Antiques & Collecting: Figural chair made haircuts an adventure
Little boys are often terrified when they are taken for a first haircut. All those high chairs, strange men and flashing scissors. So for generations, some barbers have had special figural chairs for children. The most popular is probably a horse.
There are barber chair collectors who have enough room to display them or antique lovers who buy one adult chair and keep it in a home bar or library or even living room to use. But those who dream of having a barber’s chair must remember it weighs several hundred pounds and will be hard to move to another location, especially up or down stairs. The special large metal chairs with the hydraulic parts also may need repair.
Today, the most remembered names of barber equipment are Kokens or Belmonts, but one of the oldest is Emil J. Paidar Company from Chicago. It was the leading barber chair company from the early 1900s to the late 1950s. The company chairs were copied by other makers. In the late 1950s, Belmont merged with Takara Chair Sales Company of Japan. Takara started by 1921 and opened in New York in 1959. The new company joined Koken in 1969.
The man’s barbershop chair has changed little over the past 100 years except for the upholstery material and more streamlined metal parts, but the child’s chair today can look like a car, airplane, horse, motorcycle, spaceship and more. Cowan auctions recently sold a chair by Emil Paidar Co. of Chicago. It is an early chair marked on the foot. The front of the chair is a realistic stuffed leather horse that the child sat on for a haircut. It was estimated at $1,500 to $2,500 and sold for $1,375.
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Q: My grandmother has some pieces of modern copper jewelry she bought in New York City. Most are marked “Mason.” I learned that metalsmiths made costume jewelry in shops near silversmiths who made inexpensive handmade pieces that they sold to customers and exclusive downtown shops. Is Mason a store, a company or an artist?
A: Winifred Mason (1912-1993) was an African-American jewelry designer. She graduated from New York University with a master’s degree in art education in 1936, then worked as a Works Progresss Administration teacher and a craft instructor in Harlem. Her handcrafted copper jewelry was purchased by friends. In 1940, she opened a workshop. She wouldn’t copy a piece; each piece was unique. By 1943, she had so much work that she hired other artists. Art Smith, a famous modernist jeweler, was an early apprentice and shop assistant.
Her work became popular with entertainers, actors and others looking for the modern style. There were exhibitions of her jewelry in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and Haiti. Winifred won a fellowship in 1945 that enabled her to travel to Haiti. Afterward, she began to make jewelry inspired by Haitian culture.
She met and married Jean Chenet in 1948. In 1949, in Haiti, they built a jewelry manufacturing company making jewelry for tourists under the mark “Chenet d’Haiti.” Her husband was killed in the 1960s, and she moved back to New York. In later years, she was active in promoting Black women artists, was vice president in 1939 of the Brooklyn chapter of Girl Friends, a black organization, and was honored in 1990. She died in 1993.
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Q: We’re looking for information and price for an old stove. Several names are stamped on it: “Garland Stoves and Ranges, Inland Garland Stove, Michigan Stove Co., Detroit-Chicago, Garland Aerated Oven, Patented Dec 1889.” We think a part for the back is missing.
A: The Michigan Stove Company was founded in 1873. The company made stoves, furnaces and heaters and was the world’s largest stove manufacturer by the 1890s. Over 200 models of Garland cooking and heating stoves were made. Garland Group was formed in 1995. It became part of Welbilt Company in 2008. Old stoves in good working condition sell for a few hundred dollars.
Those in poor condition or with missing parts are hard to sell.
