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Best bird-themed vintage collectables: 11 that add instant charm to a home – including duck bookends

From pie birds to duck decoys, these vintage collectables add instant whimsy to your home

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Vintage toffee tins and decorative elements on display.
Becky Luigart-Stayner for Country Living

Whether you are a seasoned bird-watcher or simply a fan of our feathered friends, we've rounded up the best ornithological-themed vintage finds that add a playful note to an interior and make great collector's items.

After you’ve flipped through, you’ll want to put a bird in every room of the house.

Also, don't forget to read our guide on how to bring the birdwatching aesthetic into your home through clever decorating choices.


Read more of our vintage and antiques guides:

    Bird Books

    bird books
    Becky Luigart-Stayner for Country Living

    Feathered hats were the height of fashion at the turn of the 19th century, but the Lacey Act of 1900 and the Federal Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918 significantly curbed the hunting of wild birds.

    From there, avian field guides proliferated as consumers turned their attention to observing, not wearing, the creatures, with pocket-size compendiums becoming essential for on-the-spot identification.

    Observer's pocket books, published by Frederick Warne & Co between 1937 and 2003 are highly sought-after, well-known for their colourful hardbacks and detailed illustrations inside.

    What It’s Worth: Most vintage books, including James Fisher's The Birds of Britain (top left) sell between £8-£25. Observer's guides can be found for as little as £3, while first editions can reach over £500.

    Cuckoo Clocks

    cuckoo clocks on wall over green armchair
    Becky Luigart-Stayner for Country Living

    Originating from the Black Forest region of Germany in the 1600s, cuckoo clocks push air through wooden whistles to produce the synonymous two-note cuck-oo call of the bird for which they are named after. Most are fabricated in the Bahnhäusleuhr style or the more traditional Jagdstück style (shown here), which is marked by forest motifs. Cuckoo clocks that also play music have three hanging weights.

    What It’s Worth: Trending again thanks to a revived interest in wooden objects, Jagdstück designs from the 1960s and ’70s fetch £200 for small pieces and £500 and up for larger varieties. Clocks with working top automatons are particularly coveted.

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    Classroom Charts

    birding charts
    Becky Luigart-Stayner for Country Living

    Before the widespread use of overhead projectors, hanging charts were popular classroom tools because they could be quickly rolled up and put away when not in use. Charts depicting different species of flora and fauna were especially common, with those illustrating a country or region’s native birds being an easy way to engage students in local wildlife.

    What It’s Worth: Today, charts from across the globe made between the 1950s and ’70s typically bring between £100 and £300 each, depending on size and condition.

    Songbird Music Boxes

    music boxes in the shape of bird cages
    Becky Luigart-Stayner for Country Living

    18th-century Swiss clockmaker Pierre Jaquet-Droz is credited with developing the singing bird box, which was often affixed to ornate snuff boxes and sold to European royalty. Over the centuries, the windup mechanisms were simplified to suit mass production, and similar singing bird music cages became exponentially more affordable. Music players with drawers often doubled as jewellery storage.

    What It’s Worth: While serious collectors shell out thousands for German-made cages from the early 1900s, casual collectors can expect to pay between £500 and £1,000 for players, depending on size and number of birds in the cage. Examples with working automatons bring the higher numbers.

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    Sewing Birds

    sewing birds
    Becky Luigart-Stayner for Country Living

    Patented in 1853, the sewing bird served as a “third hand” for at-home seamstresses. The thumbscrew secured the tool to a table, and its spring-loaded tail pieces could be pinched to open the beak, which would grasp fabric in need of hemming. Over time, designs became more ornate, and grooms-to-be often gifted the birds to their betrothed while she prepared her trousseau.

    What It’s Worth: Today, vintage clamps can sell for £150-£400 apiece. Sewing birds without a clamp and padded pincushion can often be found for less than £200.

    Bird Whistles

    bird whistles
    Becky Luigart-Stayner for Country Living

    A popular child’s plaything from as early as the 1600s, bird whistles have been made from a variety of materials throughout the centuries and were occasionally designed with water chambers to produce a warbling sound (bottom right). Rarer brass “Victory Canary Songsters” from the 1920s (centre) were crafted with a moving beak and often co-opted by photographers to capture the attention of young subjects – hence the phrase “watch the birdie.”

    What It’s Worth: Victorian-era pewter, ceramic, and cast-iron pieces can be found today for £10 to £40. Rarer brass “Victory Canary Songsters” from the 1920s can command up to £200.

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    Blue Bird Toffee Boxes

    blue bird toffee tins
    Becky Luigart-Stayner for Country Living

    Following in the footsteps of his competitor Cadbury, confectioner Harry Vincent established his candy factory in England’s West Midlands in 1927. His popular Blue Bird Toffee was sold in decorative tins often emblazoned with a signature cerulean-hued swallow. Tins from the 1930s through the ’60s are considered collectors’ items—look for “Huntington” in the box address to confirm age—and pieces with interior lid designs are especially sought after.

    What It’s Worth: Prices range from £10 for small rectangular tins to £50 for larger pieces. Rarer circular tins can top £100.

    Duck Bookends

    Shelves displaying decorative duck figurines and a selection of books.
    Brian Woodcock for Country Living

    The classic brass duck bookends became popular in the 1960s and can often be found at flea markets, car boot sales, and on vintage sites. Birds-in-flight versions (top right) or non-brass variations, like wood-painted ceramic (centre), also make for fine complements to your field guides.

    What It’s Worth: Brass duck bookends can be found for anywhere from £100 to £500, depending on age and condition. Most wood and ceramic pairs are easily found on Etsy and eBay for around £30-£50.

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    Cast-Iron Door Knockers

    Decorative wall hangings featuring various bird designs.
    Becky Luigart-Stayner for Country Living

    Long serving as symbols of woodland charm, birds have inspired cast-iron door knockers for decades. Given their rhythmic pecking, woodpeckers are a natural fit for front doors. Briefly popular in the 1930s, smaller indoor knockers produced by Pennsylvania’s Hubley Manufacturing Co. were offered in at least five bird designs. Parrots are the most commonly found, but rarer owls are also sought after.

    What It’s Worth: Midcentury versions can be picked up for less than £100.

    Pie Birds

    Display of ceramic bird figurines and baked goods on wooden shelves.
    Becky Luigart-Stayner for Country Living

    A quirky adaptation from purely function pie funnels from the Victorian era, it was the old nursery rhyme (“4 and 20 blackbirds baked in a pie”) that inspired the first bird-shape one in the 1930s.
    Playing a crucial role in the pie-baking process, the ceramic vessel’s vented structure allows steam to escape during baking, thus preventing filling-overflow disasters. Pie birds (and their other quirky-themed counterparts) are highly collectible, especially if they are made by notable makers such as Stuart Bass and Clarice Cliff.

    What It’s Worth: Most ceramic pie birds range from £10 to hundreds of pounds apiece. Most midcentury vintage versions, however, can be found for under £70, while some by notable makers can warrant a higher price tag.

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    Duck Decoys

    Wooden duck decoys displayed on shelves with a green plant.
    Brian Woodcock for Country Living

    While decoy styles run the gamut of colours and materials, some of the highest-value birds come from Detroit’s Mason Decoy Factory, where production was most active in the early 1900s. Known for their realistic painting and attention to detail, their decoys were divided into three categories based on performance grade: premier, challenge, and standard.

    What It’s Worth: The decoys shown here range from £200 to £900, with the premier grade at the pricier end. Rare models can garner hundreds of thousands of pounds at auctions.

    Ready to jump into bird watching as your next hobby?

    More on birds, including a video on birdwatching with Hamza Yassin

    Headshot of Sarah Zlotnick
    Sarah Zlotnick
    Lifestyle Director

    Sarah Zlotnick is the Lifestyle Director at Country Living, where she has run point on travel, rural lifestyles, and all things vintage and antiques since 2021. Previously a lifestyle editor at Washingtonian and Philadelphia magazines, she has been championing small businesses and regional destinations for 15 years. She also holds a bachelor’s degree in American Studies from Georgetown University, a major her younger self would be quite surprised to learn has come so in handy. First and foremost a service journalism enthusiast, she loves an in-depth explainer on an everyday topic or a deep dive into the history of vintage objects. When she’s not editing and writing, you’ll find her needling her husband to pull off the highway so they can explore a new small town or cozying up with a juicy murder mystery. 


    Headshot of Alison Allsopp

    Alison Allsopp is the former Style and Market Editor at Country Living.

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