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Showing posts with label Frankoma. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Frankoma. Show all posts

Monday, September 19, 2016

Spaces: No-name room

Since renovations to the house are ongoing, I don't have any final full-room photos to share...and may not for a while. In the next few posts, I thought I'd show you a few corners, walls, and nooks and  here and there throughout the house.

These shots a room between the formal living room and the family room/dining area. We haven't decided quite yet whether to make it an office or a breakfast room. but for now it holds some of our favorite things.


My Remploy dropfront desk, full of pewter and silver treasures

Frank Lloyd Wright brass picture, vintage gooseneck lamp,
Bitossi bird, studio pottery, mid-century "flash cards,"
and various Danish, Swedish, and Norwegian pewter and silver

My daughter's vintage camera, Carstens floor vase,
and repro George Nelson clock

A favorite Ib Kofod-Larsen chair

Corner built-ins with some favorite Scheurich pottery,
Festivo candleholders, Frankoma pieces, along with
 vintage glass beaker and mortar and pestle
from my grandfather's drugstore

Friday, January 16, 2015

Frankoma ashtrays and snack stands

A reader emailed me yesterday asking about his Frankoma smoking stand. He had seen a photo on a very early post from 2010...when I had only been blogging for a little over a month, in fact...that showed the stand to have a magazine rack, which his does not have, making him wonder if his was on a "married" stand.

I was fascinated by his question, and in searching for an answer, I found them with and without magazine racks, so apparently they were sold both ways.


Frankoma smoking stand in prairie green
pinterest.com - Debra Taylor

Frankoma smoking stand/magazine rack
shopgoodwill.com


Over the past few years, I've found that some people love Frankoma pottery, while others find it a little too traditional. Generally, though, no one can resist the charm of the stand. It's classic mid-century. Take a look at some other examples I ran across.

This one is called the Serva-Tray with magazine rack. It was the 1955 Ceramic Award Winner in the Hess Bros. National Contest for Versatility in Design and Use. Frankoma produced it from 1955 through 1964. I wouldn't mind having one of these by my favorite chair.



Serva-Tray in prairie green
worthpoint.com

Serva-Tray in desert gold
futuresantiques.dreamhoster.com

Serva-Tray in turquoise
etsy.com - Bead Booty

Serving trays on stands
etsy.com - Bead Booty

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Bright spots and silver linings

If you've followed this blog for long, you probably know that I love the Easy Chair design by Ib Kofod-Larsen. Knowing how much I've dreamed of owning one, my SIL split the pair he had in the store and made sure my dream came true. (He's a keeper, I tell you!)

He also gave me a beautiful Italian vase, a Frankoma bowl and a huge art glass bowl that I've long admired. While I was loading up my goodies, my sweet daughter gave me two of her amazing Fabpats as a house warming gift. I was delighted and touched by their thoughtfulness.

The next time you see all these beautiful things, they will be in my new modernist nest. Till then, they reside in the temporary train wreck we call our home.




Yes, this is my life. Handbags stacked in the corner...because I sold the chest they were stored in. A box of extra lighting fixtures waiting to be sold/returned, topped by a steamer that needs to be used on our kitchen floor. (Toddlers are a lot messier day in and day out than they are when just staying with Grammo for a few hours.) Boxes of IKEA Expedit pieces waiting to be assembled. Disconnected cable box and Roku...because I sold the TV they were attached to. Bathroom lavatory in a box waiting for countertops. Displaced Eames rocker waiting for a new home. Pictures to be hung in the new apartment...and one to be sold without a frame, since it was knocked off the wall by a worker who was removing boxes of flooring from my bedroom.

Casting a glow over all this mess and giving me hope...my new Kofod-Larsen chair, Fabpats, bowls and vase.

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Small-apalooza

The last few days we've made a haul on smalls. Usually it's the big acquisitions that are the most dramatic (and we've made some of those this week too), but I can get just as excited about glass, ceramics, wood and metal items. Some of the things we've found are simply classic. Others are a little on the kitschy side, and I'll show you those tomorrow. Either way, we have some great things that will provide perfect touches for mid-century homes.

McCoy vase

Teco maybe?

Blenko decanter by Winslow Anderson

19" ice bucket by Jens Quistgaard for Dansk

Bitossi vase, probably imported by Raymor or Rosenthal Netter

Frankoma planter

Fiesta disk vase

Another McCoy vase

Large fluted art glass vase

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Juice tumblers?

Who knew? When I first saw these Frankoma brown satin pieces, I thought they were demitasse cups and a coffee pot. I guess that's a pretty common error, because when I started to do my due diligence on them, several dealers had them listed that way too. I was having a problem figuring out why the "coffee pot" didn't have an indentation for a lid, but now it makes sense. It's a juice pitcher.

I'm still not sure whether these are Plainsman or Lazybones pieces, because I've seen them listed both ways. If you're a Frankoma expert, I'd appreciate more information about them. Whatever they are, I really like them, and I have a feeling someone will come into the store and like them too...whether they use them for juice or coffee.

#260 juice pitcher and six #260C juice tumblers
When we picked these up, we were also able to get a small bowl and pitcher set, as well as what looks like a platter to me but is listed as a pie baker. As you can see, I have a lot to learn about Frankoma.

#40A pitcher and #40B bowl
#91 large baking dish or pie baker

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Frankoma

In 1933 John Frank and his wife Grace Lee started a commercial pottery business with the goal of creating a line of fine art ware that middle class families could afford. They decided that the company name should include both their name and the last three letters of Oklahoma, where they lived, and thus Frankoma Potteries was born.

Frankoma became the pioneer in colored tableware. In 1947 the Mayan-Aztec line of dinnerware was introduced, and it was a success. Colors were introduced that reflected the essence of the Southwest, such as Prairie Green, Desert Gold, White Sand, and Onyx Black.

Other patterns were added later, such as the Oklahoma Plainsman, Lazybones and Westwind. New colors were also added, including Woodland Moss, Brown Satin, Peach Glow, Coffee, Clay Blue, Red Bud, Dusty Rose, Terracotta Rose, Turquoise, Sunflower Yellow, Robin Egg Blue and others. In addition to popular tableware, the Franks always continued to expand their lines of artistically inspired containers, sculpture and other items of ceramic art.

Although some Frankoma tended to be more traditional than much of the sleek imported mid-century pieces, the company did produce some beautifully innovative shapes and enjoyed tremendous popularity in the Forties and Fifties, especially in the Southwest. Because it was produced in such abundance, some collectors have been disdainful of the product, but its availability today simply serves to prove how much people loved it then, earning Frankoma a rightful place in MCM history.


Frankoma smoking stand
worthpoint.com

Lazybones clay blue ada clay covered casserole
modish.net

Lazybones pitcher
etsy.com - DameArtDeco

Bean pot with warming stand
ebay.com - jensvintageart

 Plainsman prairie green centerpiece
modish.net

A few pieces of Frankoma that I have for sale -
top, Plainsman oriental bowl; bottom Lazybones bowls, both in dusty rose

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

And she scores!!!!

The big estate sale was today. My daughter and I went with my grandson in tow, which is no mean feat. She took the first leg of shopping in the back yard and two outside sheds, while I watched Holden. She found a teak coffee table base and matching end table base for $4 each. She also picked up two great suitcase-style album cases for old 33 1/3 LPs for $3 each.

When she paid for those purchases and loaded them into the car, I passed the baby off to her, and I started shopping indoors. I bought a great wire magazine rack for $3, a Frankoma bud vase for $2, a Van Briggle bud vase for $7, a West Bend Penguin Hot & Cold server from the 1960s for $4 and the piece de resistance, a #5815 Blenko decanter designed by Wayne Husted with a sandblasted logo that was only used between 1958 and 1961…for only $22.50. I came straight home and found three identical decanters online, priced at $335, $375 and $395.

My $38.50 purchase is probably worth in the neighborhood of $425-500. You’ve just gotta love estate sales.


1950s wire magazine rack for $3

1960s West Bend Hot & Cold server for $4

Frankoma Plainsman bud vase for $2, Van Briggle bud vase for $7
...and 1958 Blenko decanter for $22.50

Update: The table bases turned out to be by Adrian Pearsall, so I underestimated the value of our purchases just a tad.