Reproductions And How To Identify Them And Avoid Getting Scammed! ~ Antique Talk

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  • Опубліковано 17 жов 2024
  • Mike talks about Reproductions and how to identify them and avoid getting scammed!
    66 Unique Antiques in Nashville Mi is a 9000 sqft Antique Shop filled with Antiques, Collectibles and Oddities
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 51

  • @tonyneilson1652
    @tonyneilson1652 2 роки тому +4

    In the 1990's my interest and evolving expertise was still and mechanical banks. My ability to detect reproductions, repairs and repaints was the result of joining clubs, befriending several of the worlds most knowledgeable collector/dealers and learning from them. A Quebec antique dealer I bought other goods from took the time one day to show me techniques he had learned about detecting reproductions of antique furniture. In addition to things you mentioned; hardware, darkness of wood, refinishing, wear and tear, he emphasized that a buyer should examine unfinished areas such as the backing and other surfaces; which were not readily visible, for tool marks. Antique furniture was often constructed with hand tools and he pointed out that tool marks from circular saw marks and such could often be found on unfinished surfaces providing indication of a more recent age.

  • @mariongrantham7914
    @mariongrantham7914 Рік тому +1

    I love your website, and you present your material well. Thank you for your channel, and I am grateful. Hope that help keep you motivated. I have been watching your numbers grow. Well done, bravo. And keep this channel growing all who read please share and like.

    • @66uniqueantiques
      @66uniqueantiques  Рік тому

      Thanks Marion! I am very motivated with this channel and can’t wait to see what the future holds. Thank you for your support

  • @msmb2012
    @msmb2012 2 роки тому +4

    Thank you for this information-packed video. Ordering that black light right now!

  • @loisfolk5492
    @loisfolk5492 2 роки тому +2

    Very informative. 72 and still collecting and learning. It’s a good life. ☮️✌️

  • @helenbailey8419
    @helenbailey8419 2 роки тому +3

    Great tip about the black light.

  • @ambervelte9060
    @ambervelte9060 2 роки тому +2

    Very informative! Great video! I appreciate the years & time periods included. It had me looking at a few pieces in my house trying to determine the era of them.

  • @brianguiot9636
    @brianguiot9636 2 місяці тому +1

    Fantastic video. Please make more videos on black lights to identify repros. Thank you.

  • @bergenpines1
    @bergenpines1 2 роки тому +2

    Great video, hard to make so much info into brief video. Did not know that about black light, thank you!

    • @66uniqueantiques
      @66uniqueantiques  2 роки тому

      Yes they are an amazing tool to have/use when antiquing

  • @deechick2321
    @deechick2321 2 роки тому +2

    Great video! I really like my black light. Take it w me all the time. Surprised that clear n white can glow. Turquoise..yellow topaz ...even light amber. Not all green glows. Like looking at cadmium in the red orange glass. I stray away from small items that glow. I've seen items on the internet. (Think I was taken on a single marble.) Part of the learning process. Didn't know about the pottery. Yes...cracks can show quite easy. 😊

  • @melissamonios1602
    @melissamonios1602 2 роки тому +1

    I love these learning videos you make & really appreciate them. My best friend & I have 3 booths now, two in one shop & anther in a different town. & this past year has been a great experience. Thank you for taking the time to make videos like this & the 101 ones too. Love them.

    • @66uniqueantiques
      @66uniqueantiques  2 роки тому

      That's awesome Melissa! Good luck on your booths and I'm glad you enjoy the content

  • @biggerock
    @biggerock 2 роки тому +1

    I enjoy your videos a lot! At one time I used to restore furniture for an antique store in New Orleans, so I found the section on furniture to be particularly interesting. I sure do hope to make my way to Michigan so I can meet you and your family, and browse around your store!

    • @66uniqueantiques
      @66uniqueantiques  2 роки тому

      Thanks Carl! That would be great and hopefully it happens! Thanks for watching

  • @KatsAlluringTreasures
    @KatsAlluringTreasures 2 роки тому +1

    Great info! Thank you! Just subbed and will check out your other videos

  • @vinyl1Earthlink
    @vinyl1Earthlink 2 роки тому +7

    Just remember, the very best forgeries are made by highly skilled dealers and collectors. They know all the comparison points, and will use 19th-century wood and 19th-century screws and nails, or 19th-century ink and 19th-century paper on a 19th-century printing press. Many of them have decades of experience, and can make superlative forgeries that will fool the experts. Museums keep discovering these pieces in their collections - some of them made years ago.
    The easiest forgery is in art. All you have do is find a genuine 19th-century painting in the style of a well-known artist, and careful add a signature using paints that were used in the the 19th century. It takes a real expert to detect this, although the use of black-light flashlights will often show a suspicious addition.

    • @66uniqueantiques
      @66uniqueantiques  2 роки тому +1

      Yes there are some amazing Reproductions out there and even the most trained eye can be fooled

  • @johnhardin5210
    @johnhardin5210 2 роки тому +1

    Very informative video. Do you have much experience with vintage cast iron? Especially unmarked, or only marked with a small makers mark? My dad sells cast iron and he knows a few tricks about identifying them just by the heat ring, the angle of the side of the pan, and looking at the handle.

    • @66uniqueantiques
      @66uniqueantiques  2 роки тому

      Thanks for watching John! I have some experience with cast iron, I am no expert but can identify most pieces

  • @anniemaeisokay
    @anniemaeisokay Рік тому +1

    sooo helpful! PLEASE PLEASE DO ONE FOR MERCURY MIRRORS???

    • @66uniqueantiques
      @66uniqueantiques  Рік тому +1

      I’ll write it down for a future video. Thanks for watching

  • @fluffyotter1601
    @fluffyotter1601 2 роки тому +1

    Fantastic content…thank you

  • @alanatolstad4824
    @alanatolstad4824 2 роки тому +1

    I just read a story on-line about someone who was strolling through an antique shop, picked up a kool swan piece marked $200+, and a sticker on the bottom was marked Goodwill, and only a few dollars (I can't remember now, but it seems to me it was

    • @66uniqueantiques
      @66uniqueantiques  2 роки тому

      I've heard of some great finds at Goodwill so hopefully it was that instead of someone trying to get over on someone

  • @baref1959
    @baref1959 2 роки тому +1

    i have alot of old stuff that i am needing to find buyers for. i have had alot of it most of my life. how do you go about selling your old stuff. mine are mostly collections so one piece at a time kills my heart. and if you ever need an opinion on keroscene lamps and associated brass stuff? i worked for a repro shop when i was in my mid teens.

    • @66uniqueantiques
      @66uniqueantiques  2 роки тому

      Good to know thank you… try eBay, Facebook marketplace, yard/garage sale or an auction

  • @coleomar9107
    @coleomar9107 9 місяців тому +1

    Flow Flue China and antique blue and white stoneware. How to spot a valuable piece that is not a reprduction. And where is flow blue in the selling cycle now? Thank you!

    • @66uniqueantiques
      @66uniqueantiques  9 місяців тому

      Flow blue has a niche market but still some collectors out there e

  • @ritastout6685
    @ritastout6685 2 роки тому +4

    I am old school, but I believe an antique is at least 100 years old

    • @66uniqueantiques
      @66uniqueantiques  2 роки тому +1

      Your not wrong but many people think 25 or 50 years is antique so I always say to each their own

    • @ritastout6685
      @ritastout6685 2 роки тому +2

      @@66uniqueantiques I agree, I have been selling antiques for 40 years and that is probably why I can’t think of stuff from the 1950’s as antiques. Plus, that is the decade I was born in. Lol.

    • @66uniqueantiques
      @66uniqueantiques  2 роки тому

      Absolutely! So many different perspectives on antiques

    • @doriwilson6991
      @doriwilson6991 2 роки тому +3

      Vintage is 25 years old or older. Antiques are 100 years or older in my opinion.

  • @shawnnabireley7394
    @shawnnabireley7394 2 роки тому +1

    My husband collects phonographs and I may take a pic of a real neat one I've never seen and right away he knows its repurposed or a newer one that was made say in India or something! I bought some 78s from goodwill the other day and there was a sign that said 45s 99 cents, LPs, 99 cents and 78s 49 cents, she tried to charge me for LPs, I tried to explain the differance and she got physically mad. Husband went to one antique store and lady got mad at him because she thought she knew what she had and didnt. I had another lady try to tell me a coke radio was way older then it was. She thought she had a real deal, it was coke, really, lady?!

    • @66uniqueantiques
      @66uniqueantiques  2 роки тому

      That is always hard to come across when the seller has no clue they have an item that is not authentic. Most have the same reaction you incountered

  • @paulalim1476
    @paulalim1476 Рік тому +1

    We know the Musial family…..and signed stuff.

  • @mikewatch1487
    @mikewatch1487 2 роки тому +1

    You cover way to many categories. Therefore you will always be taken. Most collectors zero in on one area. Sorry this isn’t very useful.

    • @66uniqueantiques
      @66uniqueantiques  2 роки тому +3

      Not a collector, I own an antique store so I need to know as many categories as I can.