One collectible item is really a pair. If you have ever had
a meal at someone’s home, or at a restaurant, and let’s face it, who has not,
you are bound to see a couple of pieces usually in the middle of the table. They
usually look similar, but one has an “S” on it, the other a “P”.
Okay, so
I’ve given it away. Yes, they are salt and pepper shakers.
Before
I continue, please, before you use either one of them, look to see what you are
using. Don’t be like my father did several years ago, and then wondered why his
food tasted unusual. I don’t actually know the full story as to why salt and
pepper were made a pair, but I do know their history.
Before
there were salt and pepper shakers as we have come to know them, people in the
Victorian period placed their salt in open cellars. The salt came in rock form,
and had to be chipped off to be put on food. Seems like a lot of work to have
salt on your salad. It sure is much easier to have the waiter help you or just
do it yourself.
The early
salt shakers actually were salt mills. They had a piece inside the shaker that
was used to break the salt into pieces. When salt production became more
sophisticated, the pieces used to break the salt were no longer needed. As modern
ceramics became popular in the 1940s, salt and pepper shakers took off. There
were made of various designs and shapes. The market for the shakers steadily
increased as the ability to make the shaker increased.
Today,
shakers are made in a variety of materials, including metal, ceramics, glass,
wood, and plastics.
Collectors
are impressed with shakers. But it was not until the advent of ceramics that
shakers became more accessible, and unique. As shakers became more varied, the
more shaker collectors there are. In addition, the internet has allowed more
collectors to be aware of shakers for sale.
Generally,
salt and pepper shakers are relatively inexpensive to collect. Of course. There
are some shakers that are very expensive, depending on their rarity, condition,
and desirability. Most shaker sets can be bought for between $5 and $50, but
other sets can sell for several thousand dollars.
There
are some collectors who collect vintage salt and pepper shaker sets because of
the memories they bring back while they were growing up. As with other types of
collectibles, shaker sets will most likely appreciate in value. The set that
are common, and mass produced, will not appreciate much, but hold on to the
vintage sets and the ones that are unique in design.
Shaker
sets can vary greatly in value. For example, a pair of American silver gilt and
glass salt and pepper shakers made around 1960 were sold around $350. Shaker
sets of celebrities have also been auctioned. In 2010, there were 23 shakers
owned by Lucille Ball that went for $598.
A pair
of painted bisque salt and pepper shaker from around 1920, depicting a prancing
black man and woman sold for $717, while a pair of American silver novelty salt
and pepper shakers from 1879 were sold at a Heritage Auction in 2008 for $1195.
Naturally,
the older and more ornate, the more valuable the shakers will be. A pair of Steuben
Glass Works blue aurene salt and pepper shakers from 1912-1922 were sold for
$2400 at auction. It really must take a collector who really is excited about
the items to purchase a salt and pepper shaker set for that much money. Of
course, each collector’s reasons for buying any item is different.
But I
must say that spending over $6000 on a salt and pepper shaker set is a bit
much. Well, that is what happened in a 2013 Heritage auction. A pair of Tiffany
Japanese hand-hammered silver and mixed metal salt and pepper shakers from
1878-1891 were sold for $6875. That’s right. Almost $7000 for a pair of
shakers. At least they were in good condition with only light surface
scratching and nicks. I’m sure that the buyer had a good reason to spend nearly
$7000 on a shaker set.
My wife
would have probably kicked me out of the house.
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