- NEW JERSEY WOODBRIDGE PIT FIGURENew
NEW JERSEY WOODBRIDGE PIT FIGURENew Jersey carved and painted Woodbridge pit figure, early 20th c. , of a nude female, 7" h. This figure belongs to a group of approximately one hundred that were discovered in a shack in Woodbridge, New Jersey where a series of clay pits were once mined by the brick industry.
Competitive in-house shipping is available for this lot.
Condition:
Good condition. Minor wear.
- Six pieces of Ewenny slipware, 20th
Six pieces of Ewenny slipware, 20th Century, comprising a round slipware dish trailed with a triple knot and piecrust rim, 27.5cm diameter, two vases with a brickwork pattern, another vase with a leaf, and two plates with cobweb design, 23cm diameter, all marked Clay Pits Pottery Ewenny/Provenance: from the Henry Sandon Study Collection
- (LOT) MISCELLANEOUS VINTAGE COLLECTIBLES(lot)
(LOT) MISCELLANEOUS VINTAGE COLLECTIBLES(lot) Miscellaneous collectibles: (2) vintage carved religious figures, Joseph and Mary, 11"h and 10"h; (1) horse hoof with steel shoe ash tray; (1) Porfirio Salinas "Texas Bluebonnets" plate, Dashby Kilns, West, Texas, 1952, Firs Edition; (1) clay pitcher with handle, brown glaze, approx. 6.5"h; (1) Vintage Old Sleepy Eye Chief stoneware pitcher, Sleepy Eye Flour Mill; (3) cow horn cups, largest 3.5"h; (7) whiskey jugs, four marked "From the Hills of Old Kentucky," largest 4.25"h; (1) copper sombrero ash tray; (2) earthenware sombrero ash trays; (1) crockery bowl, 2.5"h, 5.25diam; (1) mug with man form handle, signed A. Doffino, 5"h, 7"w; (1) stag handle bottle opener, San Antonio; (1) small wood jug, 3"h; (1) miniature Native American style vase signed B.C., 1981, 2"h, total for shipping: approx. 14.75lbs
- CHINESE NEOLITHIC POTTERY OWL PITCHER,
CHINESE NEOLITHIC POTTERY OWL PITCHER, QIJIA CULTURE, (2200-1600 BC) Bulbous grey clay pitcher with scratched texture, nearly abstract representation of a face at top, applied handle, 8 3/4" tall.
- Stoneware ring jug, dark reddish-brown
Stoneware ring jug, dark reddish-brown glaze, attributed to William Washington (Uncle Don) Rolander,1856-1922, found near the old Rolander pottery site and clay pits; Uncle Don's son, Ivon, was the last folk potter to operate in the Buckhead District, 13-1/2 in. Minor glaze chips, some loss of glaze to one side.