Fifteen years later and still popular with the customers, Jean  Sinenberg’s 15th annual Hamptons Spring Garden, Antiques and  Interior Design Show and Sale was held at the Bridgehampton  Community House June 2-4.   The show has become a seasonal tradition in the Hamptons. To the  exhibitors it is their first of the season, offering their early  wares to the public in a vacationlike setting. Area antiques  shopkeepers wait for the visitor traffic generated by this event  for their big spring in sales and for Jean it is the first of her  half dozen Hamptons show each summer.   Featuring room settings in the historic building there were about  a third of the dealers in elegant room settings while customers  enjoyed refreshments during the First Night reception, Thursday,  June 1. In past years the grounds were also used with several  small tents but last year the local authorities decided against  that arrangement. Jean negotiated for an even larger space in a  tent about a hundred yards away behind the Presbyterian Church  with better parking and a shuttle bus running between the two  locations. This tent then became the weekend home for the  remaining two thirds of her exhibitors and their widely varied  merchandise. Threatening weather early Friday morning seemed to reduce thecrowds but according to the dealers interviewed after the show,while sales were not record breaking they were happy with theresults. Pamela Lerner said her business “fared well” with salesthat were “mostly art.” The Bellport, Long Island, dealer wasoffering an aluminum statue of a nymph on a stand, which Pamelasaid came from the Waldorf Astoria Hotel’s original decorations.Priced at $22,000, it has not yet sold but she did feel there weresome prospects from the show.   There was a novelty whale sign that Cincinnati, Ohio, dealer  Scott Estepp helped to find a new home for about $1,850. Estepp  said he also sold an early patio set, circa 1920, and a pair of  metal mesh lawn chairs for $3,800. Decorator items offered and  sold included an early clock face, a set of leather chairs and  several folk art items.   “Mostly garden related furniture from early in the Twentieth  Century” was the answer Westfield N.J., dealer Linda Elmore gave  when asked after the show about her sales. She added that some  lighting and a few unusual early decorative items also have new  owners, including a Nineteenth Century steering wheel and a  saddle form or foundation for a Western saddle.   Bob Baker of Poverty Hollow Antiques in Redding Ridge, Conn.,  said he “did great, sold lots of smalls.” He frequently travels  to England to shop the major fairs there such as Swinderby and  Newark for his merchandise. Most recently he traveled in a small  group tour organized by another antiques dealer, Laura Haller  from White Plains, N.Y. Susan Oostdyk, Andover, N.J., was selling well right from theopening of the show with a metal framed bedstead finding a newowner in the first moments. Susan collects and trades in early bedlinens, predominantly French linens but also some from centralEurope. Selling the bed early in the show pleased her for thefinancial reasons but she then had to reorganize her weekenddisplay.   Architectural salvaging is the principal method of obtaining  antiques for Matthew White’s business, called Recycling the Past.  With a very large shop and storage in Barnegat, N.J., and a  website he does shows for the direct selling but also for the  exposure. He said the show went well with selling on the weekend  and more people finding out about his business. His standout  exhibit was a pair of terra cotta lions about 4 feet wide and 5  feet tall, which his crews removed from a building in Newark,  N.J. The structure was from 1890 and while the lions did not sell  at the show, he has prospects for them, priced at $10,750 each.   Pennsylvania was represented by Wilson Roth Antiques from  Lewisburg. Its style was folk art and turn of the century  household accessories. Sales included a large sign, Casey’s  Store, for $400 and some early lighting and garden furniture.  According to John Wilson, one of the business owners, they  “…did good in spite of the weather.” He added the opening was  slow but the people who came were there to acquire for their  homes and collections. Marianne Stikas from New York City and Cort Talmage, WestHempstead, Long Island, were sharing an oversized space in the bigtent. Their style is for later decorator pieces and some earlyantiques. Offerings this month included several architecturalelements, which appeared to have served as part of columns, driedplants pressed into large frames and some letters from signsspelling out the word “Garden,” 2 feet high and about 8 feet long.   The overall style for the show was definitely gardens and the  decorating in garden motifs, which is apropos in the Hamptons for  this is an area known for second homes and their gardens. Jean  produces another show at this location July 14-16 but the name is  simply the 15th annual Hamptons Summer Antiques & Garden Show  and Sale. In addition there is a one day outdoor show at Mulford  Farm in East Hampton three times each summer. She also produces a  Modernism show at the Bridgehampton Community House July 6-9. For  information, www.hamptonsantiques.com or 631-537-0333. 
          
 
 
 
    



 
						