It was not the icy, foreboding Delaware River that greeted  General Washington. Nor was it a churning, rising Delaware.  Despite eight days of rain of Biblical proportions, and a state  of emergency declared by the governor, the Delaware that met  dealers and patrons at the Prallsville Mills Fall Antiques Show  on the banks of this noble river was serene and inviting.   And inviting were the antique treasures that awaited patrons at  this October 15 and 16 show managed by Ellen Katona and Bob Lutz,  who for the first time changed the date to fall, to avoid  contending with the August heat. “It was a wise decision to move  this show to the October date,” noted Lahaska, Penn., exhibitor  Richard Suydam.   Perhaps York, Penn., dealer Chris Brey was subconsciously  thinking about the rainy days preceding this show when he decided  to exhibit one of the highlights in his booth – a signed oil on  canvas ship portrait of the Andrew Adams. By maritime  painter William Pierce Stubbs (1842-1909), it was offered to  patrons for $12,000. Some of his furnishings included a circa  1825 Federal figured maple and cherry, two-part dining table, an  early Nineteenth Century soft wood Dutch cupboard in a red wash  finish, and a New Hampshire, circa 1800, country Chippendale  ribbon back side chair in birch. Early in the show Chris sold a  ship painting by James Gale Tyler and whale oil lamps. For neighbors Ron and Sharon Pittenger, who trade under thename Dark Moon Antiques, Johnsonburg, N.J., it was artwork, in theform of a quilt, that took center stage. From the time that Sharonacquired an intricately stitched crazy quilt (with 11 images andfancy border work), made by Ebbacinna Wieder, she embarked on agenealogical search more readily associated with the work done onschoolgirl samplers. Sharon’s work paid off. She located themarriage records for the quiltmaker’s daughter Anna (in theterritory of Greenwich, N.J.) and ascertained that the large “A”and “Good Luck” embroidered in the center clearly identified it asa circa 1880-1883 wedding gift. This irreplaceable act of love,from the “Golden Age of the Crazy Quilt,” was offered to patronsfor $1,295.   It was apropos that a patron from New Hampshire should purchase a  New Hampshire blanket chest with cutout apron and retaining its  original blue-green paint. Both the blanket chest, and the fine  braided accent rug that it rested on will be returning to their  roots. A slipware plate and a pair of hand forged andirons were  several smalls that also found new owners.   This area is replete with “knowledgeable antique customers” noted  exhibitors Gordon and Normandie Schell. And as dealers for 30  years, no one would dispute them. Commenting on the fact that  this show was taking place on the same weekend as Atlantique  City, the Galloway, N.J., couple said, “We only live 12 miles  from Atlantic City and look where we exhibit.” The Schell’s sold  a taper leg pine stand and smalls that included an Empire doll  bed. Several items seen in their booth included a late  Eighteenth/early Nineteenth Century Connecticut cherry  candlestand, a late Eighteenth Century Philadelphia nine-spindle  Windsor side chair, $695, and several Drake canvas back decoys. In the booth of LCS, Inc, Washington Crossing, Penn., therewas a box with its original stencil design and the name “Cordelia”boldly inscribed on its lid. But it was another Cordelia that cameto mind: the only faithful daughter of Shakespeare’s King Lear. Itwas fitting that Sharon Huss, who happens to be a “faithfully”returning exhibitor to this show every year, should display thiscirca 1820 treasure in her booth. Some of her other offeringsincluded “the best” circa 1740 Shenandoah Valley blanket chest,with dovetail construction and rosehead nails, and retaining itsoriginal paint decoration, $5,400. Other furnishings included aNineteenth Century, North Carolina step back cupboard with itsoriginal green paint and a pair of circa 1760 New England slat backchairs with early woven seats.   “I have always loved to attend this show as a customer,” said  first-time exhibitor Malissa K. Davis, Bethlehem, Penn. “I love  the setting and it’s a good quality show where you can still buy  affordable items.”   River Country Antiques, Piermont, N.Y., reported sales that  included a 6-foot-long farm table, a tin trade sign, shore birds,  and quilts.   Annette Coletti and Richard Fuller, who made the trip from Stowe,  Vt., and trade under the name Hand Picked, sold a set of four,  mid-Nineteenth Century painted chairs with plank seat and a lot  of smalls.   Ken Silveri, Hamburg, Penn., said that he had a good show and  “sold a lot bit of everything,” adding, “I’m pleased with my  gross.”   Katona and Lutz, Greenwich, N.J., found new homes for a small  hanging cupboard, a painted shelf, a youth chair, and a child’s  wagon.   Larry and Helen Bryan, Princeton, N.J., must have been relieved  that their booth was located on the ground floor, given the  number of hefty furniture items that they sold. Leaving their  inventory was a mid-1800s six-board, pine blanket chest, a cherry  and pine one-drawer stand with bread board sides and turned legs,  a mid-1800s pine cupboard with its original finish and original  pulls, and, as Larry said, a “very heavy” large dry sink. Front and center in the booth of Chester, N.J., dealer JimWoodruff was a circa 1850 four-drawer Sheraton cherry and mahoganychest, $1,475. Also noted was a set of four arrow back,paint-decorated, Windsor chairs, a circa 1870-1880 grain paintedjam cupboard, and several turn-of-the-century paint decoratedchildren’s sleds. Stoneware, redware, yellowware and an EnterpriseNo. 2 coffee mill in “exceptionally good paint,” completed hislook.   Included in a collection of silhouettes seen in the booth of  Lynne Oppenheimer, Ivy Hill Primitives, Langhorne, Penn., was one  Nineteenth Century example of a full-bodied boy and girl from  Foristell, Mo., that was found in a house built by slaves before  the Civil War. Lynne also exhibited a mid-Nineteenth Century  12-drawer apothecary with dovetailed construction and its  original pulls, $1,250, an early Nineteenth Century worktable  with unusual beaded Chamfered legs North Carolina origin, a rare  mid-Nineteenth Century frame with six ambrotypes of one family  from central Pennsylvania and a Nineteenth Century, New England,  mahogany sewing box with ivory inlays of hearts and diamonds,  $795.   For more information, 856-459-2229.          
 
    



 
						