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A Steiff creation is more valuable as it ages

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By HELAINE FENDELMAN

and JOE ROSSON

Scripps Howard News Service

Dear Helaine and Joe:

What is the current value of my Steiff lion? It is about 3.5 inches tall and 4. 5 inches wide, with a beige/brown body and thick mixed-brown-colored mane. It was purchased in Trier, Germany, about 1984, and is in excellent condition with its original Steiff tag still on it.

Thank you,

J.P., Keit, S.C.

Dear J.P.:

We know that it has been 25 years since this piece was purchased, but that is a little soon for this cute stuffed lion to have gained much value. On the current market, most collectible items are taking something of a beating, and even though Steiff animals are highly desired, collectors are much more interested in the examples that have more than a few short years on them.

Appolonia Margarete Steiff was born in 1847 in Giengen, Germany. As a toddler, Margarete was stricken with polio and was subsequently confined to a wheelchair for the rest of her life.

Margarete did, however, attend grade school and she began taking sewing lessons with her two older sisters in the 1850s.

Margarete became a proficient seamstress, and she and her sister, Pauline, began a home-based enterprise making women's clothing. By age 32, Margarete was making felt clothing and outerwear under her own name. In 1879, Margarete made elephant-shaped pincushions to be given away to family and friends, and these became the basis of her later toy business.

As time progressed, Steiff stitched other small, stuffed animals for her retail business and these soon supplanted the clothing lines. In 1889, she moved her operation to a toy factory, and in 1893 the company was registered as Margarete Steiff GmbH. This was a family business with Margarete's brother, Fritz, joining the firm as a sales representative in 1893, and Fritz's children joined the company later.

They included Richard Steiff, who introduced Steiff products to the international market at the prestigious Leipzig Fair. Many of the later animals were based on his drawings made at the zoo. In 1902, the company introduced a bear with jointed arms and legs that would later be dubbed the "Teddy bear," so nicknamed for then-U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt, who refused to shoot a bear cub while on a hunting trip.

Steiff is still in business, but their animals from the 1950s and before are the most collectible and, therefore, highest in value.




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