headquarters Stuttgart, Germany.
Candy Shop - Great Barrington Photograph
Custom work, signed prints, and limited editions are available on request. 


Monday, February 3, 2014

The Arts and Crafts Movement

Selected info from wikipedia....http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arts_and_Crafts_movement
The Arts and Crafts Movement was an international design movement that flourished between 1860 and 1910, especially in the second half of that period,[1] continuing its influence until the 1930s.[2] It was led by the artist and writer William Morris (1834–1896) during the 1860s,[1] and was inspired by the writings of John Ruskin (1819–1900) and Augustus Pugin (1812–1852), although the term "Arts and Crafts" was not coined until 1887, when it was first used by T. J. Cobden-Sanderson at a preliminary meeting of the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society.[3]
The movement developed first and most fully in the British Isles,[2] but spread across the British Empire and to the rest of Europe and North America.[4] It was largely a reaction against the perceived impoverished state of thedecorative arts at the time and the conditions in which they were produced.[5] It stood for traditional craftsmanship using simple forms and often applied medieval, romantic or folk styles of decoration. It advocated economic and social reform and has been said to be essentially anti-industrial.[5][6]
In the United States, the terms American Craftsman or Craftsman style are often used to denote the style of architecture, interior design, and decorative arts that prevailed between the dominant eras of Art Nouveau and Art Deco, or approximately the period from 1910 to 1925.
In Canada, the term Arts and Crafts predominates, but Craftsman is also recognized.[27]
While the Europeans tried to recreate the virtuous crafts being replaced by industrialisation, Americans tried to establish a new type of virtue to replace heroic craft production: well-decorated middle-class homes. They claimed that the simple but refined aesthetics of Arts and Crafts decorative arts would ennoble the new experience of industrial consumerism, making individuals more rational and society more harmonious. The American Arts and Crafts movement was the aesthetic counterpart of its contemporary political philosophy, progressivism. Characteristically, when the Arts and Crafts Society began in October 1897 in Chicago, it was at Hull House, one of the first Americansettlement houses for social reform.[28]
In the United States, the Arts and Crafts style initiated a variety of attempts to reinterpret European Arts and Crafts ideals for Americans. These included the "Craftsman"-style architecture, furniture, and other decorative arts such as designs promoted by Gustav Stickley in his magazine, The Craftsman and designs produced on the Roycroft campus as publicized in Elbert Hubbard's The Fra. Both men used their magazines as a vehicle to promote the goods produced with the Craftsman workshop in Eastwood, NY and Elbert Hubbard's Roycroft campus in East Aurora, NY. A host of imitators of Stickley's furniture (the designs of which are often mislabelled the "Mission Style") included three companies established by his brothers.