Allen Peterson
Member
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Steve Sanford said:Allen et al~
Every time I see the "Vintage Decoys" in this post - I think not "antique decoys" - but rather the vintage gunning stool I've gunned over with my Dad and am now "collecting" so I can gun over them again. The years run from the 1940s into the 1960s. I learned early on that my public servant salary would not allow me to collect the truly antique birds I would covet - and still do - at shows. My taste is richer than my pockets are deep. Prices for decoys that appeal to my eye usually include 3 digits - and often 4 (all to the left of the decimal point....)
The "vintage decoys" I gather up cost between $10 and $50. By the time I find them, their collectible value had been diminished by either non-original paint or missing/broken pieces - or just low demand. Their appeal to me is both nostalgic - and the undeniable fact that they still serve as excellent gunning stool. I put them back in ready-to-hunt shape - for my own use.
For myself, I look for: Wildfowlers from either Old Saybrook or Quogue.
Mostly I have a puddle duck rig - Mallards, Blacks and a pair of Pintails - balsa-bodied birds of the Superior Model.
But I have a couple of divers that will mostly live on the shelf. This Hen was a repair for a friend.
This Drake allowed me to practice my faux canvas stippling technique.
I like Herter's in either Balsa or foam (Durlon Foam with Tenite Heads). My Dad bought some of these Model 72 "Bluebills" in the '50s - and I bought a dozen in the '60s. I also found a dozen or so taken from some hapless gunner by shifting ice on Great South Bay. (And I've lost about that many the same way....) All of my foam birds get epoxy + fine sawdust skins and fresh paint.
My Dad bought 6 Cans to go in his Broadbill rig in the early '50s. They have the flat bottoms and brass screw eyes.
I also picked up a few hollow Tenite birds only because I grew up seeing them in the catalog every year - and was inspired by this classic photo:
These are Model 50s.
The Model 59 was intended as a less expensive model - but I prefer its lines, at least on Broadbill. This Drake and his Hen keep me company on a window shelf in our living room.
I have 8 or 9 Model Canada Blacks and Mallards - almost ready-to-hunt. They are balsa-bodied and nicely over-size.
This Hen is a smaller model - whose name I cannot recall (without digging out my old catalogs).
I also have 2 or 3 rigs of Herter's Model 63s - the life-size foam-bodied birds - Mallards, Blacks and other puddlers.
https://stevenjaysanford.com/...ters-smaller-decoys/
And, I have refurbished bunches of LL Beans and others for a variety of friends and customers in recent years. Cork birds get well-sealed with spar varnish - followed by an oil base coat and a latex topcoat.
BTW: I shot my first Goose with a 28-gauge Parker GHE (borrowed from a friend of my Dad). My Dad later gave me its mate in 12 gauge. Because I hunted for many seasons on salt water - and with steel - I seldom used it. So, I sold the 12 after my Dad passed.
My cherished Winchester Model 12 was "born" in 1925. I plan to use it every day during its centennial year.
All the best,
SJS