• Connect with us
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  • Our Sponsors

Discovering America’s Hidden Treasures ™
On Tour
Watch
Special Features
Appraisals Archive 
Appraisers 
 Shop
    Quick links
  • Complete Ticket Rules
  • How the Event Works
  • 2020 Tour FAQ
  • Williamsburg, VA — Canceled
  • Nashville, TN — Canceled
  • Boston, MA — Canceled
  • Estes Park, CO — Canceled
  • Santa Fe, NM — Canceled
Latest: 2020 Tour Update

Latest: 2020 Tour Update

Tour FAQs

Tour FAQs

Things We Commonly See at ROADSHOW

Things We Commonly See at ROADSHOW

    Quick links
  • Watch Episodes Online
  • TV Schedule
  • Best Moments of Season 24
  • Best Moments of Season 23
  • Best Moments of Season 22
  • Cities from Past Seasons
  • About Executive Producer Marsha Bemko
  • Roadshow's Editorial Policy
Watch | Vintage Las Vegas 2021, Hour 1

Watch | Vintage Las Vegas 2021, Hour 1

Watch | Meadow Brook Hall, Hour 3

Watch | Meadow Brook Hall, Hour 3

Watch | Vintage Louisville 2021, Hour 2

Watch | Vintage Louisville 2021, Hour 2

    Quick links
  • Find Features by City
  • Video "RoadShorts"
  • Roadshow Topics — Endangered Species
  • Roadshow Topics — Sports Appraisals
  • Roadshow Topics — Best Moments
  • Roadshow Topics — Staff Picks
  • For Teachers
  • Vintage Minute
  • AR "Extras" Newsletter Sign-up
Article | "Only Angels Have Wings": A Model Performance

Article | "Only Angels Have Wings": A Model Performance

Appraisal Update | Cut Glass Centerpiece Base, ca. 1885

Appraisal Update | Cut Glass Centerpiece Base, ca. 1885

Extraordinary Finds | Hear More from Lowry About the Auction!

Extraordinary Finds | Hear More from Lowry About the Auction!

  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

Lithophane Lamp & Panels, ca. 1870

Value (2010) | $1,000 Auction – $1,500 Auction
Watch  

APPRAISER:
You collected these with your wife?

GUEST:
Well, yeah, her-- she's an artist, and she had a show, and her partner in the show's mother had an antique shop. And since I helped her frame her painting she gave me this one as a present. That was in the early '70s.

APPRAISER:
Wow.

GUEST:
I now have a collection of 50 or 60 of these panes, plus two lamps like this, another lamp shade, and I have a couple beer mugs. So it's been a 35-year collection, I guess.

APPRAISER:
Lithophanes are fascinating things. They really don't look like much until you light them up.

GUEST:
Absolutely. APRAISER: So I'm going to light up this one closest to me first. Now you can see it in all its glory. The first stage of the process requires carving out layers of wax on a glass plate.

GUEST:
Yes.

APPRAISER:
Which was often illuminated or mirrored from beneath. And there's a considerable amount of artistry and skill in them. And throughout Europe they made them beginning-- no one's entirely sure when they started-- but we tend to think it's the late 1820s. The one I'm illuminating here has a mark on it from the Meissen factory in Meissen in Germany, so they were made at the highest levels of porcelain making. Although most of the factories that made them were in nearby Dresden or throughout other parts of Europe, and made at a lower standard than the Meissen factory. They did make large quantities of them. Once you'd made a mold, you could kind of press them out and away you go. We often see them like this with kind of romantic Victorian scenes because many of them were made in the mid-Victorian years-- 1860 to about 1880 or '90. The lamp, I think, is a little more unusual than most. The majority of lithophanes are simple panels, usually very thin, up to a quarter-inch thick, but typically closer to an eighth of an inch thick. So very fragile and brittle, but you don't see them very often in color. The lampshade, I would say, is really the lithophane part here. These lampshades were sold independently. You could put them on whatever.

GUEST:
That's what I did here.

APPRAISER:
You put these two together, did you?

GUEST:
Yeah, I got the shade, and then we went hunting for something that would be a good base for it, and we found this in a shop. They told me it's about the same era as the shade.

APPRAISER:
They told you correctly. We call that, in my business, a marriage, when two things are put together, but I'm going to say this is a very happy marriage. It's okay in this case because the shades were sold independently and you did exactly what was intended. This one, by the way, is French. There's a little mark inside it, which is hard to determine, but the coloration of it, and everything else about it, it's clearly a French one.

GUEST:
That's good to know.

APPRAISER:
What's the most you've ever paid for a lithophane?

GUEST:
I paid $150, I believe, for the lampshade in the late '80s or '90s. I paid about $60, $75 for this. And these lithophanes I average probably $50 to $75 apiece when I bought them.

APPRAISER:
Okay. Well, I think you did well. They're one of those things though that have not done remarkably well in terms of gaining in value. When something is very Victorian like this, very ornate, I certainly admire it, but it's not modern taste. So these-- a nice screen lithograph like this today would sell at auction for probably less than $400. I would say anywhere between $200 and $400. A Meissen one like this, about the same as a single panel, perhaps somewhere between $200 and $300. And if it weren't Meissen it would be less than that, less than $100. I would say, today in a good auction, that lithophane shade lamp is going to bring at least $700 or $800. So I think you did well.

GUEST:
I thank you very much.

Support provided by: Learn more

Appraisal Details

Appraiser
Nick Dawes
Decorative Arts, Glass, Pottery & Porcelain, Silver
Heritage Auctions
Dallas, TX
Appraised value (2010)
$1,000 Auction – $1,500 Auction
Featured In
Washington, Hour 1 (#1516)
Event
Washington, DC (August 21, 2010)
Category
Pottery & Porcelain
Period
19th Century
Form
Lamp , Shade
Material
Porcelain

Executive producer Marsha Bemko shares her tips for getting the most out of ANTIQUES ROADSHOW.

Value can change: The value of an item is dependent upon many things, including the condition of the object itself, trends in the market for that kind of object, and the location where the item will be sold. These are just some of the reasons why the answer to the question "What's it worth?" is so often "It depends."

Note the date: Take note of the date the appraisal was recorded. This information appears in the upper left corner of the page, with the label "Appraised On." Values change over time according to market forces, so the current value of the item could be higher, lower, or the same as when our expert first appraised it.

Context is key: Listen carefully. Most of our experts will give appraisal values in context. For example, you'll often hear them say what an item is worth "at auction," or "retail," or "for insurance purposes" (replacement value). Retail prices are different from wholesale prices. Often an auctioneer will talk about what she knows best: the auction market. A shop owner will usually talk about what he knows best: the retail price he'd place on the object in his shop. And though there are no hard and fast rules, an object's auction price can often be half its retail value; yet for other objects, an auction price could be higher than retail. As a rule, however, retail and insurance/replacement values are about the same.

Verbal approximations: The values given by the experts on ANTIQUES ROADSHOW are considered "verbal approximations of value." Technically, an "appraisal" is a legal document, generally for insurance purposes, written by a qualified expert and paid for by the owner of the item. An appraisal usually involves an extensive amount of research to establish authenticity, provenance, composition, method of construction, and other important attributes of a particular object.

Opinion of value: As with all appraisals, the verbal approximations of value given at ROADSHOW events are our experts' opinions formed from their knowledge of antiques and collectibles, market trends, and other factors. Although our valuations are based on research and experience, opinions can, and sometimes do, vary among experts.

Appraiser affiliations: Finally, the affiliation of the appraiser may have changed since the appraisal was recorded. To see current contact information for an appraiser in the ROADSHOW Archive, click on the link below the appraiser's picture. Our Appraiser Index also contains a complete list of active ROADSHOW appraisers and their contact details and biographies.

More from PBS

The Black Church

Trace the 400-year-old story of the Black church in America.

9to5: The Story of a Movement

Go inside the movement for women's workplace equality in the 1970's.

Finding Your Roots

Discover the surprising ancestral stories of a variety of public figures.

"I know there's a lot of envious people hearing that story..." Antiques Roadshow on Facebook

What’s inside the case?

@RoadshowPBS on Instagram

William Austin Burt patented the U.S.'s first "typographer” on July 23 in 1829. 110 year later came this "The Gold Royal" typewriter… @RoadshowPBS

We're soaking up the story behind this @LeslieKeno appraisal! #antiquesroadshow @RoadshowPBS

  • Connect with us
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  • ABOUT ROADSHOW
  • Schedule
  • Contact Us
  • Credits
  • Press
  • For Teachers
  • Telephone Scam Warning
  • Roadshow Imitators Warning
  • Doing Business with Appraisers
  • Our Sponsors
  • Our Funders
  • Corporate Sponsorship

Funding for ANTIQUES ROADSHOW is provided by Ancestry and Consumer Cellular. Additional funding is provided by public television viewers.

Produced By

ANTIQUES ROADSHOW is a trademark of the BBC and is produced for PBS by GBH under license from BBC, Worldwide. PBS is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization. ©1997 – 2021 WGBH Educational Foundation.

  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Editorial Policy
  • Copyright
Subscribe Hide  ×

A weekly collection of previews, videos, articles, interviews, and more!