![]() The antique market differs from the regular economy for newly manufactured items because the supply of an individual antique item is always limited to how many were originally made. ![]() With all things antique, items’ values are based on a number of things, but the basics being “demand & supply,” a reverse of the standard “supply and demand” equation used in the regular economy. The impression in peoples’ minds being that the mathematics of all this breaks the magic 100-years-old “Antique Barrier.” The 100-year-mark, in many people’s minds, correctly puts things like treadle Singers into the “antique” category but, unfortunately, it also mistakenly makes the assumption that Antique = Valuable.Īn original advertisement for a Singer model 66, dating to 1910, just one of some 80,000 model 66s made just that year. Nearly everyone who has contacted us regarding these machines mentions a provenance to a great-grandmother or great aunt, who bought the machine, used, at the turn of the 19th century and lived to some great age, usually between 96 and 103. Our best guess for this belief that these marvels of 19th century technology are of high value could be rooted in nostalgia and their vintage. The reason for the impression these machines have some great value is a mystery one that’s often fueled by a well-publicized sale of a rare, early example or a the much-repeated family tale about “a dealer who offered Grandma $1,000 for it 10 years ago and she turned him down flat.” The second item in this series of “Unloved Antiques” (the first edition is about Limited Edition Collectors Plates) is the Singer treadle sewing machine, an item that we receive inquires about virtually every week. A 1914 Singer Model 66 Red Eye Treadle Sewing Machine.
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September 2023
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