Yesterday and first thing this morning were both wash outs. Yesterday because the kid looking after his dad's antique store up in Lincolnshire was pissy when I went to check if I could get a discount for buying multiple items. I had an early Bay vase that was a little dull to be honest and a vase they'd marked as "continental" tha tI was a little dubious about actually being German.
I'd had a chat with the guy's Dad about them and had the usual little discount mentioned with phrases like "look after you if you buy multiple".
Problem was by the time I got to the counter the father had gone leaving his son in charge - a son who seemed far more interested in watching football on the TV than talking to customers. And certainly he had no interest in giving the discount. So, end result, he kept the vases.
And nowhere else I went had any WGP at all.
Fast forward to Sunday at the day starts with rain - or no car boots for me. not a good start to the weekend.
But then there was the antique fair in St.Ives in Cambridgeshire. Okay these things mean you will always a pay a little more for vases so it has to be an unusual piece for me to want to pay the price, but there is always a chance of finding something.
And today I did fond something, or rather three somethings - two Carstens vases (the orange one in the picture below being 50cm tall) and a D&B.
.
So a not too bad weekend - and next week I'm off to Glossop to see Aidan and Emma. That will mean a few more vases.
Sunday, 30 October 2011
Sunday Antiques Fair Finds
Labels:
Annoying Teenagers,
Antiques Fair,
Carstens,
Dümler and Breiden,
St.Ives
Tuesday, 25 October 2011
Midweek Marvels
We had the day off today and we found ourselves in Solihull- appointments etc, although I don't imagine anyone would truly care.
What this did give us was an opportunity to go hunting.
But alas our options around Solihull proved fruitless; not a single item of interest spotted anywhere. We'd resigned ourselves to not finding any new ceramics.
What we'd not really counted on was seeing an antiques centre on the way home. It's just on the A452 south of Solihull called the Barn, or something like that. We thought we'd give it a try. I'm kind of glad we did as right inside the door they had a everything for £2 cabinet which had a Bay Keramik vase in it. Not for long.
A further look around the place and I'd added a Scheurich 289-27. Happiness all around and so we headed off for lunch.
Thing is we picked the cafe at Hoar Park craft centre for lunch where there happens to be an antiques centre alongside all the craft shops and so the early afternoon saw the Scheurich's big brother 289-47 tag along for the ride home.
One day off, lots of official stuff done and three more vases. Almost sounds like mixing business with pleasure.
And the vases are pictured below.
What this did give us was an opportunity to go hunting.
But alas our options around Solihull proved fruitless; not a single item of interest spotted anywhere. We'd resigned ourselves to not finding any new ceramics.
What we'd not really counted on was seeing an antiques centre on the way home. It's just on the A452 south of Solihull called the Barn, or something like that. We thought we'd give it a try. I'm kind of glad we did as right inside the door they had a everything for £2 cabinet which had a Bay Keramik vase in it. Not for long.
A further look around the place and I'd added a Scheurich 289-27. Happiness all around and so we headed off for lunch.
Thing is we picked the cafe at Hoar Park craft centre for lunch where there happens to be an antiques centre alongside all the craft shops and so the early afternoon saw the Scheurich's big brother 289-47 tag along for the ride home.
One day off, lots of official stuff done and three more vases. Almost sounds like mixing business with pleasure.
And the vases are pictured below.
Monday, 24 October 2011
General catch-up
As always for me the best of intention never quite...well, you know what I mean.
I may not have posted for three weeks but I haven't been totally without acquisition. In fact I have to report yesterday as having been particularly good for feeding my obsession.
I woke up - saw that the sun was out and that all was dry and decided it was definitely car boot time. I'm glad I did. For a short hour later I had accumulated arm-fulls of goodies - so much so that I had to pop back to the car to unload as I was unable to pick anything else up.
Anyway, here's the image.
And to summarise
- 4 Scheurichs
- 1 Dümler & Breiden (white and green square cylinder
- Lamp base of unknown manufacture
- 2 Steuler candlesticks
- 0.5l Stein with b/w transfer print.
Yes, I am a happy person. Now if only I had more room.
I may not have posted for three weeks but I haven't been totally without acquisition. In fact I have to report yesterday as having been particularly good for feeding my obsession.
I woke up - saw that the sun was out and that all was dry and decided it was definitely car boot time. I'm glad I did. For a short hour later I had accumulated arm-fulls of goodies - so much so that I had to pop back to the car to unload as I was unable to pick anything else up.
Anyway, here's the image.
And to summarise
- 4 Scheurichs
- 1 Dümler & Breiden (white and green square cylinder
- Lamp base of unknown manufacture
- 2 Steuler candlesticks
- 0.5l Stein with b/w transfer print.
Yes, I am a happy person. Now if only I had more room.
Sunday, 2 October 2011
Car boots weekend
I'm trying not to be typically English and discuss the weather, but it's inevitable. It's only obliquely though. The truth is I was pretty much resigned to not going to many more car boots this year. Then the English climate through us a bit of a curve ball. Or, to put it another way it's been warm and dry.
So I went to a car boot sale yesterday and managed to find one or two littlle things - and a rather big one. Here's a quick image.
And so along comes Sunday and the weather still holds so I popped out again and found more stuff...
And yes I now really must admit to collecting German Steins too. Darn, I think I'm going to run out of space even quicker than I previously thought.
So I went to a car boot sale yesterday and managed to find one or two littlle things - and a rather big one. Here's a quick image.
And so along comes Sunday and the weather still holds so I popped out again and found more stuff...
And yes I now really must admit to collecting German Steins too. Darn, I think I'm going to run out of space even quicker than I previously thought.
Labels:
Bay Keramik,
Car Boots,
Scheurich,
Steins,
WGP
Monday, 26 September 2011
The Perils of Posting 2
Earlier this month I decided to act on a liking I had for a specific WGP vase - Scheurich's 517-30 (the version with a bagel top) - and collect as many of them as possible (a kind of collection within a collection).
The problem is that collecting a specific vase type is not an easy thing - that is without going to eBay. So I went to eBay and bid on a handful of them. And won three. Bood news me. That is until the first one turned up in a dozen or more large pieces and a whole bunch of tiny little (sharp) shards.
Couple of days later another arrived. This time incredibly well packed, including inside the vase and everything was intact (it was in a box with two other vases) and so the score for the shape went to 1-1.
So everything came down to the final vase. And unfortunately, as you can see in the picture below, the news was not good.

I think I'm going to give up on having vases of this shape sent by post - the odds don't seem to be in my favour.
Okay, to be honest I've pretty much given up on having any vases posted, barring the couple of dealers I've mentioned before in Germany and the Netherlands who go for mega-sized packaging.
The problem is that collecting a specific vase type is not an easy thing - that is without going to eBay. So I went to eBay and bid on a handful of them. And won three. Bood news me. That is until the first one turned up in a dozen or more large pieces and a whole bunch of tiny little (sharp) shards.
Couple of days later another arrived. This time incredibly well packed, including inside the vase and everything was intact (it was in a box with two other vases) and so the score for the shape went to 1-1.
So everything came down to the final vase. And unfortunately, as you can see in the picture below, the news was not good.

I think I'm going to give up on having vases of this shape sent by post - the odds don't seem to be in my favour.
Okay, to be honest I've pretty much given up on having any vases posted, barring the couple of dealers I've mentioned before in Germany and the Netherlands who go for mega-sized packaging.
Tuesday, 20 September 2011
Weekend Hunting Success
Okay, I know it's not the weekend. It's just taken me two days to get around to posting this entry. I did intend it to be more up to date than this but hey, there's probably no one reading this so it probably doesn't matter.
The weekend arrived, and with it more opportunities to go hunting German Pottery. Well I was pretty successful as the photo below will show.
The weekend arrived, and with it more opportunities to go hunting German Pottery. Well I was pretty successful as the photo below will show.
Between a charity shop in Shirley, Solihull, an antiques centre near Stratford-upon-Avon, a car boot sale in Gotham, Nottingham and an antiques centre in Breedon, Derbyshire I managed to acquire seven new items for my collection, including a 1950s Marzi & Remy vase (on the right), three more Scheurichs and a Dümler & Breiden in the 150s design my wife likes.
Happy Days.
Hope next weekend can be as successful - I will be picking up an eBay auction win so I'll have a head start.
Labels:
Antiques Centres,
Car Boots,
Dümler and Breiden,
Fat Lava,
Scheurich,
WGP
Thursday, 15 September 2011
Hero of the Day 2
Earlier today I posted a short entry about a Scheurich vase (517-30) that had arrived in pieces. Well I contacted the eBay seller (ilovefluffy*2010) and have received a full refund with no quibbles.
Absolutely top marks! So if you see an auction on eBay with this seller let me tell you, you have absolutely no worries in dealing with this seller. Go check out her stuff
http://myworld.ebay.co.uk/ilovefluffy*2010
Absolutely top marks! So if you see an auction on eBay with this seller let me tell you, you have absolutely no worries in dealing with this seller. Go check out her stuff
http://myworld.ebay.co.uk/ilovefluffy*2010
First Heartbreak - the perils of posting
Since I started collecting German pottery I have bought several lots from eBay. For the most part I prefer not to have items posted, I stick to lots within easy collection distance, or from one or two dealers I've come to trust in Germany or the Netherlands - see this earlier post for an example.
http://thelavagiant.blogspot.com/2011/09/hero-of-week.html
But I have a soft spot for some shapes and take a chance from time to time on postage. One such shape is Scheurich's Cylindrical vases 517-30. So I browsed, saw and purchased. And then sat back waiting and hoping.
Alas, it was to prove the first of my eBay purchases to not survive the trip. This is what I found within the package.

Ah well, time to contact the seller...
..and then I'll go back to my old preference for as little postage as possible. Last couple I've won are within 25 kilometres so I will collect. One of which is an absolute lump of a vase - I'll post more later.
http://thelavagiant.blogspot.com/2011/09/hero-of-week.html
But I have a soft spot for some shapes and take a chance from time to time on postage. One such shape is Scheurich's Cylindrical vases 517-30. So I browsed, saw and purchased. And then sat back waiting and hoping.
Alas, it was to prove the first of my eBay purchases to not survive the trip. This is what I found within the package.

Ah well, time to contact the seller...
..and then I'll go back to my old preference for as little postage as possible. Last couple I've won are within 25 kilometres so I will collect. One of which is an absolute lump of a vase - I'll post more later.
Lichfield Aniques Centre
I'm about to give away another source - I know, silly if I think about it as someone else may go there and buy the one's I didn't get. But I thought it worth mentioning this antiques centre as they had one or two vases (I'm deliberately understating things). I found three I wanted and got talking with the people manning the desk - which lead to more expenditure.
They mentioned one of the dealers there had a number of other vases and kindly (and for me, expensively) telephoned her. After about fifteen minutes the dealer, Shirley by name (trading under the banner "Frankly Fabulous Finds"), arrived complete with three crates of German pottery. So I just had to choose another five from her.
The image below are the eight vases mentioned, plus another we found in a charity shop in Lichfield, plus a stein. Yeah, I rather like steins as well.

And so, of we tootled. And that was that. Well of course it wasn't. From virtually the moment we started on our way back home we were talking about a Schmider cat shaped vase we had not purchased.
And so given the fact we had the day off work yesterday we headed back to pick it up - as well as its obligatory travelling companion - vases don't like to travel alone.
So here they are.

This centre will get more visits from me I'm sure.
They mentioned one of the dealers there had a number of other vases and kindly (and for me, expensively) telephoned her. After about fifteen minutes the dealer, Shirley by name (trading under the banner "Frankly Fabulous Finds"), arrived complete with three crates of German pottery. So I just had to choose another five from her.
The image below are the eight vases mentioned, plus another we found in a charity shop in Lichfield, plus a stein. Yeah, I rather like steins as well.

And so, of we tootled. And that was that. Well of course it wasn't. From virtually the moment we started on our way back home we were talking about a Schmider cat shaped vase we had not purchased.
And so given the fact we had the day off work yesterday we headed back to pick it up - as well as its obligatory travelling companion - vases don't like to travel alone.
So here they are.

This centre will get more visits from me I'm sure.
Labels:
Bay Keramik,
Carstens,
Dümler and Breiden,
Frankly Fabulous Finds,
Jopeko,
Lichfield Antique Centre,
Scheurich,
Ü-Keramik
Wednesday, 14 September 2011
Hero of the Week
Possibly like most collectors of German Pottery I prowl eBay. I generally keep my bidding to sellers nearby - so I can collect in person rather than risk the items being damaged in postage.
But there are some exceptions. Aidan and Emma in Glossop are two - although I like to visit them anyway as it's a really pleasant drive and they're great people - and of course the fact that there's always something else there that might tempt me.
Other exceptions are a handful of dealers I've had the great pleasure to come across who all hail from Germany or the Netherlands. I'll no doubt talk about some of the others in future times but this week's (or in truth last week's) hero is a German eBay dealer who goes by the name (eBay name anyway) of Annee6706.
Here's a link to her shop - although in giving this link out I realise it might result in you outbidding me on future lots.
http://myworld.ebay.co.uk/annee6706&ssPageName=STRK:MEFSX:SELLERID&_trksid=p3984.m1543.l2533
Over the past few weeks I've won seven lots she's listed. After the first coupld she contacted me to let me know some of the vagaries of the German postal system and that I could save a deal of money on postage if I waited until my lots filled a large box - she gave me the size but I didn;t really pay much attention to it.
I'm glad I didn't because at the end of last week the box that arrived shicked the hell out of me. My shipment of pottery arrived in a 70cm x 40cm x 50cm heavy duty cardboard . And in this monstrous box were six German vases and an Italian Ceramic Wall Plaque. Picture's below.

And Anne had packaged these so wonderfully well, there was no chance (ok nothing's totally without risk) that these would have been damaged. Anne double boxes vases. Each vase bubble-wrapped in smaller cardboard boxes then placed, with further padding, inside a larger heavy duty box.
Only problem it left me is dealing with the recycling. Still a small proce to pay for getting such wonderful items.
But there are some exceptions. Aidan and Emma in Glossop are two - although I like to visit them anyway as it's a really pleasant drive and they're great people - and of course the fact that there's always something else there that might tempt me.
Other exceptions are a handful of dealers I've had the great pleasure to come across who all hail from Germany or the Netherlands. I'll no doubt talk about some of the others in future times but this week's (or in truth last week's) hero is a German eBay dealer who goes by the name (eBay name anyway) of Annee6706.
Here's a link to her shop - although in giving this link out I realise it might result in you outbidding me on future lots.
http://myworld.ebay.co.uk/annee6706&ssPageName=STRK:MEFSX:SELLERID&_trksid=p3984.m1543.l2533
Over the past few weeks I've won seven lots she's listed. After the first coupld she contacted me to let me know some of the vagaries of the German postal system and that I could save a deal of money on postage if I waited until my lots filled a large box - she gave me the size but I didn;t really pay much attention to it.
I'm glad I didn't because at the end of last week the box that arrived shicked the hell out of me. My shipment of pottery arrived in a 70cm x 40cm x 50cm heavy duty cardboard . And in this monstrous box were six German vases and an Italian Ceramic Wall Plaque. Picture's below.

And Anne had packaged these so wonderfully well, there was no chance (ok nothing's totally without risk) that these would have been damaged. Anne double boxes vases. Each vase bubble-wrapped in smaller cardboard boxes then placed, with further padding, inside a larger heavy duty box.
Only problem it left me is dealing with the recycling. Still a small proce to pay for getting such wonderful items.
The blog starts here
To start of with I'm going to put your minds at rest that you're in the right place...
Scheurich
Carstens
Bay Keramik
Dümler & Breiden
Roth
Ruscha
Yeah - FAT LAVA in other word, West German Pottery if you like (although both terms are not entirely accurate).
I kind of figured I should do this - more like figured it was inevitable really. Until the start of this year I write short stories, articles and book and movie reviews for a number of magazines - all science fiction and horror and maybe of little interest to anyone to anyone who might browse accros this blog anyway. In case you do here's the link
http://ielester.blogspot.com/
Well I gave up writing, maybe temporarily, maybe permanently early this year and started to collect German Pottery.
It started accidentally. I bought a vase in February just because it was the right size and right colour to balance a vase my in-laws had bought in Scotland many years ago. And it looked perfect.
It also had some numbers on the bottom, 517-30, and W.Germany. That made me curious. I wanted to know what it was all about. What the numbers meant. I should have known it was dangerous. After all I've lived in this head of mine for over four decades and I know what I'm like. I collect things.
And all because of that one missing space on the shelf I now collect German pottery. And I research German Pottery. Yes I'm that sad.
So the obvious next step of someone who used to write but now doesn't and who collects Fat Lava is to write about it. Even if no one actually reads it.
Oh, and the Giant in the title refers to my height. I'm over two metres tall. Doesn't make me to greatest collector of German pottery, or the most prolific, or the most knowledgable on the subject. But I might be one of the tallest. I'll take that.
And just so you don't get too bored. Here's a picture of one of my vases...

Scheurich
Carstens
Bay Keramik
Dümler & Breiden
Roth
Ruscha
Yeah - FAT LAVA in other word, West German Pottery if you like (although both terms are not entirely accurate).
I kind of figured I should do this - more like figured it was inevitable really. Until the start of this year I write short stories, articles and book and movie reviews for a number of magazines - all science fiction and horror and maybe of little interest to anyone to anyone who might browse accros this blog anyway. In case you do here's the link
http://ielester.blogspot.com/
Well I gave up writing, maybe temporarily, maybe permanently early this year and started to collect German Pottery.
It started accidentally. I bought a vase in February just because it was the right size and right colour to balance a vase my in-laws had bought in Scotland many years ago. And it looked perfect.
It also had some numbers on the bottom, 517-30, and W.Germany. That made me curious. I wanted to know what it was all about. What the numbers meant. I should have known it was dangerous. After all I've lived in this head of mine for over four decades and I know what I'm like. I collect things.
And all because of that one missing space on the shelf I now collect German pottery. And I research German Pottery. Yes I'm that sad.
So the obvious next step of someone who used to write but now doesn't and who collects Fat Lava is to write about it. Even if no one actually reads it.
Oh, and the Giant in the title refers to my height. I'm over two metres tall. Doesn't make me to greatest collector of German pottery, or the most prolific, or the most knowledgable on the subject. But I might be one of the tallest. I'll take that.
And just so you don't get too bored. Here's a picture of one of my vases...

Labels:
Fat Lava,
Introduction,
West German Pottery,
WGP
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