Ashbourne News Telegraph

Auction of shop’s contents hit the sweet spot

DAVID ‘GOBSTOPPER­ED’ AS BIDS COME IN FROM AROUND THE WORLD

- By Gareth Butterfiel­d gareth.butterfiel­d@ashbournen­ewstelegra­ph.co.uk

THE contents of what has been dubbed “the best sweet shop in the world” have gone under the hammer and its owner has closed the doors for the last time.

David Walker started selling retro sweets from his period-styled Edward and Vintage Sweet Shop in Tissington back in 2012, but he says the time has come for him to move on to a new project, and every item in the former cottage was put up for auction last week by Hansons.

Bidding was fierce from the start, with would-be buyers battling over lemon fizz kali, a Rowntree’s Cocoa sign, a 70-year-old bar of chocolate and a till dating back to 1905.

Fans of the shop, which closed last month, drove for miles to bid in person and buyers tuned in online from around the world, including America and Canada, to snap up a memento – much to the amazement of Nottingham-born David, who has been working on a project to revive an abandoned village in Scotland.

Every single lot at his shop sold during the auction, in Tissington Village Hall on Saturday – all 159 of them – including a multitude of sweet jars, Jelly Babies, vintage display cabinets, enamel adverting signs, the brass shop counter bell and a 1920s bar of Bournville chocolate.

Charles Hanson, owner of Hansons Auctioneer­s, said: “It was a magnificen­t day. The sun was shining, the room was packed with bidders – and the sale hit the sweet spot.

“There were tears of emotion and lots of hugs. It was a day brimming with community spirit and goodwill, all thanks to Dave.

“His shop has brought joy to countless people – including my family and children. The success was down to his vintage vision, enormous popularity and hard work. That and the fact that everyone loves sweets or chocolate – or both.”

David, 50, says he knew Edward & Vintage had plenty of fans but nothing could have prepared him for the sale’s overwhelmi­ng success – and the love from his customers which delivered the sweetest results imaginable.

Estimates were smashed to smithereen­s and the final sales total was just shy of £8,000.

David said: “I was totally and utterly gobstopper­ed! Some people drove miles and miles to be there. There must have been around 150 people at the sale.

“One former customer made a six-hour round trip from Essex just to pick up four glass sweet jars. She wanted her daughter to have a keepsake.

“Another lady was determined to buy a toy dog on wheels she’d hankered after since coming to the shop as a girl of 10. That’s exactly what I wanted – my wonderful, supportive customers to wander off with a memory.

“Some things sold for crazy amounts. Old enamel advertisin­g signs that had been outside my shop in all weathers for years made hundreds of pounds. A jar of lemon fizz kali sold for £75 and a vintage bar of Bournevill­e chocolate went for £95.

“There were even bids coming in from New York – to buy things from my little shop in Derbyshire! It was unbelievab­le.

“It turned out to be far more of an emotional day than I anticipate­d. The support I had from customers was amazing. They were prepared to bid to help me.

“When you purchase from a small business you are actually investing in that person’s life. I might get my new cottage watertight now! I have told Ned, my dog, that he’ll have a roof over his head.”

Dave is in the process of renovating a group of derelict crofters’ cottages he bought in 2016, sight unseen, on the island of Sanday in Scotland’s Orkneys. After years of gradual renovation work in winter, which involved making 24-hour journeys by car and ferry from Tissington to the Orkneys, he is making the move permanent. “I eventually plan to live in one of the crofts in a 13ft by 33ft space”, David explained.

“I know it will be hard but I’m looking forward to it. There are about 500 people on the island and they’ve been very welcoming. Ned, adores it. I wanted him to have a beautiful place to live, just like Edward, my previous dog. The Peak District shop was named after him.

“When I announced the closure of Edward & Vintage on Facebook there was an outpouring of grief. I love my customers. Thanks to them I’ve had the most amazing time. They’re a brilliant bunch of loyal people. I’ve seen some of them become parents and children grow into marvellous adults.”

Edward & Vintage, described as the best sweet shop in the world by an online reviewer, won fans all over the world. Tourists from across the globe discovered it and it has been featured in numerous magazines and papers including a prestigiou­s Japanese publicatio­n.

Famous people have walked through the door including actress Joanna Lumley, TV presenters Christine Bleakley, Anna Richardson and Anita Rani and comedian Micky Flanagan. It has been filmed for Escape to the Country, Country File, Germany’s ARD TV and The Great Interior Design Challenge.

More coverage beckons as the auction was followed by a TV production team making a documentar­y series about Hansons Auctioneer­s, which is due to be aired in the new year.

They had lots of excitement to capture as numerous items excelled, including the original shop fittings. Lot 44, a vintage shop display counter, made £300 from an estimate of £80£120; a 1930s vintage Cadbury’s wall display cabinet reached £330 and an Edwardian mirror-backed display unit achieved £320.

The shop’s 1905 cash register, made in Dayton, Ohio, USA, was contested to £420 from a low estimate of £300 and an American shop counter brass bell made £110 from a £20-£30 estimate.

Enamel advertisin­g signs proved popular. Lot 42, an original Rowntree’s Cocoa sign, reached £380 from an estimate of £80-£120 and a Lipton’s Tea sign made £170 from a £40-£60 guide. In addition, lot 67, a Greensmith’s Derby Dog Biscuits advertisin­g board made £110, treble its £30-£50 estimate.

Lots big and small did well. For example, a framed Freeman’s Baking Powder advertisin­g card made £48; lot 34, a vintage tin collection including Quality Street, Werthers and Bassetts, sold for £33 and a sweet jar filled with Jelly Babies made £41.

Unusual buys included lot 39, The Story of Chocolate, an original 1950s Cadbury’s School Project kit with original chocolate wrappers and cocoa beans. It reached £130 from an estimate of £30-£40.

And period nostalgia went into overload when a 1930s mannequin in vintage clothing reached £150 from an estimate of £40-£60. It originated from a department store in Ashbourne. Bidders were equally keen to secure a vintage rock chopping machine made by L Collier of Rochdale. It sold for £170 from a £40£60 estimate.

 ?? ?? Inside the Tissington sweet shop
David Walker, pictured with
Ned the dog, has sold the contents of his Edward & Vintage Sweet Shop in Tissington to renovate a group of cottages on an island in the Orkneys, below
Some of the 159 lots that went for auction included a 1905 till, vintage dog biscuits, chocolate bars and display material. A dog on wheels, left, was bought by a lady who had coveted it for years Pictures: Hansons
Inside the Tissington sweet shop David Walker, pictured with Ned the dog, has sold the contents of his Edward & Vintage Sweet Shop in Tissington to renovate a group of cottages on an island in the Orkneys, below Some of the 159 lots that went for auction included a 1905 till, vintage dog biscuits, chocolate bars and display material. A dog on wheels, left, was bought by a lady who had coveted it for years Pictures: Hansons

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