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WATCH COLLECTING BOOKS
Posted in Watch Collecting (Friday, September 5, 2008)
Written by Karl Kochmann. By Clockworks Pr.
The regular list price is $42.50.
Sells new for $47.50.
There are some available for $65.49.
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No comments about Clock and Watch Trademark Index of European Origin.
Posted in Watch Collecting (Friday, September 5, 2008)
Written by Henry F. Piaget. By Pelican Publishing Company.
The regular list price is $10.00.
Sells new for $5.34.
There are some available for $6.37.
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No comments about The Watch: Hand Work Versus Machinery.
Posted in Watch Collecting (Friday, September 5, 2008)
Written by Jim Linz. By Schiffer Publishing.
The regular list price is $34.95.
Sells new for $22.48.
There are some available for $42.84.
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5 comments about Electrifying Time: Telechron and Ge Clocks 1925-55 (Schiffer Book for Collectors).
- What an incredible book! Mr. Linz presents the History of the Warren-Telechron Company in an interesting, yet not burdensome fashion. Using photographs of the literally hundreds of models made until the company's demise, the author takes you from the heavy Cathedral-Style through the Deco era and into "space-age" design of the 50's and early 60's.
I'll wage a bet that if you don't have a Telechron, someone in your family probably does. This book will make a fan out of anyone who is remotely interested in design. There's literally a Telechron for anyone's decor!
- This book was recommended to me by a friend who said he thought I might find it interesting. My mother used to work for Telechron and G.E. making clocks. Now, after reading this book I have a better idea what she did all day while I was at school! If you know anyone who worked for Telechron, this book would be a great gift. I even got the courage to look at a couple of broken clocks I had lying around with the help of the repair section. I think I'm going to get one of these working again!
- This is a well done book with tons of photos and lots of literature and obscure facts on Warren Telechron. The only thing I found a little dissapointing was the clocks themselves. A few are fabulous, scarce and expensive but the majority are rather conservative and dull. Still, an excellent piece of research.
- The book contains a lot of good history on the company, the founder, and the advertising/promotion meterials. The section on the "designers" gets a little boring. The section on repairing/restoring is interesting and has some good information. There is not a lot of depth to it but for most people, it is more than you'll need. I like the model look up list in the back. The price guide will soon go out of date though, and some of the color photos of the various clocks are horribly green. Overall it's a good book and well worth buying if you are a Telechron enthusiast.
- This book is wonderful. It has a lot of colored photographs and is a great reference book. It is worth the money.
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Posted in Watch Collecting (Friday, September 5, 2008)
Written by Klaus Maurice and Peter Heuer. By Schiffer Publishing.
The regular list price is $59.95.
Sells new for $35.95.
There are some available for $42.00.
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No comments about European Pendulum Clocks.
Posted in Watch Collecting (Friday, September 5, 2008)
Written by Michael Korda. By Barnes & Noble.
Sells new for $3.46.
There are some available for $2.35.
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1 comments about Marking Time: Collecting Watches and Thinking about Time.
- I'm not really a watch collector or WIS (watch idiot savant as some watch collectors refer to themselves), but I loved this book! Unlike just about every other watch book I've seen, it's _not_ just a catalog of different watch models with short descriptions. It's really well written, with prose worthy of the New Yorker. It does an excellent job of telling the history of watches, with the author's personal anecdotes integrated into the story. If I had the money, I'd enjoy collecting watches, but this book is an enjoyable read in and of itself.
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Posted in Watch Collecting (Friday, September 5, 2008)
Written by Anton Kreuzer. By Schiffer Pub Ltd.
The regular list price is $59.99.
Sells new for $42.44.
There are some available for $185.08.
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5 comments about Omega Designs: Feast for the Eyes.
- great explanations on the concept of omega watche
- This book tells the long history of Omega and describes all watchlines (Constellation, Deville, Seamaster, Speedmaster etc) very well. There is not much depth, but the book do give you a lot of information about the used movements, great photos and information on all watchlines by Omega. For indepth stories about how watches work, buy Chronograph Wristwatches : To Stop Time; Reinhard Meis, Gerd R. Lang or Wristwatch Chronometers : Mechanical Precision Watches and Their Testing; Fritz Von Osterhausen.
- With a far from comprehensive collection of color photographs of vintage Omega's, a smattering of vintage ad reproductions, and a barely comprehensible company history, this book's only saving grace is the illustrated history of Omega movements.
If you need more movement info than can be found in Cooksey-Shugart, buy this book. Otherwise your money is better spent on something more generic, like (Heinz Hampel's) Automatic Wristwatches from Switzerland.
- If you are interested in more than how Omega watches look and need to know what's inside them, this book is a great resource. As a collector it's frustrating to see watches listed for sale with movement calibers listed, but not have a source of information that provides details on the movements. For Omega watches only, this book seems to be definitive in this area. I also enjoyed the descriptions of the major Omega lines and the other information on the company, although it's far from comprehensive. I would only recommend this book if you want or need the technical data on the Omega movements.
- It amazes me that a well-known maker as Omega has a paucity of books in print detailing the history and products of this renowned maker (at least in English). Other than a hard to get and doubtless expensive official history, this leaves the gentle reader with this book by Mr. Kreuzer. A translation from German, this book is an exception to the overall thoroughness inherent in the German horological press. The history of Omega is very general and reads almost like a sales brochure from the company itself. Little effort is given to chronicling product development, especially in the era following WW 2, the most prolific period for the company and of most interest to collectors. Much better in this respect is the book "Tale of the Seamaster" by Messrs. Nakamura and Noda (Tokyo, World Photo Press). Unfortunately, this is in Japanese. On a positive note, the section in the back of the book detailing Omega movements is quite helpful, and I have often used it to identify watches.
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Posted in Watch Collecting (Friday, September 5, 2008)
Written by Alan Shenton. By Antique Collectors Club Dist A/C.
The regular list price is $79.50.
Sells new for $55.65.
There are some available for $40.99.
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1 comments about Collectable Clocks 1840-1940: Reference and Price (Reference and Price Guide).
- If you are interested in buying antique clocks this is the book to find all the information. Finally not a book about museum-pieces but about clocks that are in reach for everyone. The book is divided in chapters about different sorts of clocks like bracket-clocks, alarm-clocks etc. A good book to find out more about your grandma's clock.
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Posted in Watch Collecting (Friday, September 5, 2008)
By Collectible Connection Ltd..
Sells new for $14.99.
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No comments about Time to Rewind: A Guide to Collecting Disneyana Ingersoll Wrist Watches 1933 - 1939.
Posted in Watch Collecting (Friday, September 5, 2008)
Written by Mike Kilburn. By New Holland Publishers (Uk) Ltd.
The regular list price is $50.00.
Sells new for $30.25.
There are some available for $26.95.
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No comments about London's Theatres.
Posted in Watch Collecting (Friday, September 5, 2008)
Written by Robert M Overstreet. By House of Collectibles.
There are some available for $12.90.
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5 comments about The Official Overstreet Indian Arrowheads Price Guide, 8th edition (Official Overstreet Indian Arrowhead Identification and Price Guide).
- Purchased to study projectile points. I was not disapointed with the packed information and photos on this subject. Used as well, as a price guide for collectors, I none the less use it as a reference manual. It lists point artifacts from each part of the country broken down in groups of states. It then shows most of what is common for that area as far as shapes, sizes, etc. It is a good guide for the beginner to learn both projectile shapes and nomenclature. I carry it as a supplement to other books on archaeology and prehistoric American Native studies.............
- This book and the whole collection of Overstreet guides are a unsubstantiated ruse! DO NOT BUY THIS BOOK. The author seeks to mislead and misdirect the general public by putting a monetary price on human history. is the value of an artifact monetary? Can riches be made from stealing the history of the public? This book would like you to think so.
One large discrimination of this book is the fact that the prices within are set by a bunch of country yahoos sitting around a swap meet, spitting tabacky into priceless ming vases. The fact that there is little mention of the money it may cost you if you collect artifacts on public land and the fact that looting significant archaeological sites for arrowheads can land your butt in jail, is barely mentioned. Do yourself a favor, take a class in archaeology from your local junior college, pick up the Bruce Bradley video called Flintknapping or Andrefsky's lithic book from Cambridge and start making your own arrowheads. Then go to your local swap meet and sale them to dumbasses that buy this book! Remember price is only what you can get some country bumpkin to give you for an arrowhead, and looting sites on public or private land will only land you in jail, or even worse get you filled with lead from an angry landowner.
- I bought this book to figure-out the monetary value of pot hunted artifacts, in order to change pothunters of federal and state crimes. Very informative. Thank you.
- Despite the emotional opinions of some, on the whole monetary value issue, I found this book to be quite a valuable reference guide in terms of tool typing, and assessing style variations and aiding in establishing era. In fact I've not seen a more comprehensive reference guide. In addition to this being a fine guide for the collector, it is also a nice reference for the amateur or serious archeologist. I have participated in several responsible, (academic), archaeological digs and have witnessed more than one academic reference this book for regional typing purposes.
The issue of affixing value to antiquities is always subjective (and it is reality on a Global scale) I believe the author is simply providing a range of what collectors have paid for certain examples. Again, this may be useful information to some collectors, or for Museum curators in establishing the 'street' value of collections for insurance purposes.
- Since there are few references available on point types, this was added to my reference library. Disregarding the prices, for the types, descriptions, etc. I have the Texas type book also. What puzzles me is why Overstreet has listed some types for Texas, which are not covered in the current Texas book, nor any of the old books (and I have them back to the second or so book from the 1960s). Example is the Texas point type Overstreet calls Edwards. Not in any other Texas books I find. No explanation by Overstreet. Not a bad reference for types, just wish there was a better one available, more akin to the 1960s book from Texas.
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Clock and Watch Trademark Index of European Origin
The Watch: Hand Work Versus Machinery
Electrifying Time: Telechron and Ge Clocks 1925-55 (Schiffer Book for Collectors)
European Pendulum Clocks
Marking Time: Collecting Watches and Thinking about Time
Omega Designs: Feast for the Eyes
Collectable Clocks 1840-1940: Reference and Price (Reference and Price Guide)
Time to Rewind: A Guide to Collecting Disneyana Ingersoll Wrist Watches 1933 - 1939
London's Theatres
The Official Overstreet Indian Arrowheads Price Guide, 8th edition (Official Overstreet Indian Arrowhead Identification and Price Guide)
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