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Look out coin collectors, another hobby on the rise - but can they be slabbed? :)

Collectors hunt for bottled treasure
Glassware enthusiasts from across the country flock to a show in Baltimore County
By Laura Cadiz
sun reporter
Originally published March 6, 2006


William Corle has a theory about people who go to antique shows and, in his words, "spend their hard-earned money for this junk that people are trying to get rid of."


"They're not wrapped very tightly. ... They're half nuts," Corle said.

But Corle, 70, woke up at 3 a.m. yesterday to drive from his Manns Choice, Pa., home to be among the first people at the 26th annual Baltimore Bottle Show and Sale, which organizers call the world's largest one-day bottle show.

The show's 300 tables at the Essex Campus of the Community College of Baltimore County were staffed by dealers who traveled from 25 states and three countries to sell bottles and other antiques, said Steve Charing, the publicity director for the Baltimore Antique Bottle Club, which put on the show.

Charing said bottle collecting is the third-largest collecting hobby in the nation - behind stamps and coins - and is mushrooming in popularity. He pointed to the 1,200 to 1,400 people that the bottle show typically attracts, with some customers coming from as far away as Hawaii.

"To leave Hawaii and come to Maryland in March, you must be a real fanatic bottle collector," Charing said.

There's no formula that determines the price of a bottle. Instead, the value is largely driven by supply and demand, Charing said. However, some basic aspects, like color and condition, can increase a bottle's price, he said.

People sometimes collect bottles in specific categories, such as medicine bottles or barbershop bottles. Some categories are more sought after, with some bottles selling for tens of thousands of dollars, Charing said.

"The values of some bottles are just skyrocketing," he said. "There's only so much that's in the ground that people we're able to retrieve or get handed down from generation to generation."

Michael Bienvenue, of Long Valley, N.J., bought a barbershop bottle that he speculated once contained hair tonic or perfume in the late 1800s. He said he was attracted by the bottle's yellowish peach color and thought that the $115 he paid was a good deal.

Bienvenue, 49, said he started collecting bottles at age 12 when his mother wanted to decorate their New Jersey farmhouse with bottles. Now he and his wife, Sharon, both enjoy the hobby.

"It's better than going boozin'," Bienvenue said.

Bill Stephens of Rising Sun was looking for bottles that would add to his collection of bitters bottles, which Charing described as bottles that contained bitter-tasting medicine and were known for their shapes, such as animals or log cabins.

Stephens, 45, said he has about 50 to 75 bottles on display at his home.

"They're pretty, and they look good with the sun shining through them on the shelf," he said.

Corle's prize buy at the show wasn't a bottle. Instead, he bought a pair of metal sugar nippers - a tool from the early 1800s that he said was used to break up clumps of sugar - for $50. Corle admitted that the sugar nippers are likely to get lost in his and his wife's collection of more than 100 antiques, including furniture, glassware and bottles.

But, Corle said, collecting antiques has been a part of his life since 1963, and he planned to stop at some antiques shops on his way back to Pennsylvania to search for items that he just couldn't go home without.

"It keeps you busy," he said. "It keeps you broke."

Comments

  • NoGvmntNoGvmnt Posts: 1,126
    I believe that many of your TH'ers (Metal Detectorists) also have a collection of bottles (although they may not admit it).

    I have a collection of bottles that I have unearthed over the years of TH'ing. Although I have not taken the time to actually look up their value I do know that I have some valueable ones.

    Jim
  • crispycrispy Posts: 792 ✭✭✭





    << <i>I believe that many of your TH'ers (Metal Detectorists) also have a collection of bottles (although they may not admit it). >>





    I don't know of any detectorist that won't admit collecting bottles. I know that some bottle collectors don't like to say that they hunt old privvy sites as they were often used for dumping areas (no pun intended) for used bottles , broken pottery and other refuse.



    "to you, a hero is some kind of weird sandwich..."
  • ziggy29ziggy29 Posts: 18,668 ✭✭✭
    However, some basic aspects, like color and condition, can increase a bottle's price, he said.

    Who would want to participate in a hobby like that?
  • librtyheadlibrtyhead Posts: 1,116 ✭✭✭
    I collect bottles ever since I dug some up when I was a 10 yr old.I have no clue what they are worth but there must be a hundred lining the windows in the barn.image
  • crispycrispy Posts: 792 ✭✭✭


    << <i>However, some basic aspects, like color and condition, can increase a bottle's price, he said.

    Who would want to participate in a hobby like that? >>





    Good point.



    "to you, a hero is some kind of weird sandwich..."
  • carlcarl Posts: 2,054
    HMMMMMMMM. That may have just answered a question I always had about what was happening on a construction site I was on. Several of the construction workers would always jump out of a back hoe or other diging devise and grab a bottle that turned up. One electrical guy told me he had thousands of bottles from numerous construction sites. This particular one was the redoing of a major road in a major city that was first constructed in the 1920's. The same guy also showed me a small bag of coins also found this way. Two of them were $10 gold coins. These guys also left with old stones, old wood, Pieces of foundations of old buildings, old piping and wire. I always just thought they were just a little to nutty of collectors.
    Carl
  • Some of that old wood can be valuable to someone making art with it.
    I remember where they dig up old trees buried in peat bogs swamps and such, and sell the wood for very high prices to wood carvers and artists and such.
    Heck up north in the Great Lakes area, they are fishing old tree logs out of the lakes to be recycled too.
    image
  • mgoodm3mgoodm3 Posts: 17,497 ✭✭✭
    There's some neat glass out there. My step-grandmother had a collection had a collection of uranium glass - yes it's a bit radioactive. It's a cool yellow-green color and has a little flourescence - kinda like watch dials.
    coinimaging.com/my photography articles Check out the new macro lens testing section
  • My mother collected Lalique and Sandwich Glass bottles for years-- they turn out to be worth more than my complete Morgan collection at a fraction of the cost. Multi-color, blue (not from the sun, ie AT) or rare colors are popular now--sounds like toned coins!image
    morgannut2
  • pf70collectorpf70collector Posts: 6,672 ✭✭✭
    I live right about a 1/4 mile from Essex. Would have stopped by just to see what all the fuss was about if I had known about it.
  • Maybe PCGS can cerify them like they do with diamonds?

    image


    Anyone else ever told that the cobalt blue glass was radio-active?

    image

    Larry
    Dabigkahuna
  • ILikeMercsILikeMercs Posts: 1,392
    Look in the walls of old buildings........lotsa beer cans in there too..............image
    imageDo not taunt Happy Fun Ball image
  • krankykranky Posts: 8,709 ✭✭✭
    Those are too fragile. I'd always be afraid to take them somewhere.

    I wonder if bottle collectors have their "case of 24". image

    New collectors, please educate yourself before spending money on coins; there are people who believe that using numismatic knowledge to rip the naïve is what this hobby is all about.

  • Conder101Conder101 Posts: 10,536
    Well they have certification companies for stamps, die cast cars, action figures, and beanie babies, why not bottles?
  • GemineyeGemineye Posts: 5,374
    Garbage pickin' at the old dump sites looking for old bottles in NOT considered one of my favorite things to do.That's where you might find some one looking .image
    ......Larry........image
  • ziggy29ziggy29 Posts: 18,668 ✭✭✭


    << <i>Well they have certification companies for stamps, die cast cars, action figures, and beanie babies, why not bottles? >>

    For one thing, I think a lot of people would be paranoid about shipping them...
  • BigEBigE Posts: 6,949 ✭✭✭
    Sure they could be slabbed, just have different size plastic tubes with a tamperproof top-------------------------BigE
    I'm glad I am a Tree

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