The least expensive lamp in the bunch was a Jewellery on Sale wave-design reading lamp. The shade with gold-patina base sold for $32 in 1906. The costliest item in the lineup was a magnolia floor lamp with a 28-inch-diameter shade. With base, it cost $456 in 1913, Return to TIFF Heart tag ring the average yearly income was $620, according to the show's label text. In 2005, a similar lamp auctioned by Christie's brought just over $2 million, www.christies.com reported. "It shows the magnolia flower front, back, side, bud, full bloom and on its way out -- in all its life cycles," the curator said. The Return to TIFF mini heart tags bracelet collection is famous for its many Tiffany lamps and its vast, colorful array of flat and pressed glass used in so many Tiffany products. Egon Neustadt and his wife, Hildegard, began purchasing Tiffany lamps in 1935, when Tiffany's decorative arts were not in style. An Austrian-born orthodontist, Neustadt continued to add to his Tiffany holdings until his death in 1984, The New York Times reported. Return to TIFF Oval tag bracelet show complements the Chrysler's equally renowned Tiffany collection, which emphasizes blown glass forms but also includes about 17 lamps. Walter P. Chrysler Jr., the museum's chief benefactor, collected Return to TIFF Oval tag key ring items around the same time as Neustadt, Conway said, but she knows of no record of the two having met. In 1931, Chrysler visited the great artist-designer Tiffany at his exotic, palatial home on Long Island, N.Y., called Laurelton Hall. That encounter led to a friendship that ended with Tiffany's death in 1933 at age 84.
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