You either are or you aren’t a collector,’ thinks Alison Snowdon, ceramics specialist at the auction house Fieldings. ‘Some children painstakingly assemble albums of football stickers or collect Pokémon cards and, as adults, they keep on collecting. It’s as if it’s genetic, or a personality trait.’
Alison thinks there is a pattern to a lot of novice collecting. At first, collectors start small, perhaps buying Royal Crown Derby paperweights to display in a cabinet. But it snowballs and soon, not only is the cabinet bursting, but there are boxes of paperweights gathering dust in the spare room.
‘It’s like there is a ladder of collecting. As a beginner you’re getting an adrenalin rush finding new pieces, so you buy things a bit indiscriminately. But, over time, as your knowledge increases, you become more selective and only want rarer examples in better condition, or you decide to limit the scope, and stop trying to collect everything.’
Mike Moir, an Art Nouveau and Art Deco glass specialist, agrees: ‘Very often, the first half-dozen or so pieces someone buys will be regretted five years later. It takes time for a collector to realise what they really want." People's collecting styles also differ. Some are completists, on a lifetime's mission to acquire the full set, be it Clarice Cliff conical sugar shakers or silver sixpences from the reign of every British monarch. Some become connoisseurs, who want the best of the best, or who research their collection so deeply, their expertise rivals that of the professionals.
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Denne historien er fra May 2023-utgaven av Homes & Antiques.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
Relaxed LIVING
John and Katy Maskell Bell have filled their Victorian home with inherited treasures and antique finds to create a stylish yet warm and welcoming interior.
The HARD SELL
Like many of us post Christmas, Hattie Bell felt in need of a good clear out, but wasn't sure where to turn for items that were too special for the charity shop. Here, she tries and tests several methods - from selling ceramics at a vintage market to auctioning books...
THE ANTIQUES THAT SHAPED ME - Matt Dixon
The owner of TallBoy Interiors tells us about selling his first antique, and how to handle the pressure at French fairs.
48 hours in ASOLO
The medieval hilltop town of Asolo has captivated the imagination of visitors for centuries. Amanda Robinson finds out more about this beautiful- and romantic - Venetian gem...
Pride of place - STAFFORDSHIRE SLIPWARE
Distinguished by its bold, earthy colours and the use of liquid clay applied in decorative patterns, this rustic English pottery has a long and fascinating history, finds Janet Gleeson
ONE EYE ON THE PAST
Artist Sophie Glover explains how she creates her contemporary lover's eyes
Rainbow revelations
When Amy Eld bought her Pimlico home, its plain white walls sparked a desire to drench it in colour, before carefully furnishing it with vintage and antique treasures
Sustainable STYLE
When Nichola and Adam Burns moved from Bristol to France, they took their love of vintage and antique pieces with them, decorating their home with a multitude of stylish finds
Curated collections
Step into Marc Kitchen-Smith's atmospheric Cornish home, where antiques, history and passion intertwine to create a timeless, well-curated sanctuary.
Lisa Coppin
The Cotswold Company’s chief creative officer shares the pieces that mean so much to her