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Mark B. Ledenbach's vintage Halloween collectibles blog.

Vintage Gibson Halloween Tongue Twister Party Game With Envelope 1928-32

Gibson was in a long boxing match for market share with Dennison, the paper heavyweight, and Beistle. Being the runner-up motivated them to try harder in the creativity of their offerings - and the Tongue Twisters exemplify this. I don’t recall ever seeing a full envelope of six. Most of the time when the glassine envelope is extant, there is but one Tongue Twister accompanying it. Both items comprising this lot look very clean. The marketplace typically values these highly, so it will be fun to see what this wonderful listing brings. Check out page 23, upper right, to see examples of the seldom seen Tongue Twister place cards Gibson also produced.

09/02 Update: This sold for $412.76. I’ll be placing the Book Item equivalent on my For Sale page later this month.

Vintage Halloween Beistle party favor basket of owl bat cauldron 1925 NMINT RARE

Beistle produced four favor basket designs of this size from 1927-1931. They typically surface for sale in good to very good condition because in opening the honeycomb bottom and inserting the tabs to keep that honeycomb open, the entire item is put under stress. This example seems to be as good as the seller indicates. Refer to page 225 to see the other three designs. This one, the learned owl, is the most commonly seen. The design with the witch in the cloak adorned with skulls is the one seen the least. I’ve had a number of collectors mention that they find the background this great seller uses to be distracting, so he may wish to go with something a tad less busy. I very much enjoy and applaud the way he describes things - dividing it into “The Basics” and “The Fluff.” I’ve been acquainted with this seller for many years. Have no hesitation in doing business with him.

Vintage Halloween 3 Musketeers Candy Box Empty* 1950s HTF Halloween Decor

There has been a plethora of results these last few months that don’t make sense to me. This candy box has great graphics and is in better-than-average condition but it surfaces frequently. I do know that something is valued at whatever someone wants to pay, but there seems to be a bubble developing in the vintage Halloween market. As a net collector, it makes me uneasy. As a sometimes seller, I don’t mind it quite so much. My long-time concern is that the hobby has simply gotten too expensive for the collector with an average to even above-average income.

1996 Casper The Friendly Ghost Candelabra w/ Box Trendmasters Vintage Halloween

I don’t purchase very many contemporary (Nearly 30 year-old items seem contemporary to me…) decorations, but I picked up one of these Casper candelabras a few seasons ago and LOVE it. It makes a great display with its understated lit appearance and those great flickering candles. I’m glad to see they are bringing strong dollars.

EXCEEDINGLY RARE Antique Vintage Halloween Diecut & 11 Coordinating Placecards!!

This is a result that is more of a function of two determined bidders who surely never dreamed that one of them would be on the hook for such an unsustainable sum. (Take a look at the bidding history.) In conversations with several collectors as to whether I’d be bidding, I said I wouldn’t be as I didn’t want to pay what I thought FMV would be, $2,500. Imagine my shock when the ending price was $4,900. Allow me to temper my shock with repeating that this is a one-off result due to only two bidders AND with the observation that I had never seen any one of the items that comprise what I hope is a complete set. The art is sublime and very reminiscent of Rust Craft. I appreciated how the seller pointed out the “Gertrude” by-line. Fascinating! It will make an astounding display - albeit a very costly one, at ~$415 per item.

SCARCE Antique Vintage Halloween Crescent Moon & Cat Diecut Decoration Germany!

The Germans designed many Halloween diecuts that are true eyeball grabbers. They came up with two similar large crescent moon designs - this one with a cat perched on the Durante and the other with a perched owl. Seldom does one see one of these large diecuts in such splendid condition. Just look how sharp those points are! This seller, who largely sells things on commission for others, has been on a tear lately with nice items that have on several occasions garnered bids I don’t understand. (An example will appear below.) This diecut should do well. It’ll be fun, and perhaps unsettling, to see what it fetches.

08/13 Update: This sold for $427.

3 Antique Beistle Halloween Die-Cut Nut Cups Original Packaging-Black Cat

I enjoy seeing listings like this one that shed light on the production history of an item. The similar item shown on page 221 has packaging characteristics that firmly date it to the 1930-1931 season. This listing shows an envelope that is plain, lacks a stock number and seems to be made from the same thin-paper stock Beistle used during the early 1920s. It makes me question my belief that these nut/candy trays were produced for a single season. It’s hard to chart the birth/death of Beistle products because Beistle catalogs are scarce compared to those issued by Dennison. Beistle sent their catalogs to retailers, who would use them to order for their brick and mortar shops. (As an aside, there seems to be an abundance of Beistle catalogs from 1948, so perhaps they had a change of strategy for that season.) In any event, these nut/candy trays surface infrequently enough that they were surely produced for a small handful of seasons.

NMINT PLUS Antique Vintage Halloween Cat & Pumpkin Candy Container Germany 1920s

The seller noted that some fellow collector had concerns as to whether this candy container was truly vintage. Several things puzzle me: What was the specific concern? Was it a true concern or was the concern conveyed to the seller for mischievous reasons? Why would the seller not have had the confidence in her own judgment to ignore the fellow collector rather than give the expressed concern any airtime? The actual owner of this wonderful candy container contacted me to ask whether I had seen the listing and whether I had formed an opinion. (This owner is one of the most knowledgeable, honest and picky collectors I know - and he’s been in the hobby for longer than I have. By the way, I admire pickiness.) I told him that on the few occasions this container surfaces, I make a point of looking at the photos. Why? Well, many serious collectors have invested in a copy of my third edition. On page 69, relative to this candy container design, I write, “Reproduced versions of this container with a smaller pumpkin base were made beginning in the mid-1990s. These new versions tend to be heavier and lack the detailing of the originals.” Truly vintage examples of this particular candy container are easy to identify vis-a-vis the soulless reproductions cranked out beginning in about 1995. When I glanced at the photos the seller provided I thought that it was a beautiful, truly vintage container that any collector should be proud to own. And it is.

08/02 Update: This item sold for $2,253. If someone would like to buy the one in the collection shown on page 69, contact me. I’d sell it for $2,150 - postage included.

RARE Antique Vintage Halloween Paper Mache Pulp Owl Wall Decoration FN Burt 20s!

This F.N. Burt owl design is exceedingly rare, especially with this pleasing use of two colors. The light spray of the coloration, giving it a pastel feel, is exquisite. I have had two examples of this pulp item come through over the years. Both were a simple black. This design was meant to be hung. Neither of the examples I have handled had any sort of perforation to the back. Some end-user or end-users added the divot and the hole. Neither would have been present at the time of sale. The ending price was more than I would have expected.

Interest has been strong in these non-embossed thin-paper-stock diecuts Beistle produced during the early 1920s.Beistle produced a handful of designs, then varied their offerings by size. This is the larger version of the broomed witch diecut. These diecuts bend and crease easily. The typical example is riddled with pinholes. This particular example seems quite crisp, so I’m not surprised the prevailing bidder paid $77. I do hope the bidder objected to it being sent Priority Mail. There isn’t any reason to send something that weighs an ounce or two via Priority Mail. On another note, I dislike when sellers cram a series of disjointed words into the title line hoping the search function will highlight the listing.

~Vintage~ Halloween Wooden Drum- Devil and Pumpkin~ Germany~

I doubt this is a truly vintage item. The rim may be vintage but the skins with the images are inconsistent with any other such thing I have seen. The buyer paid $300, so if it is a married item (old rims merged with new skins), the money was ill-spent.