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Showing posts with label consignment shops. Show all posts
Showing posts with label consignment shops. Show all posts

Monday, July 20, 2009

Additional Thrifty Finds


Blue Monday is sponsored by our gracious Sally at Smiling Sally.
This post is also for Today’s Thrifty Treasures hosted by Rhoda at Southern Hospitality.

On a recent visit to my consignment shop I found a blue and white ceramic table lamp costing $2.38. I have placed it on the breakfast table, and turn it on when I want softer light in the kitchen than the bright ceiling lights. It is hooked up to an extension cord with an on-and-off switch on the floor, operated by one’s foot.
For now, a white shade has been borrowed from another lamp not in use, until I can buy a smaller, more suitable one.
This oval pressed glass platter was $4.75.
I like the pattern around the border,
and the starburst in the center. (The camera angle makes it look distorted.)

Another pineapple item for my collection is this crystal dish which cost $1.13. It can be used as a candy or nut dish.

This eight-piece set of ceramic shakers with tiny pink flowers and gilt tops cost $2.76. There are four individual salt and pepper sets.
These are vintage and are in their original box.
Last is a pretty blue tablecloth for a round table cost $1. I found this at one of the thrift shops in town.
It has pretty yellow tulips and green leaves.
It was nice to have you visit today. Do come again as soon as you can, and do leave a comment. I love to read your comments.
Enjoy more Blue Monday posts at Sally’s blog, Smiling Sally. Also, please visit Rhoda at Southern Hospitality for more thrifty treasures.

Sunday, June 28, 2009

More Consignment Shop Finds

This post is linked to Today’s Thrifty Treasures and Blue Monday.

Today’s Thrifty Treasures is hosted by superb shopper, Rhoda, at Southern Hospitality.



Blue Monday is sponsored by our gracious Sally at Smiling Sally.

Here are some more items I’ve found recently at my consignment shop. These prices reflect the fact that the store had a half price sale on the lowest price on the merchandise tag.

This tall mug will hold a lot of hot chocolate or other hot beverage. Cost 88cents. I was attracted to the pretty colors and the cup and mug graphics.

This large hurricane shade or glass candle chimney cost $4.38. It is 12 ½ " tall and 6 ½" diameter top and bottom openings.
A Royal Albert "Country Roses" salt and pepper set came in at $2.76.

A Royal Albert "Country Roses" teacup and saucer went for $4.38. I had been wanting this set for quite some time but did not want to pay the regular asking price of $15.99 at the stores. Sure glad I held out!
For my blue and white teacup collection I got three cup and saucer stands for $2.75.
This rose tea cup and saucer, at half off the lowest price, cost $4.50
This pretty china leaf dish was $1.88. Notice how it is divided into sections.


Not from the consignment store but the thrift store, I found this nice modern vase. I was attracted to its lovely blue color. It was 75 cents.


Well, those ar my thrifty treasures for this week. I hope you enjoyed seeing my latest bargains. Please leave a comment and come again soon.

Monday, June 8, 2009

Today’s Thrifty Treasures – Hen on Nest Tureen, et cetera


As I mentioned in last week’s post, on Friday May 29 I went to drop off a few items at the consignment shop, then went around the large store looking for bargains. One find was shared in last week’s post, Here are more great buys:

A white ceramic soup tureen for $2.13. The plastic ladle is missing, but at that price I couldn’t leave it.
The piece is all-white except for a bit of red and yellow above and below the hen’s beak

The lid is the chicken and the tureen itself is like an oval woven basket.I also found a set of three 100% cotton kitchen towels for $3.25. One is solid, one striped and dotted, and one patterned with leaves.


Also catching my eye was a large hat box for $3.75. It is an ample 14" diameter x 6.25" tall. I’ll use it for storing small linens.


Thanks for your visit, and do come again soon. I would love to read your comment.
Please visit Rhoda at Southern Hospitality for more thrifty treasures.

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Thrifty Country Chic Décor

Treasure Seeking for the Royal Rose Guest Bedroom

The guest bedroom at Oak Rise Cottage has been furnished with some new, some used, and some vintage goods. The theme is floral, with roses as the predominant motif. It is, therefore, a room whose décor elicits remarks about a bed and breakfast when friends see it. As it happens, this is the smallest of three bedrooms. At 9' x 10' is would usually be furnished with a twin bed, placed lengthwise along the long wall.

However, for a more useful guest facility, I chose to buy a full size mattress and boxspring. In addition, I placed the bedhead against the long wall for access from both sides. As a result, the furnished room is fairly crowded, but functional for one or two. As it is, the room also serves as storage until company is expected. The photos show boxes under the window and in a corner.

A headboard was sorely needed to give the room greater poise. Having spent all my money acquiring the house, I was more than short on funds. The headboard pictured was from an estate sale – well, more of an estate disbursement, since the executor did not want anything sold. So, when I admired the bed as we were going about the tasks of closing out the house, she told me I could have it. Later that day she came to my house with two young fellows in a pickup truck and delivered the bed. It is a short four poster made of dark wood (walnut?) and has a shapely headboard



The new linens are "Cottage Flowers" from KMart's At Home With Martha Stewart line. Included are matching sheets, pillowcases, dust ruffle, comforter, shams and throw pillows. The windows have matching Priscilla curtains and tiebacks. A new floral swag adds a finishing touch. ( I also have 2 5-yd. packages of the decorative border, but await painting the walls first.)


Along with a bed, a guestroom needs a nightstand, right? Well, in 1998 we were putting things in a moving van, transferring my mother’s household goods from a storage unit to her new rented house. My brother-in-law was about to toss a beat-up piece of furniture into the dumpster. Realizing that it was a wood nightstand my father had made for me when I was a teenager, I rushed to rescue it. (Does this qualify as dumpster diving?)


When I left New York for grad school in California, I was to end up far from the East Coast except for holidays and family events. From California it was on to Texas to teach and more graduate schooling. Therefore, the furniture, which had been purchased by my parents for me, just went by the wayside. Some things were given away or sold and others were sort of thrashed by the grandkids.



My father designed and built the stand in a style reminiscent of art deco and it fit in well in my bedroom, with its white Hollywood bed and vintage vanity with a large round mirror. Having rescued it I found the stand was in quite bad shape; the lovely finish of gold over a pink undercoat was quite ruined and the edges were bruised and battered. Nevertheless, sentiment made me clean it up, put two Battenberg lace place mats over the top, and place it in my guestroom. I hope to find someone to sensitively restore this piece, since it is one of few items I have of my late father’s cabinet making work.


There is no dresser or chest of drawers, only a wood bookcase, which I bought from a yard sale for about five dollars. Above it is a wood with a broken pediment and flame. I bought it in 2001 from an antique store where I worked briefly. It was in the basement show area in the store; I described it to the owner and she quoted me $40. Later, when she saw it she said that was not the mirror she was thinking of, but honored the quoted price.


From this same antique store I bought the painted wood bed tray ($5) and the pink and white crochet doily (along with many other pieces of vintage linens, such as the little heart-shaped white pillow with crocheted edging on the bed).


One day I went into the store and spotted a nice little antique white shelf. As I was looking at other items, I set it down on something. A few minutes later I saw the same design shelf. I was thrilled to have a pair. Walking back to where I had placed the first shelf, it was no where to be found. I asked the owner, and she said she and seen it over there, and set it one another table for better display! So I just got to buy one shelf, which fit nicely on the guest bedroom wall with a Lenox nativity plate on it. ( The ceramic placque in front of the plate was given to me by a thrift furniture dealer)


Also in that wall group is a ceramic plaque painted in Italy; the frame is of ivory with gilt edging. For years it hung in my mother’s bedroom in New York. The white round mirror is of wood and is gilded around the edges. It cost a dollar or two at a small consignment shop. The china plate with the roses is from a junk shop where I got lots of stuff. As I was always nosing around his shop looking for blue and white wares, when I asked the owner the prices for a flow blue plate and this rose plate, he quoted $3. for the blue and white, but only $1 for the beautiful floral plate -- which I did want and did buy! (I thought the blue was flawed in its flowing, and just did not care for it.)

In a new blue ceramic Chinoiserie vase from Marshall’s discount store, are paper flowers from a craft store. The matching blue bowl is under the window. The new "Antiques" sign is also a craft store find. Other Marshall’s finds in the room are: the new pair of antiqued white metal shelves on the side walls; the etched crystal water carafe on the nightstand; the floral wastebasket near the window; the tall framed rose print by the curtains; and the doll chair on the bed, which awaits Christmas time for its doll or bear occupant.



From eBay auctions are Avon Cape Cod ruby red glassware – a hurricane candle lamp, pair of candlesticks near the window, and pair of vases below the wood mirror.
A Museum catalog was source of the crystal pineapple on the nightstand.


Travel shopping yielded the painting above the bed. My younger brother bought it in Viet Nam when his tour of duty as a medic was completed.


I bought the small pitcher holding lavender sprigs at Glastonbury Abbey, England. The small hand painted blue tin box is Mexican, purchased when I was sponsor of a school trip to Mexico City. The pink plate behind the water carafe on the nightstand is from a bone china cup and saucer set my sisters and I brought back from London for our mother in 1979. Over the passing years the cup was broken.

Whew! In the guest bedroom I’ve identified about 10 of the 20 sources which I listed in my post on Oct. 2, "Treasure Hunting for your Home." They are all underlined above in the first instance mentioned. See list in the labels below.

I hope you enjoyed reading about my tiny guest room.

Monday, October 15, 2007

Other Consignment Shop Finds

To pass the time while waiting for my car at a maintenance shop a few weeks ago, I thought to visit a new consignment shop I had read about. It was in short walking distance, so I took off and soon found the building. Walking up the stairs, I looked for the shop. A postal delivery person putting mail in the boxes inside the door, told me this was the right address, but she did not know the location in the building. Entering an office, I asked about the shop and was told the entrance was on the side next to the parking lot. As I was walking across the parking lot, toward the entrance (which I could now see, as well as the huge sign) a pleasant man came alongside and asked if I was going to the shop. He turned out to be the owner. Inside, his wife was glad to hear that I had read about the shop and was coming to check it out.

The consignment shop is large and full of wares of all sorts, including antique, vintage and some new items. My finds consisted of a fine bookshelf, an antiqued white wood stool, a cream ceramic bowl, and four china and crystal thimbles. A call to the auto service shop revealed that the car would not be ready for a couple hours. So I had a ride home, and the delivery of the bookshelf and stool, from the shop owner.

Here is the bookshelf and stool in my study. The bookshelf is sort of an etagere in the form of a truncated obelisk. The green ceramic pinecone finial acts as the point for the top.




This new piece allowed me to take quite a few books off the floor. The stool, with a green cushion, serves as flexible seating. Without the cushion it is a handy place for a current project.

The ceramic bowl has a stylized swirl design, similar to Art Deco style. In the bedroom right now (under the bedside table), it will be used for potpourri.



Hope you enjoyed my adventure in treasure seeking for my home.

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

Consignment Catch II

In Sunday’s blog I mentioned the pine hutch I bought at the consignment shop. It was delivered today, since yesterday was Columbus Day.
Here is a photo of how it looked when it first arrived, before cleaning:





The unit was only a bit dusty, but while sanitizing it, I got to know every inch of the solid pine piece. The upper molding has simple dentil detail. The two upper doors have glass panes with frosted etching to imitate leaded glass. They can be changed out very easily since the glass is held with screws and metal braces. Under these doors are two small drawers. The base unit has two larger drawers and a two-door cabinet with one fixed shelf.




With a surge of patriotism, and conscious of being in the great Bay State (or, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts), I have decided to display the blue and white transferware called “Liberty Blue.” This English Staffordshire ware was made for the Bicentennial of the United States in 1976. Each piece depicts a building or event in the American Revolution. Knowing that I liked Blue and white dishes, my middle sister bought pieces each week at her supermarket in New York and gave them to me as a gift. In later years, I worked to gather twelve 5-piece place settings, plus the various bowls, platters, gravy boat, salt and pepper shakers, cereal and berry bowls, etc. in this extensive line. My sources were yard sales, antique and thrift stores, and eBay auctions. I still lack a few pieces, but have plenty enough for a Thanksgiving dinner or other meal with family or friends.






The surface of the base cabinet or buffet holds pantry goods in canisters. Mixed in with the display are some Bordallo Pinheiro green leaf ware and vintage aluminum tray. The base cabinet provides storage for the rest of the “Liberty Blue,” plus some “Blue Willow.”

This looks so much better than the bookcase I showed on Sunday, right?




When December comes, it will be fun to put Christmas wares on display in my “new” pine hutch and buffet.