Cliff Love petroliana collection headlines Miller & Miller June auctions
By AI, Created 6:36 PM UTC, May 27, 2026, /AGP/ – Miller & Miller Auctions will sell the Cliff Love Collection and other petroliana and advertising pieces in two online-only sessions June 13-14 in New Hamburg, Ontario. The sale features rare Ford dealer signs, Canadian Tire neon, and other investment-grade collectibles that could draw serious automotive and advertising collectors across North America.
Why it matters: - The June 13-14 auctions bring a rare lifetime collection of Canadian petroliana and automotive advertising to market. - Top pieces include historically important signs tied to Ford, Canadian Tire, General Motors, and Canadian petroleum brands. - The sales could set strong price points for museum-quality petroliana and advertising collectibles.
What happened: - Miller & Miller Auctions, Ltd. will hold two online-only Petroliana & Advertising auctions on June 13 and June 14 in New Hamburg, Ontario, Canada. - Session I starts Saturday, June 13 at 9:00 a.m. EDT with 228 lots from the Cliff Love Collection. - Session II follows Sunday, June 14 at 6:00 p.m. EDT with 147 additional lots. - The June 13 sale will have a live webcast as lots close in real time. - The June 14 timed session will close sequentially without a live webcast. - Internet bidding will be available through Miller & Miller Auctions, Ltd. and LiveAuctioneers. - Phone and absentee bids will also be accepted for the June 13 session.
The details: - Lot 158 is a Canadian 1912-1927 Duncan Garage Ford “The Universal Car” winged pyramid dealer sign. - The porcelain sign measures nearly ten feet wide. - The sign was originally mounted to the Duncan Garage in British Columbia’s Cowichan Valley. - The sign is authenticated by The Authentication Company, TAC #402571. - The estimate is CA$80,000-CA$120,000. - Lot 209 is a 1940s-1950s Canadian Tire Corp’n Associate Store porcelain neon sign. - The sign measures over eight feet tall. - The sign retains both die-cut porcelain faces. - The estimate is CA$60,000-CA$90,000. - Lot 217 is an early Ford punched tin smaltz dealer sign from the 1910s-1920s. - The sign uses hand-punched tin coated in reflective smaltz and internal incandescent lighting. - The estimate is CA$60,000-CA$80,000. - Lot 114 is a 1940-1945 General Motors Products neon sign. - The sign is TAC-authenticated, #402607 and #402608. - The estimate is CA$50,000-CA$70,000. - Lot 159 is a 1940-1941 Canadian McColl-Frontenac Red Indian 42-inch porcelain sign. - The sign was produced by Vilas Enamel Products before Texaco acquired and discontinued the brand. - The estimate is CA$35,000-CA$50,000. - Lot 190 is a 1933-1939 Good Rich Safety Tires “Mountie” vertical porcelain sign. - The sign is TAC-authenticated, #401860. - The estimate is CA$35,000-CA$50,000. - Lot 76 is a 1940s-1950s Chevrolet Oldsmobile dual-brand porcelain neon sign. - The estimate is CA$25,000-CA$35,000. - Lot 220 is the L.C. Gardner & Co. Pharmacy “Six-Pack Sequence” by Ithaca Sign Works. - The set was commissioned between the late 1920s and 1934 for a Nova Scotia pharmacy. - The six roadside signs were designed to be placed one mile apart. - The estimate is CA$20,000-CA$30,000. - The June 14 timed session also includes Lot 251, a 1955 Orange Crush “Handi-pack” single-sided tin push bar, estimated at CA$1,200-CA$1,500. - Lot 255 is a 1939 Coca-Cola “Drink Here” double-sided porcelain flange sign with a classic scroll design, estimated at CA$1,200-CA$1,500. - Lot 345 is a 1950s Corvette Motor Oil eight-imperial-quart bilingual tin by Ideal Petroleum Co. of St. Lambert, Quebec, estimated at CA$1,200-CA$1,500. - The broader sale also includes soda advertising, thermometers, imperial oil tins, push bars, general store displays, gas pumps, painted metal advertising, porcelain service station signs, and automotive neons. - Ethan Miller, CEO of Miller & Miller Auctions, said Cliff Love’s collecting emphasized originality and condition. - Miller also called the sale a landmark opportunity for serious collectors across North America. - Miller & Miller says the Cliff Love material is among the strongest petroliana offerings the company has handled in recent years.
Between the lines: - The sale leans on scarcity, condition, and Canadian provenance, three factors that often drive bidding in niche collectibles. - Wartime scrap drives, limited production runs, and fragile materials explain why several signs are framed as rare survivors. - The mix of high-end headline lots and lower-estimate advertising pieces broadens the bidder base beyond only top-tier buyers.
What’s next: - Collectors can preview and bid through the June 13 and June 14 catalogue links. - More information is available in the June 13 catalogue and the June 14 catalogue. - Miller & Miller Auctions continues to accept consignments in petroliana, advertising, watches, art, antiques, and other collectibles.
The bottom line: - The Cliff Love Collection anchors a two-day Canadian petroliana sale built around rare signage, strong provenance, and collector-grade condition.
Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.
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