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Friday, October 21, 2011

Galvanized



Another new trend in home use and decoration is any vintage galvanized item.
Most sheet metal galvanized pieces were produced for practical commercial uses, mainly because of its durability and flexibility. Later it was also found as useful for home uses such as buckets,farm equipment,and of course watering cans.



I was a fan long before it became a trend again. I always saw a glow and warmth in the metal after applying paste wax and buffing. If you have not tried that I highly recommend.

Here is some brief history;
Since its conception in the early 1900's, galvanized metal has offered a durability other steels and metals do not, a durability that lasts for decades.
Galvanized metal was named after the Italian scientist, Luigi Galvani. In 1783 he had a dissected frog on the same table he was using while conducting an experiment on static electricity. When he touched the sciatic nerve of the dead frog with his metal scalpel, the frog's leg moved. He called it "animal electricity," but his fellow scientists referred to it as galvanizing. It was in 1923 that the first piece of galvanized metal was used by the Baldwin brothers. They constructed the Gleaner Combine Harvester, the first harvester to be self-propelled. It was also the first time galvanized metal was used in construction.

It has been shown that galvanized metal can be recycled and re-used, even after sixty years or more of prior use.

Galvanized metal goes through a processing which involves a piece of steel or metal being submerged in melted zinc. It is during this process of galvanizing that the zinc chemically reacts to the molecules in the metal, permanently bonding it to the metal. The zinc provides protection against rust and corrosion that the natural elements. Galvanized metal comes in many forms: Sheet metal examples are what are shown in photos and being used in homes as decor today.

Galvanized metal can be painted, but it requires a primer made especially for it. You need to be sure that the surface of the metal is free of alkaline build-up and then add the metal primer. You can then paint it with latex paint. Any oil or alkyd based paints should not be used; they do not mix well with the chemicals found in galvanized metal. Also, any product containing galvanized metal should not be used for any form of food preparation or storage. The acids found in food could dissolve in the zinc, making the person eating the food extremely ill.









Folks are now seeing both practical uses and decorating properties. These items look great mixed with a country,modern,or architectural home decor style.


Monday, October 17, 2011

EARTH DAY--The 4 R's Repurpose,Rethink,Reuse,Recycle



Earth Day Celebrations encourage us to go "Green" which is great.

We collectors have been doing that as long as we have collected Antiques and Collectibles. How you say?!! We recycle furniture saving trees and power, and we use old potter...y, silver, jewelry, cookie jars, wood doors, clothing,fireplace mantels etc etc etc. We also repurpose some items in a way not intended originally, but what works for us today. Some artists take old and create something wonderful by reusing discarded bits and pieces. We are ahead of the "Green Movement" and deserve to pat each other on the back. Come join us, your welcome, and know if you love collecting it can be a lifetime committment of being "Green".
 
I have posted in the past articles about going green with antiques and also about thinking outside the box and using antiques and collectibles in ways other than originally intended.
Here are some additional ideas people have had. Makes for an eclectic mix in your home showing off some of your personality and love,
instead of having a TRENDY COOKIE CUTTER decorated home.
Plus the benefits of knowing you are doing your share in being green.


ROCKET AUTOMATIC FISH SCALER as LIGHT


VERY GRAPHIC WALL DECOR of PRIMITIVE WHISK BROOMS

OLD FOOD CRATES used as SHELVING

VINTAGE METAL CLIP-ON BOARD with OLD SEED PACKETS as a WALL DISPLAY

ANTIQUE DOORKNOB changed into a BOTTLE STOPPER

PRIMITIVE CARRY TOOL CHESTS used as STORAGE AND ORGANIZATION of CHERISHED ITEMS


WOODEN ADVERTISING/INFORMATION SIGNS as SCREENS or BACKDROPS
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DARE TO BE CREATIVE AND ECO FRIENDLY

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Antique China ETC--Holiday-Birthday-Anniversary-Just a special thoughtful Gift

With Christmas and Hanukkah just around the corner, now is the time to start thinking about your gift-giving needs. Instead of patronizing the crowded malls and box stores and paying top dollar for quite ordinary mass-produced trinkets and home accessories, why not be remembered this year for your spectacular, unique and antique gifts?

SILVERPLATED TEA SERVICE

One area of interest is antique china. In that niche you will find everything you need to fit all taste levels on your gift list. You can make your shopping easy and a delight by patronizing our Antique Shop. Of course we would like for you to visit us first and say "hello" to your neighbors here in Historic Downtown New Albany, but you also have a unique variety of other type shops here to check out also. Have fun getting out and about while crossing off the names on your gift list.














TEA CUPS,HANKIES,VINTAGE SPOON
TEABAG HOLDERS,HOT CHOCOLATE CUP

Everyone loves vintage tea cups. Why not purchase several? Tea cup sets are items of enduring beauty that will get you through your holiday gift list and on to birthdays, get well or hostess gifts. Fill the cup with an assortment of individually packaged tea bags. Place the cup and saucer on a large square of colored wrapping paper,vintage hankerchief,etc,use your imaginaion. Bring whatever you use up around the cup and saucer and wrap with a long colorful piece of fabric ribbon. What a welcome gift!

RETRO ENAMELED PLATE,BUTTER PATS,FISH BONE PLATES

Try the same with butter pats/or small plates! Place one large wrapped chocolate on a pat and surround it. Don’t forget to set one of these delightful treasures at each guest’s place setting at your next luncheon or dinner party and enjoy your guests’ complimentary remarks.

They are also great candle holders. Buy several votive candles to accompany your bounty of antique plates. Voilá! You now have several inexpensive but delightful gifts for your special girlfriends, not only for this holiday season but throughout the year ahead.

MUSTACHE CUP,SHAVE BRUSH,SHAVE MUG

For the mustachioed man in your life, a mustache cup is a must! These relics of Victoriana will be treasured for years ahead. Antique shaving mugs are another terrific present. Pack up a gift bag of shaving creams and lotions and you will be able to present a gift that you are proud of and one that won’t cost you a bundle! Add a brush to the mug and you will surely please the special man in your life.

A day of snooping around antique shops can find a number of small glass and china dishes or trays which should provide you with the opportunity to pick up several inexpensive soap dishes. Make a side trip to your local discount store for a variety of decorative soaps. Pack a bar of soap with each dish and wrap the ensemble in vintage hankies tied up with big red ribbon.

LEMON SLICE DISHES,GLASS&SPOON TEABAG HOLDERS


The possibilities for great gifts are endless when you go antiquing. Add your own touches to create truly memorable holiday gifts. Why not bake up a storm and artfully arrange the goodies on a 19th-century Haviland dessert plate? Surely someone on your gift list would love a matching sugar and creamer. Do you have a dog-lover on your gift list? Fido certainly would appreciate some doggy treats presented on a 19th-century Staffordshire bone dish!

Always remember, it is the thought that counts. Gifts of antique china are packed with memories, and by adding your own special touches, you will relay the message that your gifts have been packaged with careful thought and love.

Monday, October 3, 2011

Very Old does not always mean Very Expensive


There’s a special, nostalgic feeling that comes from holding a piece of glass from the 1930s, a vase from the reign of Queen Victoria, or a coin that was in circulation when Lincoln was president. But many collectors are surprised to learn that it’s possible to purchase inexpensive antiques that pre-date the era of Abraham Lincoln, or even George Washington. As any collector of antiquities will tell you, there is something truly intoxicating about owning an object that is hundreds or even thousands of years old.
Many times I have heard statements or been told by someone trying to sell me something, "I know its very very old so it must be worth alot." "I know its old because it belonged to grandma."
Sorry,not always true.
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I knew I had a find—the pages were printed in German with Gothic lettering. When I looked at the bottom of the title page my eyes grew wide. There, clearly printed, was the publication date—1760. My discovery turned out to be a German Bible, printed before the American Revolution. At the time, I thought this piece was ancient, but I discovered later that it was practically new compared with some of the antiquities that could be had for very reasonable prices. That 1760 Bible was only the beginning.
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Most collectors believe that anything hundreds or thousands of years old will be found only in museums or the collections of the very wealthy. Antiquities certainly are found in these places, but they can also be a part of the collections of individuals like you and me. An item may only be worth $30 dollars and be centuries old. An example can be many ancient coins,books,stone oil lamps and so on.
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Why is something so old so inexpensive?
Many reasons---
Demand or Desireability of the item
How readily available
Condition
Trends
Location
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Lastly, everything old is not desireable, therefore many things old can be worthless to everyone except the person that wants to sell such item.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Quilt Barns

What are they and how did it all get started? Here is the story of the originator Donna Sue Groves. I've also included the links for Quilt Barns across America,utube video of Ky Quilt Barns,and Maps for Kentucky. Enjoy

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A Patchwork of Hope: Donna Sue Groves, the woman behind barn quilts, faces the challenge of her life

Losing a job and learning you have cancer would devastate just about anybody – except for Donna Sue Groves. She is a survivor. What helps Donna Sue fight is the love and support of family and friends, and the community she has helped create through a simple idea of painting colorful quilt squares on barns.
When Donna Sue Groves was a young girl she spent hours in the backseat of the family car during vacations. Sometimes they would travel from Crede, West Virginia to visit grandparents in their native Roane County, WV. Other times, they would drive through Pennsylvania, up to New England.
Somewhere along the way, her mother Nina Maxine Groves, created a game for Donna Sue and her brother based on the different types of barns they saw dotting the countryside. Points were awarded per barn and painted advertisement. Donna Sue got really good at spotting barns and grew to love the different shapes and the stories of the people who built and worked in the wooden structures.

Years later, when Donna Sue was divorced and her mother widowed, they purchased a farm in rural Adams County, Ohio. When they toured the property, they came across an old tobacco farm. Donna Sue had never seen one before and thought it was the ugliest thing she ever saw!

Looking at the distressed wood of the giant barn, she joked to her mother, a celebrated quiltmaker, that she would paint a quilt square on it to give it some color. Donna Sue had a great appreciation for the colorful fabrics and patterns pieced together by the skillful hands of her mother, as well as both her grandmothers.

Her promise of painting a square became a joke amongst friends and neighbors, until one day some of those friends encouraged Donna Sue to make good. But she didn’t want to paint just one square. With the help of the community, Donna Sue created a “Clothesline of Quilts” in Adams County. The idea was to create a driving trail of 20 squares so that tourists would come to the area to see the quilt barns and stop at local merchants. It would be a way to bring economic opportunity to the area.

The first square was unveiled in 2001 and Donna Sue immediately started getting calls from neighboring counties. They wanted to know how they could start their own trail; asking everything from where to get the paint to how big to paint the plywood squares. Donna Sue was happy to share what she knew.

Almost ten years later, it’s now the National Quilt Barn Trail, spanning more than 20 states and British Columbia. Donna Sue is even getting calls from overseas; she wants to start calling it the “International” Quilt Barn Trail. There are still moments of amazement that this phenomenon all started in a small Ohio community.

In 2003, the second of the Adams County quilt barn squares was unveiled. It was a “Snail’s Trail” quilt pattern added to the Groves’ old tobacco barn. Donna Sue and Nina Maxine even added a second square on the side of the barn that faces their homes, away from the road. It is just for them. A reminder of a promise kept and a promise to keep fighting, no matter what tomorrow may bring.
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a website for more info and Quilt Barns in other states;
http://www.americanquiltbarns.com
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Quilt Barns of Kentucky
http://youtu.be/QtIhl3CVsuI
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Ky Quilt Trails--Maps
http://www.kentuckyquilttrail.org/

Sunday, September 25, 2011

The Eyes Have It

Faces remain a favorite style of figural costume jewelry



Ask the average person on the street why people love jewelry and answers might range from wise investment to frivolous fashion indulgence.

But there's a whole psychology surrounding jewelry too, and why we love what we love and when. For instance, look at three different time periods when large-scale jewelry was the rage: the 1940s, the 1980s, and for the past five years of the 21st Century. Was there a common link in those trends? Sort of.
When life suddenly revolves around rationing and sacrifice, it makes psychological sense that anything big and abundant is going to prove desirable. Maybe a fantastic new dress was out of the question during the worst war years, but an enormous brooch, big as a lapel, was affordable and could make stale fashions seem fresh.
Beyond size, whimsy was another key ingredient for obvious reasons: Light-hearted and novel distractions were cheering, whether in movies or on fashion modes.

In the 1980s, on the other hand, jewelry's large scale was the child of ostentation often married to wealth. Bigness during the Reagan years made a statement about who we hoped we were: important.

Today those two decades intersect. As the divide widens in America between the haves and have-nots, oversized pieces feed the needs of different socio-economic groups hankering for what adornment bestows. A well-heeled woman might opt for a large fancy-color diamond as an enviable and envy-arousing investment, or massive Iradj Moini jewel-encrusted collar that boldly asks: What Recession?

On the other side of greener pastures, someone unemployed and scared out of her wits about the future still needs the occasional balm of lovely novelty, so a big bib dripping in stones on sale for $10 at Burlington Coat Factory can make a girl at least feel for a week like a million bucks.




This is all a round-about way of traveling to the demise of one jewelry trend, which I don't understand at all. In the Facebook era, why would the long-time figural favorite – face jewelry – virtually be made no more? It doesn't make sense, unless jewelry houses put the kibosh on kissers because women weren't buying them, but since just about every jewelry collection includes multiple countenances, what gives? Psychologically speaking, I have no answers for that one.

Happily, the current unfortunate retail trend doesn't prevent us from relishing the many vintage and later visages on the secondary market. It's also worth mentioning that faces remain a favored realm among artists and artisans, if not jewelry companies.


The variety of human expressions cast as jewelry is vast. So are values, styles and quality. Technically, a face pin might be a museum-quality cameo carving worth thousands of dollars, a stunning, delicately painted portrait pin, Art Nouveau ladies cast in sterling silver.




Snag anything that's unusual or remarkable. A face brooch that looks like an Alien Geisha is one example. The flip side is a face that's straight-out beautiful.


Sunday, September 18, 2011

Decorating with Vintage & Antique Plates


Have you looked at decorating magazines lately? The top interior designers are hanging plates everywhere! Decorating with plates is an inexpensive way to make a bold statement. Exquisite china that is beautifully arranged says much about the homeowner. Why not make vintage and antique china an integral part of your home décor?




Here are fifteen savvy styling tips to get you started:

1. Hang plates horizontally along the top of a wall as an interesting border.

2. Butter pats as a border make an exciting visual statement, particularly in the dining room and kitchen areas. Many collectors enjoy displaying butter pats along the kitchen soffit. Another idea, hang around window frame.

3. Place 3 plates in an arch around the top of a framed print/painting

4. Hang large 19th-century Staffordshire platters next to breakfast table or maybe over a door opening.

5. Don’t despair over chips, crazing or glaze flaws — they will add to the shabby chic appeal of this easy-on-the-budget decorating scheme.

6. Plain white ironstone plates in a grouping make a chic statement against exotic wallpapers or lively paint colors.

7. Try matching same theme plates and platters such as roses or fruit-motif. Sometimes mixed unrelated styles work if in same color tones. An arrangement of vintage plates representing various states or tourist destinations is a real conversation piece and a reminder of great vacations.

9. Plates combined with Impressionist artwork create a serene environment.

10. Hang your collection of pie plates

11. Don’t throw out your breakages! Use to make a mosaic and hang that on wall.

12. Display plates arranged in an arch over a buffet or sideboard.

13. Hang a wooden plate-rail shelf in a dining room, kitchen, or hallway, and use it to display plates and do change your exhibit seasonally.

14. In earthquake areas use museum wax to attach valuable china pieces to shelves. Then make sure the shelving unit is earthquake-strapped to the wall as well.

15. Hang a beautiful 19th-century Limoges plate on your office wall to remind you of the lovely home that you have to return to each evening.

Antique and vintage plates can be found at very reasonable prices and these stunning pieces with a history are so much more appealing than contemporary china. Wouldn’t you adore having your home decorated with quality Limoges or Staffordshire china?