Kovels Antique Trader October 2023

Ruby Lane founder Tom Johnson…Fright Night Fun…Sporting Art…Gustav Stickley Furniture…Swatch Watches…Disneyland Memorabilia…Batman Toys…Gripoix Glass Jewelry…Gold Rush Country…American Porcelain Marks…Collector’s Gallery  

From the business of vintage to the excitement of Halloween, the October issue of Kovels Antique Trader offers plenty of tricks and treats this month.

Born out of frustration of not being able to easily find what he was trying to collect online, Tom Johnson started Ruby Lane. Twenty-five years later, Ruby Lane is the world’s largest curated online marketplace for quality vintage collectibles and antiques. We caught up with Johnson, the co-founder, CEO, and president of Ruby Lane, at his […]

Fangs for the Memories

By Paul Kennedy Danger lurks. It always does when you’re a kid standing alone on an October evening just this side of Halloween, at the corner of Jackson and Eighth Street. I’m not far from my house, but right now, I’m definitely not close enough either. My buddies have long ago peeled off for home, […]

Fright Night Fun

By Mark Ledenbach Photos courtesy of Mark Ledenbach While the rest of us celebrate Halloween on October 31, Mark Ledenbach, one of the world’s leading authorities on collectibles centered on the spooky holiday, celebrates Halloween every day. Ledenbach, who has collected and studied vintage Halloween memorabilia for about 35 years, is so respected in the […]

Halloween Greetings!

For more information on Halloween collectibles: Check out pictures and prices in the HALLOWEEN category in Kovels’ Antiques & Collectibles Price Guide. Watch Terry Kovel show off her jack-o’-lantern collection in Kovels’ Halloween YouTube video, posted here.  And be sure to visit Kovels’ Halloween Pinterest board for even more Halloween collectibles.  

Boo! Halloween Collectibles Are Scary-Fantastic

Dear Lee, Leaves are brilliant burnt orange, red and yellow, and the sweaters are pulled out of storage. That can only mean one thing: It’s time for me to display all the spooky jack-o-lanterns, cats, ghosts and witches I’ve collected over the years. Many are stored on shelves in the General Store re-creation in my […]

Jack-’O-Lantern

Q: My mother-in-law bought these metal pumpkins about 1950 for a Halloween party for her children. She gave them to me several years ago. She said you were supposed to put a candle in them to light them up. I tried, but the holes in the eyes and nose are too small. There are holes […]

No Tricks! Halloween Collectibles Are Treat 


We thought you might enjoy a free look at a Kovels’ Premium Sales Report on Halloween collectibles. This article originally appeared in Kovels On Antiques & Collectibles Vol. 48 No. 2 Newsletter, the October 2021 issue. 

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Today’s Halloween celebrations are rooted in kids trick-or-treating and elaborate or gory decorations and movies. But Halloween at the turn of the 20th century looked very different, with more emphasis on scary and bold expressions than gore. A recent sale at Morphy Auctions in Denver, Pennsylvania, had 30 Halloween themed items, including a vegetable man Halloween candy container that sold for $31,200. The candy container brought a high price because of its rarity and excellent condition.

“Veggie people” were popular—and prized—Halloween collectibles from this era. They combined traditional Halloween figures like the jack-o’-lantern with various vegetable body parts which celebrated the fall harvest season. Another vegetable candy container, made in Germany in the 1920s, had a jack-o’-lantern head with a candle holder and sold for $2,706.

Veggie people are also harder to find than standard pumpkin and jack-o’-lantern candy containers. Also difficult to find are witches, black cats and devil candy containers. Candy containers made in Germany usually bring high prices. A witch candy container made in Germany in the early 1900s, the golden years of Halloween decorations, brought $6,660.

After World War I, many German companies began making Halloween decorations to export to the U.S.A. where the holiday was becoming increasingly popular. Some of the most valuable vintage Halloween collectors’ items were made in Germany from 1920 to the mid-1930s.

Halloween imagery was also found on household items, for example, the chimney cover pictured here. These decorative metal discs were used in the off-season to cover the holes for the vent pipes of wood burning stoves in winter. This chimney cover with a Halloween theme auctioned at Morphy for $150.

Halloween collectors seek out candy containers, noisemakers and postcards since they have a high value, but children’s toys are close behind. Halloween was originally a holiday that adults celebrated with spooky celebrations complete with skeletons, ghosts and costumes. Children’s Halloween toys became more prominent closer to mid-century. A toy car driven by a witch sold for $1,107 (pictured on cover). Character and condition contribute to the value of these toys, but captivating expressions on toys or containers also bring high prices. A toy with two Halloween cats on wheels auctioned for $1,008.

Halloween began to see more trick-or-treating in the 1930s. Sugar rations of the ’40s slowed the holiday’s popularity down a bit before it bounced back after World War II. In the 1950s, the holiday transitioned into a child-oriented holiday, especially after Walt Disney released the short film Trick or Treat in 1952. There were costumes, trick-or-treat bags, papier-mâché jack-o’-lanterns, party favors and house decorations. It can be difficult to find pieces of Halloween memorabilia in mint condition because they were made of paper, cardboard, paper pulp and other lightweight materials. They were meant to be used and then discarded after the Halloween festivities or trick-or-treating ended.

Photos are courtesy Morphy’s Auctions, 2000 North Reading Road, Denver, PA 17517. The June 16 & 17, 2021, Toy, General Collectibles & Sneakers auction catalog can be found at MorphyAuctions.com.

halloween witch driving car

Halloween witch driving car, plaster head, metal wheels, original clothing, jack-o’-lantern on bumper marked “Germany,” 4 in. h. by 6 in. w. by 3 1/2 in. d., $1,107.

 

halloween veggie man candy container

Halloween vegetable man candy container, holding vegetable on rope, face with 3D apples, carrot arms and shoes, wooden base, probably German, 1920s, 11 in. h. by 7 in. w., $31,200.

 

halloween witch candy container

Halloween witch candy container, plaster, original paint and clothing (small tear on apron), bottom detaches to reveal container, partial label marked “Germany,” early 1900s, 11 in. h. by 4 in. w., $6,600.

 

halloween decoration, cats on wheels

Two Halloween cats on wheels, spring necks, boy holding a fiddle, girl holding a jack-o’-lantern, Tico Toys, 1940s, 9 in. h. by 4 1/2 in. w., $1,008.

 

halloween candy container

Halloween vegetable man jack-o’-lantern candy container, candle holder in head, probably German, 1920s, 8 in. h. by 5 1/2 in. w., $2,706.

 

halloween decoration, chimney cover

Chimney cover with a Halloween theme, metal, pictures two children, one holding a glowing jack-o’-lantern, metal stand, c.1900, 8 1/2 in. dia., $150.

 

Know What Halloween Collectibles to Collect and Save

Halloween is one of the most popular holidays in America for collectors, surpassed only by Christmas.  If you are looking for vintage collectibles to add to your Halloween display, look for those made in Germany of papier-mâché or cardboard. What brings the most money?  The early masks not made out of plastic, black cats and deco […]

Scary Halloween Collectibles

A recent sale by Bertoia Auctions in New Jersey included vintage Halloween decorations with common Halloween themes, including, black cats, pumpkins and witches. Combining two of those themes was a 1930s, 7-inch-high painted cardboard grinning pumpkin head candy container that sold for $450[L1] [SCL2] . The ghoulish fun of Halloween can be traced to ancient pagan Celtic […]

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