Vintage suitcases for a Spring design project. Scoped out this weekend in in Upstate New York.
Category Archives: Collecting
Got Game?
This is what Valentine’s Day gifts look like around these parts. How I find things like this romantic, only those very close to me would understand. Suffice to say my recent and plentiful meals at the John Dory Oyster Bar have brought mounted game fish even closer to my heart. A few great finds including a great vintage Beam’s Choice bottle to add to my collection…
Love Lasts

Love these antique shoe lasts with the cobbler’s handwritten measurements over them… not sure for what… Maybe a towering stack in a massive glass vessel or something…
Right Now

Loving:
1. Heavy brass paperweights
2. Old worn tennis raquets
3. Little gilt-edged plates
4. Wicker drinkware
5. Old manual clock radios
6. Limited issue bourbon bottles
7. Antique schoolhouse chairs
Road Trip: 127 Sale

Just returned from the legendary 127 Sale… a recap of the adventure HERE & pics after the jump…
THE DIXIE COP: 600 Miles of Yard Sales with My Six Year Old
Read my new article for the Huffington Post HERE.
Bring on the Dancing Horses
As I mentally prepare for our annual family trip to Wildwood on the Jersey Shore, I’m remembering how much I really really like carousels. And how much I LOVE carousel horses. I’d have a whole menagerie bolted into the floor in the corner of our living room if my significant other would go for it.
A recent late-night internet rabbit hole took me into the depths of carousel history.
Apparently the first carousels date back to the Byzantine Empire and were used by Turkish and Arabian horsemen for cavalry training. The early carousels had no poles – the “horses” were chained to the ceiling and swung out to the side by the centrifual force of the spinning carousel… And they were powered by real horses! How awesome is that? Almost beats Morey’s Piers. Almost.
Fisher Men
Remember these? I had so much fun with Fisher-Price Little People. I’d love a massive clear fishbowl full of these on our coffee table. The new ones aren’t nearly as cool.
Brand Royal
I absolutely adore porcelain anything, and Porzellan Manufaktur Nymphenburg is the dream stuff is made of. They have been churning out the finest porcelain in the world since 1747. Inextricably linked to Germany’s Royal Bavarian Wittelsbach family, the house produces all of its figurines and serving pieces using original methods at the Nördliches Schlossrondell Palace in Nymphenburg. Schloss Nymphenburg was built in 1664 as a summer residence for Elector Ferdinand, and is still owned by the Bavarian royal family.

No other factory in the world still manufactures its products the way that Nymphenburg does. It’s one of the last places where all products are made entirely by hand, and the term “manu factum” really does mean what it says. The conscious decision not to use any type of automated process has produced the most breathtaking pieces. The porcelain paste – which other companies buy as a semi-finished product – is made on site. Nymphenburg also creates and mixes its own paints; its porcelain painters work without templates. Each item is shaped and painted by hand, each ornament individually applied and all designs, regradless of how intricate, are cut with tiny blades into the unfired porcelain. Nymphenburg consciously decided to only employ manual production methods, and since the 18th century has refined them to near perfection. Clients are often amazed to hear that delivery of a four-part food service will take two years.
The buildings and workshops are as much works of art as the pieces they produce. I could live in the Paste Mill or Gilding Room. The spaces are so magnificent, they are available to rent out for events and film shoots. Can you imagine???






Meet The Flockers

I love love love little flocked animal figurines. Ever since I was three or four, I’ve secretly wanted to stockpile them. The best ones were made by Josef Originals and were designed by Muriel Joseph George in California and Japan from 1945 to 1962. She also made straight ceramic pieces but the furry ones were my favorites.
The company was sold to George Good in 1982 and he continued to make Josef Originals until 1985. Good sold the brand to a larger conglomerate which put and end to the fuzzy menagerie within a few years. You can still find the occasional great piece on ebay, usually around the holidays. Some faves below.




































