08-21-2009, 10:36 AM
Waukegan Harbor Antique Show in the News-Sun.
<!-- m --><a class="postlink" href="http://www.suburbanchicagonews.com/newssun/lifestyles/1727755,summer-festivals-082109.article">http://www.suburbanchicagonews.com/news ... 09.article</a><!-- m -->
Long-running antiques show returns to harbor park
Comments
August 21, 2009
By DAN MORAN <!-- e --><a href="mailto
MORAN@SCN1.COM">DMORAN@SCN1.COM</a><!-- e -->
WAUKEGAN â The annual Waukegan Harbor Antique Show can trace its origins to the late 1990s, when, Dan Traynoff recalled, he walked by âa beautiful little park on the lakefront, and there was a little art show there.â
That would be Siver Park, which sits on Waukegan Port District property just west of the Waukegan Yacht Club. The garden spot between the railroad tracks and the waterline has been home to the summertime festival almost every year since 1997.
Traynoff said he feels the free event â returning Sunday with more than 40 antiques and collectibles vendors â helps shatter a negative image of Waukegan, and he has at least one anecdote to prove it.
![[Image: traynoff.jpg]](http://sbcglobalpwp.att.net/d/a/danteeqs/traynoff.jpg)
Dan Traynoff of Waukegan looks at a 1933 Chicago World's Fair umbrella that will be shown by Mary Miller of Lake Villa at the Waukegan Harbor Antique Show.
(Thomas Delany Jr./News-Sun)
RELATED STORIES
⢠Photos: Fest preparation
âI remember the very first year, the impression it left on me ... the power of a simple little special event,â he said. âI had a woman call me from Highland Park, (and) she said, âIs it safe for me to come down to Waukegan?ââ
Traynoff said he told her that Waukegan was like any other urban area, with good areas and bad, so she came down to the literally tree-lined Siver Park. âWell, the day of the event, she came up to me (and) said, âThank you for convincing me to come down.â In a very direct way, she had a change in her impression of Waukegan.â
The lineup for this yearâs edition, scheduled to run from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., includes live performances from regional open-mic troubadour Chris Sipos at 9 a.m., the Highland Park Pops at noon and the Downhome Sophisticates at 2 p.m.
In addition, the Yacht Club will be open to the public for a buffet breakfast from 9 a.m. until noon, after which a beer garden will be open on the site. Along with admission, parking is free, with lots both west and south of the park.
As for the antiques, Traynoff said there is space for 44 vendors and the slots were filling up. And he said that âthe more appropriate and accurate term (for the show) is âantiques and collectibles,ââ since antiques are about 100 years old and collectibles such as 1950s toys are more and more in demand.
<!-- m --><a class="postlink" href="http://www.suburbanchicagonews.com/newssun/lifestyles/1727755,summer-festivals-082109.article">http://www.suburbanchicagonews.com/news ... 09.article</a><!-- m -->
Long-running antiques show returns to harbor park
Comments
August 21, 2009
By DAN MORAN <!-- e --><a href="mailto

WAUKEGAN â The annual Waukegan Harbor Antique Show can trace its origins to the late 1990s, when, Dan Traynoff recalled, he walked by âa beautiful little park on the lakefront, and there was a little art show there.â
That would be Siver Park, which sits on Waukegan Port District property just west of the Waukegan Yacht Club. The garden spot between the railroad tracks and the waterline has been home to the summertime festival almost every year since 1997.
Traynoff said he feels the free event â returning Sunday with more than 40 antiques and collectibles vendors â helps shatter a negative image of Waukegan, and he has at least one anecdote to prove it.
![[Image: traynoff.jpg]](http://sbcglobalpwp.att.net/d/a/danteeqs/traynoff.jpg)
Dan Traynoff of Waukegan looks at a 1933 Chicago World's Fair umbrella that will be shown by Mary Miller of Lake Villa at the Waukegan Harbor Antique Show.
(Thomas Delany Jr./News-Sun)
RELATED STORIES
⢠Photos: Fest preparation
âI remember the very first year, the impression it left on me ... the power of a simple little special event,â he said. âI had a woman call me from Highland Park, (and) she said, âIs it safe for me to come down to Waukegan?ââ
Traynoff said he told her that Waukegan was like any other urban area, with good areas and bad, so she came down to the literally tree-lined Siver Park. âWell, the day of the event, she came up to me (and) said, âThank you for convincing me to come down.â In a very direct way, she had a change in her impression of Waukegan.â
The lineup for this yearâs edition, scheduled to run from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., includes live performances from regional open-mic troubadour Chris Sipos at 9 a.m., the Highland Park Pops at noon and the Downhome Sophisticates at 2 p.m.
In addition, the Yacht Club will be open to the public for a buffet breakfast from 9 a.m. until noon, after which a beer garden will be open on the site. Along with admission, parking is free, with lots both west and south of the park.
As for the antiques, Traynoff said there is space for 44 vendors and the slots were filling up. And he said that âthe more appropriate and accurate term (for the show) is âantiques and collectibles,ââ since antiques are about 100 years old and collectibles such as 1950s toys are more and more in demand.