2740 S. Harbor Blvd. Suite G. Santa Ana, Ca
949-645-9955

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Come Pick Up Your Restored Piece


When you come to pick up your restored pieces, to museum quality, it will be packaged safely for its transportation home! We take delicate care of your pieces from start to finish, and restore anything! From Any Material or Finish! You name it, we can restore it! Bring in your fine porcelain, china, crystal, jade, wood, glass, etc... art or antique collectible, and leave completely satisfied!
From you PUP STAFF!

A Very Happy Client!

                              
Watch how happy one of our loyal client's is after receiving her restored Crystal Candelabra! It was restored to museum quality! She has been with us for the last 20 years, and trusts Pick Up the Pieces for the most difficult jobs and restorations!

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Our New Commerical


This month in February, we filmed our artists and put together this lovely video for your happy viewing. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact us at 949-645-9955. We are located at 2740 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana, Ca. 

A new testimonial from a loyal customer!


Kimberly Duncan, a loyal and returning customer, brought to us her ebony bull for restoration. Upon it's delivery from Africa, the bull's horn was broken in transit. Mrs. Duncan, rushed the piece over to PUP for a quick and beautiful restoration. Thank you, Mrs. Duncan for you trust in us to do it right!

Picking Up the Pieces

An Article in Antiques
Written by Jennifer J. Bush


A childish bout of roughhousing decades ago left a legacy and a bit of unfinished business for Ray LaTreill of Irvine.

When they were young boys, LaTreill and his twin brother tipped over their mother's precious porcelain vase while wrestling in their upstate New York home. During the scuffle, the boys broke off a piece of the rim.

"It was my mom's favorite heirloom," LaTreill said.

The boy's mother, Thelma LaTreill, had received the hand-painted vase as a wedding gift from her mother around 1910. Shortly after the wedding her mother died, which contributed even more to the sentimental value of the piece, he explained.

"We knew she was hurt, but she never really showed it," LaTreill said. His mother simply turned the side with the flaw to the wall to hide it. And the missing piece of the rim was eventually lost.

Ray inherited the hand-painted Royal Doulton porcelain when his mother died. His research indicates that it was made between 1890-1900. Signed by the artist, it is considered an original work of art. A recent appraisal valued the piece at $7,000-$9,000.

"I'll never sell it," he said. "It's very sentimental."

LaTreill, who vowed to make it right one day, finally put a happy ending to the story of the vase. The vase was recently repaired at PICK UP THE PIECES, a company that specializes in the restoration of fine art collectibles.

Foster Art Restoration

PUP is the nation's largest art restoration company. John D. Foster-- an inventor, chemist, and artist-- started the business under the name Foster Art Restoration over 50 years ago. Foster innovated and patented a porcelain-like substance that seals cracks and bonds invisibly. And when poured into a mold, it can be used to create missing parts on a porcelain figure. Borrowing ideas from the aerospace industry, he developed a transparent adhesive for glass and crystal. In all, Foster developed about 25 strategic applications that can be used to repair almost any fine art medium.

"Growing up, my dad was always mixing things; he was like a mad scientist," said his son, John C. Foster.

The company receives broken treasures from all over the world, some just shards arriving in Ziploc bags. At any given time, the shop has about 3,500 items in the works. About 20 percent of the total items they receive are defined as antique (more than 100 years old). Another 30 percent are sentimental pieces.

"These are items that may not be worth much on the market, but are irreplaceable to the owners," John C. said. For one couple, it was a plate, the only item retrieved after their home burned down. To another woman, a salt shaker was all she had from a childhood home. And for a little boy, it was a simple clay pot he created as a gift for his mother that he dropped on the way home from schol.

"People are elated when we tell them we can fix things," said Angela Foster, the wife of John D. "We have housekeepers that come here in tears and they go out smiling."

The majority of the items restored are high-end art pieces including sculptures, crystal, ivory, china, ceramics, porcelain, silver, bronze. They also repair and clean original oil paintings, photographs, and graphics of all types. Moving and insurance companies are their largest customers.

The family owned business has repaired extremely rare and valuable pieces for collectors, museums, and galleries including original Ming vases and Dresden and Meissen porcelain. The oldest item restored was a 4,700 year-old Egyptian amphora that was retrieved from a shipwreck in the Mediterranean.

"The irony is that it existed on the ocean floor for 4,700 years and when they brought it up, they dropped it," John C. said. It was more than 200 pieces, some of which had reduced to powder. The artisans had to not only fit the pieces together, but simulate the encrustation that had occurred over time, he explained.

Their company's field services division can restore just about any hard surface, such as porcelain tubs, ceramic tile and marble. The Melrose Abbey mural in Anaheim was among their many projects.

The cost of restoration varies according to the extent of repair needed. Each piece is evaluated individually. On the average, it cost about $125 to repair a Lladro with several broken parts. Usually it takes 30-60 days to complete most restorations.

"We're often asked whether restoration decreases the value of an item," John C. said. "While the value of a collectible such as a Lladro can go down about 20 percent after being damaged and then restored-- for rare, one of a kind pieces, restoration tends to increase its value.

"If you think about it, the Mona Lisa has been restored 60 times," John C. said. "And its value has not changed."








Article Featured in Orange County Home 2006

First Aid for Art -- PUP is the largest restoration company in the nation!

Some might Consider an oil painting with a cracked or torn canvas, smoke damage or excessive dirt beyond repair.

But with the solutions and specialized techniques developed by John D. Foster of Newport Beach, fine art can be restored to its original luster.

Foster- an inventor, chemist, and artist- carved his niche in the art world by combining his love for art with chemistry. He started a business under the name Foster Art Restoration 50 years ago. The company, now known as Pick Up the Pieces, has become the largest art restoration company in the nation.

"This is an emergency room for treasured items; you never know what's going to come through the door," said Chris Carter, PUP manager.

While the company has been recognized for its repair of sculptures and other objects crafted from porcelain, crystal, china, and marble, it can also perform the same magic on damaged oil paintings.

Four professors of art on staff advise art collectors, museum curators, retailers, and insurance companies on the beset treatment plan for paintings in need of cleaning or repair.

Damage can come from everyday disasters, such as house fires, or unexpected accidents in transit. When a forklift punctures art shipped in a container, "WE get the task of bringing it back to life," Carter said.

Each painting is evaluated individually upon arrival. The condition of pigment is first tested for its integrity.  Then the painting is cleaned in stages using solutions created by Foster.

The passage of time alone can be damaging to fine art.

"After a period of time, crazing can occur where the pigment starts to crack and it eventually starts to fall," Carter said. Such situations require the skill of artisans on staff, who actually repaint missing sections.

In severe cases, when large segments are gone, a piece of a new canvas can be inserted and repainted. A fragile painting might first require relining the entire back with canvas.

"People place an enormous amount of trust and fait in us," Carter said.

The company recently finished restoring a collection of works by California artist Edgar Payne worth $750,000.

"We get such a variety of objects from different cultures all over the world," said Angela Foster, wife of the founder. She oversees the company along with her son, John C. Foster.

"So much original art is going to be extinct," she said. Perpetuating art for future generations is the overall goal of the family-owned business, she said.

In addition to paintings, the company restores photographs and historical documents such as Civil War certificates in which the ink has disappeared over time.

"We're able to arrest the aging process and re-create missing areas," Carter explained.

A Customer recently brought in a letter which had turned completely gray after nearly a century. It took a microscope to see the indentations of the letter, which divulged that it had been written by Theodore Roosevelt in 1911. The letter; along with a badly decomposed newspaper clipping dating from the same period, were meticulously restored and placed in an archival frame for the customer.

The reception area of the shop can become emotional at times. "A lot of people burst into tears when they get their things back," Carter said.

Written by Jennifer Bush
jbush@ocresgister.com