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Home Page » Family & Home » Spare-Time Activity
 

8 Tips to Identify Antiques

 
Author: Martin Swinton

Want to know if your furniture is as old as you might think? Here are some tips to help you identify an antique.

1. Patina

An old table will have a rich, beautiful finish. Decades of polishing and exposure to the elements create patina. Check underneath a table. On an older table, the appearance of the wood will be much different underneath than on the top. The underside will be lighter because it has not been polished or had use. This is a clue to advanced age.

2. Handmade

Look for handmade furniture. Antique furniture was hand made by craftsmen. Watch for uneven carving; it indicates hand made workmanship. Machine made furniture has identical, perfect carving. A set of chairs is great to check for it. If all the carving and detail on all the chairs is absolutely identical, it was machine made, and not so old.

3. Veneer

Look for thick veneers on wood. Veneer has been used for hundreds of years and is not necessarily a bad thing. However, older veneer is thicker than modern veneer and it was glued onto wood. Newer veneers are very thin. Modern manufacturing methods allow for thinner cuts. Modern veneers are often glued onto particleboard or base woods.

4. Signature

Look for a makers signature. Newer, mass-produced furniture would tend to be signed by a craftsman. A signature helps to date an item, determine value and provide provenance.

5. Mortise-and-tenon Construction

Watch for construction methods, mortise-and-tenon is a method where two pieces of wood are cut like a jigsaw puzzle to fit together without nails or glue. This technique is used to compile the overall structure of a piece. It denotes excellent craftsmanship and helps to identify an antique.

6. Locks

Look for locks fitted with brass keys on drawers, desks etc. Often the lock makers name is clear. This name is a good reference point to determine age and value.

7. Dovetail Joints

Dovetailing is a method of construction used to put together drawers, blanket boxes etc. It is also method where two pieces of wood are cut like a jigsaw puzzle to fit together without nails or glue Handmade 18th century dovetails are large and uneven. Machine-made dovetails are thin and even.

8. Nails

Look for square pegs and hand forged nails. Furniture made during 17th and 18th century used square pegs. Hand forged nails also indicate an antique. You can tell hand forged nails because they are very irregular in size and shape. Seeing construction with a Phillips screw should make you think that an item is not so old.

Author Bio:

Martin Swinton

A lifelong lover of all things old, Martin was born in Toronto, Canada and spent time in Malaysia as a child.

Martin learned to restore furniture when he was a teenager and has worked at an auction house. He owns Take-A-Boo Emporium, an antique shop located at 1927 Avenue Road, Toronto, Canada.

His television appearances include Canadian Living Television, Breakfast Television, Daytime and Toronto Living.

Martin teaches courses on antiques and he writes a regular column "Let's Talk Antiques" for the Town Crier newspaper and "Antiques 101" for the Home Advisor. He also does appraisals for estates and community events.

When Martin is not appearing on television or teaching, he can be found in his shop restoring well-worn furniture, gluing vintage tables or re-caning and rushing chairs. On warm summer days, he has been seen multi-tasking out front of the shop when he chats up the locals and works on his tan.

Martin recalls that he has always been interested in things from the past, so it is not surprising that he graduated from the University of Toronto with a degree in Archaeology. He holds a high school equivalency diploma from the Ontario Ministry of Education. Martin completed his grade 2 course of studies at Cedarvale Public School before being home school through to high school. At the age of 7 Martin was diagnosed with a bad case of dyslexia, which explains a lot of the problems that he had in Mrs. Mansica's grade 2 reading circle.

His personal areas of interest are Asian art, European furniture and the Arts & Crafts movement. Martin is a member of the Monarchist League of Canada. He lives in Toronto with his wife Andrea and Kurt, his basketball mad 14-year old son.

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