The
trademark applications described above are
attempts to legitimately use the "McCoy" name
on ceramic products. It was appropriate for Designer
Accents, as the owner of the Nelson McCoy pottery
to acquire the right to use the name that the
company has exclusively used since 1936, and
I suppose would have been the logical choice
in the opinion of the Federal Trade Commission.
However, since the Nelson McCoy pottery was closed
in 1990 it was anybody's "ball game." But,
what about the purpose of the others, given the
fact that they did not acquire the Nelson McCoy
pottery? Are these others just attempting to "cash
in" on the very well known McCoy name?
Experienced collectors of Nelson McCoy pottery
know the answer to that.
Collectors
of Nelson McCoy pottery and some other pottery
companies as well, have to be smart in their
acquisitions in a way that was unnecessary just
a few years ago. We need to know what we are
doing. In light of all of the fraudulent pieces
that on the market today we must know whether
a piece of pottery that we are considering buying
is authentic or not.
Non-authentic
pottery is divided into two types. One type is
called "reproductions", or as I prefer "look
a-likes," and the other type is called a
fake. A "look a-like" is simply a piece
of pottery that looks like an authentic product,
in our case a Nelson McCoy product. The simplest way
to tell if this type piece is authentic or not
is to compare the measurements of the subject
piece to a known authentic example. Look a-likes
are smaller than the authentic piece.
Fake
pieces are pieces that were never produced by
the pottery that is indicated by the trademark
that is present on the piece. A word of caution
- sometimes sellers offer for sale an unmarked
piece, or a piece that is marked "USA" which
wasn't really made by the company that they say
it was. So, how can you tell a fake? Generally,
the best way to tell a McCoy fake is to be familiar
with the different pieces that the Nelson McCoy
pottery actually made. I say "generally" because
every now and then a previously unknown piece
of authentic McCoy pottery turns up. But these
cases are not very common. When considering buying
a piece of McCoy, look through the reference
books. If you can't find it in one of the books,
I would say that there is a very high probability
that the piece is a fake.
Another
way to tell many of the fakes is to have pictures
of the known fakes. The inclusion of pictures
of some known fakes is one of the purposes of
this article. Most of these pieces shown are
marked "McCoy," but some are marked "USA" and
others are not marked at all. However, all of
the pieces shown have been advertised as being
made by "McCoy."
In
addition to the above it is best to study the
design of these fake pieces and not be confused
by the colors and decorations or the name given
to them. The people that produce these pieces
sometimes use many different color designs and
decorations, and the people that sell these pieces
sometimes refer to the same piece by many different
names. |