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Here's a "common" W.B. Brown lamp that just went for $910 on eBay. This, in my mind, is the model you see more often than any other style/type/model of Mission lamp. Isn't 910 a little high for this..I'm thinking less than half this price, say 350ish? Opinions? Anyone see these in the shops at this kind of price?
 
Posts: 1142 | Registered: 01-27-05Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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That does seem a bit high to me since it is a very common form. I didn't know W.B. Brown commanded such high prices. I saw this lamp when we were at Daltons, which David Rudd thought was W.B. Brown. They actually made something like 6 copies of it for someone. I saw one of them and it looked like just about a perfect match. This seems like it should command a higher price, and it does. Three times the money = three times the lamp (they want $2750 for it). But the simpler design still doesn't seem to be worth the money... Maybe someone else has some info on this company that helps to explain?

 
Posts: 187 | Registered: 01-23-06Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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wow, that is a very nice lamp. much nicer than the common one.

i did a repair to a broken spider arm on one like the first lamp for my local dealer. i didnt see what price he had on it.

he also just got one with more prairie style. i will try to get a picture of it this weekend.
 
Posts: 707 | Registered: 03-03-05Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Bev
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I don't think that the first one is a Brown lamp. That exact style lamp (there is a dealer here who has two of them--same green glass) are found in the "Illustrated Mission Furniture Catalog, 1912-13" by the Come-Packt Furniture Company. Examples of this lamp are found on page 59 (H4905--different top and added wooded border at bottom but same base and overall shape); page 62 (H4922--same top, base and overall shape but extra border of stained glass on the bottom) and page 60 (H4913 with fringe, top and base a bit different and H4910 same exact lamp with decorative wood border).

This is from a reprinted catalog I got off the web. I hope this helps. I don't know who Brown is but that lamp is a dead ringer for the ones made by Come-Packt.

I will get the price for the lamp in the local shop for you.(I think that it is less than $200.) Those green glass lamps originally sold for less than $4.00. The second lamp is not in the Come-Packt catalog.


Bev.
 
Posts: 290 | Registered: 05-11-06Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Bev
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Ok, I just checked E-Bay and it is signed Brown but the lamp in the local shop has no such label anywhere. I will get a picture of it for the forum and a price.

Bev.
 
Posts: 290 | Registered: 05-11-06Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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my understanding is that virtually any wooden lamp from the period was made by Brown, and others put their labels on it or not.

i think i read that in AM or Style 19oo or heard it from my dealer.
 
Posts: 707 | Registered: 03-03-05Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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quoted:

Who Made All Those Wooden Brown Lamps?
An illustrated lecture by Dr. Michael Clark
Saturday, April 13, 2002, 2 PM
Curtin Auditorium, Onondaga Central Library

A prevailing question has perplexed those interested in the lighting of Arts and Crafts interiors: who created the generic oak and leaded glass fixtures found in so many of these period environments? Some of these lighting devices were one-of-a-kind workshop projects created in schools or from popular craft books. Others, judging by their frequent appearances, were produced in numbers on high-quality, high-precision, factory assembly lines. New research by Michael Clark and Jill Thomas-Clark reveals that a large number of these fixtures were created by a single firm: the W. B. Brown Company of Bluffton, Indiana. Michael's talk will shed light on the significance of Brown's fixtures, which were created to blend harmoniously with the Arts & Crafts or structural "Craftsman" environment.

end quote

and a link
http://www.onlyinternet.net/pbender/brown.html
 
Posts: 1142 | Registered: 01-27-05Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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...and a lamp very similar to the Dalton's lamp but claimed to be marked Shop of the Crafters who Dr. Clark says was supplied by Brown.
 
Posts: 1142 | Registered: 01-27-05Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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OK, back to the question of 'what's it worth?', here's another one that just finished with no bids, starting at $350, admittedly some damage but repairable, also should it have had a top cap like the previous one?, anyways..shows that the price swing is pretty big.
 
Posts: 1142 | Registered: 01-27-05Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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