The eighth annual Green Mountain Antiques Show in the Union Arena  for the second year had good growth in sales and a full house of  exhibiting dealers. Visitor traffic was near the totals of last  year, but some of last year’s traffic, according to one of the  show’s committee members, Bob Fraser, “was due to the mailing to  the Union Arena’s donors, who came to the charity fundraising  event. It was the first non-ice skating event in the new facility  last year. This year, the dealers came with good antiques and we  saw a lot of case pieces [furniture] going out the door.”   For the previous six years, the show had been scheduled to run  the week prior to New Hampshire Antiques Week, but last year it  was moved to two weeks ahead, so the July 30-31 dates were less  in conflict with other activities. Fifty-six dealers were mostly  from New England, with a few coming from farther afield. This has  become “Vermont’s premier summer antiques show,” according to one  of the exhibitors. He added, “Because of the highly visible  location and because it is indoors, we can bring our best to show  it and not worry about the weather, unlike two weeks ago when we  were rained out in another other show.” New Hampshire dealer John Rogers said, “It was a very, very,very good show, as I sold many of the best pieces I brought to theshow. The buyers of my corner cupboard came to get it at the end ofthe show and then also bought the comb back Windsor chair, and thatwas only half of my show.”   One Connecticut dealer sold throughout the weekend, and his sales  were a mix of things, including an early English hall globe lamp,  a church bench at $400, a collection of early English porcelain  and two stands from the Eighteenth Century. The stands were sold  to the same buyer, but one sold on Saturday morning when the show  opened and the other during Sunday evening pack-out.   Sue Lilly is the owner of Red Horse Antiques in Bridgewater, Vt.,  and this is one of the few shows in which she participates. She  did “quite good, really, as we sold a variety of things,  including the stone squirrel, which was priced at $450.” Lilly’s  shop is on the same road as the show, Route 4, but a few miles  down and open by appointment or chance. Ron Chambers from Higganum, Conn., has been doing the showsince its start in Chester eight years ago. He, too, was pleasedwith the sales, for he no longer owns the four-drawer chest that heoffered at $2,000, and there were seven more transactions from hisbooth.   Plainfield, N.H. is home for Robert Hay, who calls his business  The Packrat. Hay makes sure his booth fits the title. His sales  over the weekend included a pair of early English brass wall  sconces, several stands, a variety of early iron implements for  the home and several baskets. His collection is based on what he  finds traveling around Northern New England, and it is fun just  to rummage through it for the great finds he offers.   Not all the dealers were local. Dover House from Lexington, Ky.,  brought a mix of furniture and English dishes, a collection of  the type called soft paste. Henry Callan collects and trades in  Staffordshire porcelain and Sandwich glass, which is reasonable  since he lives in Sandwich Mass., across the street from the  Sandwich Glass Museum. His favorite piece at this show was a dark  cobalt blue platter decorated with strawberries and apples and  several birds feasting on a worm and snail. Mad River Antiques owners Steve and Lorraine German of NorthGranby, Conn., said they were pleased with their results. They solda wide variety of antiques, big and small. Their sales includedfurniture, the best basket in their collection of Native Americanwares, some Vermont coin silver and various other smalls.   The show was a “bright light in sales for most of us, with decent  sales in spite of a modest gate,” according to Fraser. The dates  for next year will be approximately the same, the last weekend of  July. The show committee is made up of four antiques dealing and  collecting families – the Pills, Dunns, Stahuras and Frasers.  They produce the show for charity and take no money out of it;  their only compensation is a booth and they work very hard for  free to do it. It may sound corny, but it is a happy show with  happy people, dealers and customers, and it seems to make a  little money for all involved.   For information, 802-484-5942.          
 
    



 
						