Showing posts with label swans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label swans. Show all posts

Friday, July 18, 2008

Show and Tell Friday -double swan vase

See more Show and Tell posts at Kelli's!

Show and Tell

We are nearing the end of my Swan collection and I didn't know I had so many until I began photographing them for Show and Tell. I have a few odd balls left, some pictured below.


Painted beaks are rubbing off on this McCoy double vase, but I will like them just fine when they are yellow all over! The pair below is interesting, because the one on the right is an older Enesco, when it was still N. S. Co, and the one on the left is newer, made in Japan and was cast with a pieced neck seam. Some minor differences, but obviously a copy.
This little black swan is not marked, but i found a similar one that was marked and the ad read "A wonderful piece of 1940-50's California Pottery. Marked "Roselane 261" on the bottom. Approx 7 3/4" tall x 4" across body"


Friday, June 27, 2008

Show and Tell Friday- Nelson McCoy swan

I am doing swans again for Show and Tell Friday at Kelli's!




Another of my Favorite Swans, (I seem to have a lot of favorites!) this one is by Nelson McCoy and is my smallest McCoy swan. I really like the color of pink and the detail. She is more realistic than stylistic. Here is another picture, with two of the swans from last week for comparison.


Friday, June 20, 2008

Show and Tell Friday, smaller swans

This is a smaller Niloak swan, and she has a chip out on the inside as you can see below. The smaller swan is unmarked.


This blue girl and most of the ones pictured here today would have been used as Napkin holders as I discussed earlier in the series. The one below has a lot of crazing and I have trouble reading the markings on the bottom.

I think it says that it was made in 1987, which doesn't make it very old so I think the crazing was part of the glazing process, not a result of aging.

Here is another napkin holder!
This one is a little larger than the others and I am showing both sides since it is asymetrical. Unmarked.

Visit more collections at Kelli's Show and Tell Friday.

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Brush Swan- Show and Tell Fridays

See more Show and Tell posts at Kelli's!

Show and Tell




This Brush Swan is old and has crazing which I really like. Marked 681, Brush pottery was at one time owned by Brush McCoy. The original company was started by a Brush, who then joined forces with the McCoy folks. Very similar colors and glazes. This is a fairly large swan. You can see the swans featured so far by clicking on SWANS in the Labels section to the right.



See more Show and Tell posts at Kelli's!

Show and Tell



Friday, June 6, 2008

Swans for Show and Tell Friday

See more Show and Tell posts at Kelli's!

Show and Tell


Here are some of my white swans, some with painted beaks and some without. The first three are unmarked and very different from one another, I like the lines of the largest one the best, but the one in front has a cheeky tilt to her head. She makes me smile.





This little girl was made in West Germany by Goebel. She is unglazed but has a painted beak, much of which has flaked off.







See more Show and Tell posts at Kelli's!

Show and Tell

Friday, May 30, 2008

Show and Tell Friday Swans again

I really like the lines of this one, and she is floating on her own little wave!
These two appear to have been made in the same mode or cast, but the pink one has a Made in Japan stamp on the bottom. Her head is a little wider than the white one.
I like them both.



See more Show and Tell posts at Kelli's!

Show and Tell

Friday, May 9, 2008

Blue Swans- Show and Tell Friday

Show and Tell








My blue swans, of varying hues and sizes. The largest is a Niloak, and unfortunately there is a chip out of the back, near the lowest point of her tail, on the inside. It doesn't hurt for display purposes, but does affect the value. While photographing these, I remembered when I started gathering the small ones.
I had a collection of W. S. George petalware for my dishes, and I thought the small swans, in their corresponding pastel colors, would make neat napkin holders with the plates. I would accordian pleat the napkins, fold them in half, and stick them in the small swan vases. Then I could place the swans in the center of the top dish and TA DA! Unfortunately, I stored the plates on a shelf that one day came smashing down and broke most of them. Sigh.
I still think lots of the smaller swans would make neat napkin holders, I just don't have the right dishes to set a table with them.

Show and Tell





Friday, May 2, 2008

Frankoma Swans





These are my only living Frankoma Swans. I used to have a black one also, but he was sitting in the garden window, and some cat decided he needed that space for a nap. Frankie did not survive the fall from the window. I don't know why that black swan was a male, because the rest of my swans are all female. Hmmm.

Frankoma pottery is made in Sapulpa, Oklahoma. It is a red clay base and you can usually see it through the glaze. The older pieces are collectible, I don't know about these guys. I know they miss their brother.

Friday, April 25, 2008

Tall Maddux of Calif swans

I put the little chapstick between these guys so you would get an idea of their size. They were made by Maddux of Calif and I got them on Ebay after my collection had obviously become a collection! Maddux also did a series of TV lamps shaped like swans. These are the tallest birds in my group so far. They have a white finish and glazed black beaks and eyes. This is under the glaze and won't scrape off, like some of the painted pottery does.

See what every one else is sharing on Show and Tell Friday!

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Mommogrum

Yeah, great, it is all digital now so you don't have to sit around and wait to be sure the x-rays are readable, but you still get smooshed. And you still have to wait 7-10 days for the results to get back to you. And I still don't much like it. But I did it.
Sneak peak at Friday's swan.