Showing posts with label Camp Life and the Tricks of Trapping by Gibson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Camp Life and the Tricks of Trapping by Gibson. Show all posts

Monday, 12 May 2014

New Antique Mall Pix & The Max Memorial Garden

Here are the new items in my half booth (800) at the One of a Kind Antique Mall, located in Woodstock, Ontario. I know it looks pretty paltry, but I've put over 100 items in here in the past six months and sold over 20 items.


Three-panel wrought iron screen with birds on twigs, 1920s brass bridge lamp with a seahorse design, 2 wrought iron jewellery racks, which will also stand flat on a table.



Back row, L to R: large aluminum stock pot; large aluminum kettle; stoneware "whisky" jug with hand-carved wooden plug; green and brown glass jugs;
Front row, L to R: tin lined copper pot w/lid, brass handles; tin lined copper bottomed saute pan with brass handle; large stoneware mixing bowl with dark brown glaze; stoneware bean pot w/lid; stoneware crock; tin red apple shaped container; set of 4 pink and black glazed ceramic bowls; small 1970s COPCO Michael Lax enameled cast iron casserole dish.

Current iteration of the showcase (ditto 800) located on your right when you walk through the main floor door.

Left side of the display case:



Right side of the showcase:



The beginning of the Max Memorial Garden. Hard to believe that I had to have the heat on this morning and now the door and windows are all wide open. Of course it's also letting in a really gross field smell... like something died. Welcome to life in the country.


That's Mombird's nest up there on top of the lamp. Dunno where she got to. I hope she's not afraid of the door being open. Nope -- just checked. She's back. Whew!

Feel free to ask if something catches your eye and you'd like to see more pictures or would like to have something designed. Leave a message here, or email me.

Thanks for looking!

Sunday, 11 May 2014

New Venture... A Jade & Dzi Necklace in Progress... & What's For Dinner?

A little bit of back story -- a year and a half ago I met my new pal Nancy when she showed up at my table at the market looking for crystals, knowledge (hah), jewellery-making lessons... and in return she turned me on to estate sales. A lawn and garage sale veteran of umpteen years, I move to town, hit up garage sales and Goodwill, furnish a place; then get rid of most of the stuff the same way. Move on down the highway, lather and repeat.

But estate sales... ooooh. What a novel concept. Picker entered my vocabulary. Along with the jewellery showcase at the One of a Kind Antique Mall, I now have half a booth (#800) to sell my finds.

After getting up at 6:30 on a beautiful, sunny and finally warm Sunday morning (rain and thunderstorms predicted all this coming week) and driving a few miles down a deserted concession road, lined with more flip, flap, flop and flying red-winged blackbirds than I've ever seen at one time, these were acquired, brought home, washed, priced and went into my booth #800, today:


Of particular note is this score: Camp Life and the Tricks of Trapping by Gibson, 1881, 1st ed. Looks like this is the Canadian edition as the publishing info on the title page is a titch different and it's missing one illustration that I see in the online edition of the book. Tucked inside this particular book was a pamphlet on hunting regulations covering every province in Canada and state in the US for 1903. There are beautifully clear line drawings in the book: how to set traps, how to build a canoe and make camp, etc. I'd keep it, but I think my days in the bush are long gone.

I pulled the hand-carved stopper out of that "whisky" jug, and holy moley, the owner had brewed something fruity in there!


I also got this small table on wheels... thought maybe I could paint the top white... or black... it would make a chic-ish little coffee table...

Tonight for dinner... boned chicken thighs cut up and sauteed in butter and Szechuan sauce on a bed of basmati, green grapes for dessert, with leftovers for three days. Yummers.



I'm in a bit of a bind here. It's been feeling like this has been a year devoid of sales at all the venues, but imperceptibly things have been selling. I look at my table and it seems like all of a sudden there's nothing left to sell, particularly noticeable when people ask for specific items. Oopsies. Better get making new stuff, especially since I'm being moved out of my spot at the market by the coffee pot where I've been since time immemorial. Next Saturday I'll be across the room where Oliver's Farm usually is (half the market moves outside that day) and I'll have tons more display room. Guess I need something to display.

To that end, I started putting this necklace together yesterday. It was sold to me as jade, but... mmmmm, I dunno. Maybe it is. Maybe it isn't. Maybe the bead factory was pushing the envelope a little because, "Hey, this stuff's green; let's call it jade". It's purty though, and since green is one of those colours that for some reason has never done much for me (other than browny-greeny turquoise and Granny Smith apples... and, okay, green grapes), I rarely buy it, let alone use it. So, in the interest of being inclusive to all the lovers of green, because not everyone loveloveloves blue the way I do, here goes.



Green with scattered brown jade beads, handmade Ethiopian copper beads, a rectangular "Dzi" bead -- dunno if this shape would properly be called a Dzi -- but with 2 eyes, etched agate.

Note to new jewellery-makers: tiny jump rings are your friend. They can be placed unobtrusively to subtly spark and set off a long line of beads, the way I've done to "outline" the brown beads, and are also very handy at filling in the gaps that will occur between large beads and large and small beads when the necklace is being worn. It also cushions the wire so over time it doesn't develop an unsightly goink when it comes out of a large focal bead weighting down the bottom of the necklace.

The other thing I'm sure we've all noticed is that bead strings are getting shorter. In this case, I bought two strings, so there are enough beads remaining to make a bracelet and earrings. I'll post more pictures when everything is completed.

To all the mothers out there, Happy Mother's Day, and thanks for looking!