Sunday, February 26, 2012

Start your deliciously wonderful APRON collection ...


Ruffled Sheer vintage apron  
The nostalgic charm of a VINTAGE APRON ... offers a huge connection to the past for anyone who ever ran home from school and straight to the kitchen to see what smelled so good all the way from the front gate. This fast-growing  collecting trend is part of the popular draw to all things kitschy and a fine example of the ‘tacky’ to some, ‘treasures’ to others collectibles popping up in vintage shops everywhere. Antique linens in general, including vintage aprons, are just one of the many ‘hot’ items tugging at the apron-strings of collectors hearts everywhere.
The item always home made with love and featured fabrics, colours and styles as varied as the women who stitched them. The most popular collectible style being the near new or never worn examples sporting lovely hand work, embroidery, exquisite sheer fabric and heritage laces and worn only on the best of occasions for the finest of entertaining. The less than refined examples are no less of a draw and the trims of bright contrasting colourful fifties-era trims and rick-rack zigzag bring a charm to the simple utilitarian item. Another popular style is the reversible aprons sporting a bright floral and matching plain trimmed pocket on one side and when flipped over offer the opposite in a plain apron with the bright floral featured in the pocket. This style offered the style conscious hostess a quick turn-around to a fresh look after cooking but just before serving the meal.
Round & Red Ric-Rak fun 
Mother size aprons with a matching young daughter-size twins are a special treasure as are the Christmas themed aprons often holding their original starching too special to even wear. The bridge playing set had a look all to itself with lovely handwork featuring black and red aces, spades, hearts and diamond are another hot commodity.  The keen eyed collector may even find the apron matching hand-worked linen napkins and card table cloth with tie-down corners to complete the well-heeled hostesses’ afternoon luncheonette and weekly card game.
Smocked Sweet Vintage 
The gingham aprons are always a crowd pleaser and boast popular hand cross-stitched borders and waistbands and pockets trimmed in a contrasting colour. Many also feature lovely full round hems and smocking delicately stitched into the cinched waistbands.
Most women have a draw to the aprons, not only because they grew up always entering a cooking underway kitchen wearing one style or another, but also fondly remember their first school sewing project and making their own personal apron touting their handwork talents.
Festive Holiday Glitter
As a collector one might still find these gems in thrift shops, although as the popularity increases, they are getting harder and harder to find. In the vintage and antique shops expect to pay from $10. to as high as $60. or even $80 dollars for a prime example of hand work and finery. Once a collection is started it rarely stops at one or two as each style, each print, each trim, brings back a fond memory of an era when the kitchen always smelled wonderful and the apron of the day always reflected the occasions, the season or the talents of the cook. Vintage aprons are a deliciously appealing item to collect. 

Friday, January 20, 2012

MELMAC mania ...


check out over 40 groupings of Vintage MELMAC for sale at:
  http://www.etsy.com/shop/CndnPrairieAntiques?section_id=6669023

When the trend to vintage campers, boler trailers, airstreams, teardrops and more became the fun thing I knew it was only a matter of time till people restoring the retro camping gems would shift their focus to collecting all the decorator goodies to make their look complete inside and out. I started stock piling Melmac almost 10 years back filling bin after bin as friends thought I was crazy. By the time the hot retro trend showed up I was ready with wonderful collections and near full sets collected a piece at a time. In the summer of 2009 I packaged it in delightful groupings and I sold it as fast as I stocked my antique store shelves with this colorful dishware. My online stores still feature a great selection although it is getting harder and harder to find first hand and the prices have skyrocketed. Melmac will be one of those items I am happy to say I was ahead of the trend on! 
REGAL Sears Warner Spekcaled ware
http://www.etsy.com/listing/80804462/vintage-kitsch-rare-melmac-speckaled
With a history back to the 1930’s the use of melamine particles to produce hard plastics has led to decades of popularity for what became trademarked Melmac household dishware. Many manufacturers produced melamine products but the Melmac brand carried the highest standards and quality control. By the 1970’s it declined in popularity as Melmac was limiting to modern kitchens and was slowly replaced with stone and earthenware that could go from the freezer to the microwave or oven, and then into the dishwasher.

In its heyday hardly a magazine household advertisement or full spread decorating feature was complete without some version of Melmac featured in the images of life back in the day. It is fun to thumb through vintage magazines and old catalogues and discover the many patterns and displays of Melmac. For your best collecting value look to find only those pieces clearly marked MELMAC on the bottom. Prices go from the pennies to the hundreds so know your market and whether reselling or reusing enjoy your collecting!
hard to find the rattan wicker lined melmac is so retro!
http://www.etsy.com/listing/79319468/vintage-kitsch-melmac-hot-4-mugs-with


Friday, December 23, 2011

Antique Printing Press & Cabinet of lead typeface ...

Chandler and Price
Craftsman Old Style
http://tinyurl.com/7u7f9co

chandler & price PRINTING PRESS
http://tinyurl.com/7u7f9co
ANTIQUE Printing PRESSES are all the rage with many dealers and collectors looking for these rare nostalgic industrial tools of the trade to recreate authentic printing press products.

Artists, scrap-bookers, multimedia arts, potters, are on the lookout for not only lead type face lettering  but the old press cabinet drawers - so the a twenty drawer cabinet with the typeface contents is an exciting find all on its own!

This rare old printing press find is a Chandler and Price Craftsman Old Style with the tell tale curves on the flywheel. Harrison T. Chandler, an Illinois banker, while negotiating to buy an interest in the Cleveland Type Foundry, met William H. Price, son of a builder of printing presses. They founded the Chandler & Price Co. of Cleveland to build printing equipment.
This CHANDLER & PRICE hand fed open platen jobbing press is marked:

"The CHANDLER & PRICE Co CLEVELAND, OHIO, USA"
and has a brass plate marked:

"SOLE AGENTS TORONTO TYPE FOUNDRY Co LIMITED TORONTO MONTREAL HALIFAX WINNIPEG"

- marked PAT APRIL 2 87 (1887) No 1060.



The PRESS CABINET  has 20 drawers full of original lead typeface and is a fabulous find all on its own! A great antique cabinet full of history!
20 drawer PRESS CABINET full of letterpress TYPEFACE
http://tinyurl.com/7u7f9co

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Inkwells ... love of an an era gone by

Moriset & Fount-O-Ink inkwells
http://tinyurl.com/csew9zn

Is it the romance of dipping the feathered quill’s precise sharp nib? The thought of a desperate lover penning a love-sick plea in tear stained ink by flickering candlelight? Perhaps a picture of the astute banker signing-off on a hard earned mortgage-release in the dirty thirties, with the elegance of a fine document and the professional dignity of a well flowing pen? Whatever the vision, all are good reasons for the love affair of late with inkwell collecting in this loss of an era gone by.
It seems as a culture, the more addicted to our computer and the quick stoke of the keys we become, and the more desensitized we are from the days of a pride in penmanship and the art of the written word, the more we are drawn to the romance of the inkwell and the dip of the nib pen. For practical purposes we do not sway back to the pocket pen full of staining ink, but we are definitely reverting back to graceful written notes on elegant stationery, and lovely desktops with which to sit and write them from. The draw to the inkwell seems a logical fit and the feverish passion of late for collecting them has been comforting to those who fear the loss of our written word to the sometimes too-fast paced technology consuming our pride of personal penmanship.
Collectors hunt for a variety of inkwells with some collecting all styles and others preferring an era or a theme. Popularity is over-ruled by personal preference as unique as one’s own handwriting. As with all antiques there are reproductions and fakes out there so buy from a reputable dealer and as always buy what you love and what is in your collector budget. When a more favourite find comes along one can always trade-up as your collection takes shape and you find your area of interest and knowledge. As always enjoy the alluring hunt for the harder and harder to discover inkwells.






Thursday, December 15, 2011

Retro Fashion Up-Cylcing ...

Reduce reuse recycle has never been more true than when it comes to up-cycling clothing! It is an exciting time in fashion when there is truly nothing in or out but only that which speaks to individuality, comfort, nostalgia and a love of all things vintage. The beauty of vintage clothing is it has stood the test of time. The quality of many of the wares and the craftsmanship in the production is something that is hard to find in our mass produced throw-away culture.
VINTAGE WEDDING DRESS


Stepping back in time and pulling forward a piece of clothing into today’s world is not only fun to do but especially fun to wear. Whether a casual feeling groovy shirt or a flower power dress, a tartan wool winter warm boot skirt or a full on vintage elegant wedding dress, the news that everything old is new again when it comes to fashion is a welcome way to express your style. It is all good, as it saves the landfills from too much trash, reduces way too much consumerism by lessening the demand for mass produced goods and gives an old garment a second, third or even fourth life.

               Now that is fashion-fun!


LEISURE Suit LOVE
http://tinyurl.com/7eoukpo
classic PENDLETON
http://tinyurl.com/7el5khs

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Typewriter luv ...

http://www.etsy.com/listing/85779502/vintage-typewriter-corona-floating-shift

Typewriters date back to 1860's and carry as much fascination in today's modern world as they did almost 150 years ago.

After all, what aspiring writer does not want a vintage typewriter hoisted up on the corner of their writing desk for inspiration?

When I had my antique shop, Inktiques, typewriters of every era graced the vintage desks with displays time gone by.



From the book, From Spinning Wheel to Spacecraft, The Story of the Industrial Revolution by H W Neal: "Up to this time communication in business correspondence had consisted of letters written in pen and ink, often by men employed for their handwriting clarity and skill. In 1867 Christopher L. Sholes, assisted by Carlos Glidden, Samuel W. Soule and Matthias Schwalbach, designed and produced a "writing machine" in a small shop near Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
The machine, which Sholes named the "Type Writer," had a series of lettered and numbered keys which, when struck with the fingers, printed letters or numbers on paper. Eventually the manufacture and sale of the device was undertaken by the firm of E. Remington and Sons, Ilion, New York, and one of the first customers to buy a typewriter was the famous author, Mark Twain. For advertising purposes he wrote a letter which the manufacturers printed and distributed. It said:
“Gentlemen:
Please do not use my name in any way. Please do not even divulge the fact that I own a machine. I have entirely stopped using a Type-Writer for the reason that I never could write a letter with it to anybody without receiving a request by return mail that I would not only describe the machine, but state what progress I had made in the use of it, etc., etc. I don't like to write letters and so I don't want people to know I own this curiosity-breeding little joker.
Yours truly, Saml L. Clemens”

http://www.etsy.com/listing/85779716/vintage-typewriter-royal-quiet-deluxe?ref=v1_other_1
http://www.etsy.com/listing/40660618/vintage-typewriter-underwood-deluxe

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Collecting FAB Modernist Ceramics ...

http://www.etsy.com/listing/87752642/vintage-poole-pottery-delphis-ware-set

With a history dating back to Dorset, England in the 1870’s, Poole Pottery, established as an architectural ceramics business featuring tiling, flooring and fireplace surrounds of the day. Growing into a domestic and decorative ware company in the next century and moving from earthenware to clay, the company flourished but like most found itself struggling post war years. The movement to free form patterns and unique shapes and designs challenging the traditional took Poole to a new height with many designers and painters lending their name to this exciting line of pottery.
By the end of the 50’s and for the next two decades and beyond, Poole became all about bold designs and shapes. The exciting Delphis line rolled into production in the early 1960’s and the 1970’s Aegean ware lines were introduced, each piece hand painted with extensive use of rich flowing colors popular to the day, the browns, oranges and yellows gave weighty bold color to the unique abstract  designs.
Poole Pottery became the home of many prolific ceramic visionaries with a key role in the mid-century art and design movement. Sadly after more than a century of production by 2003 Poole Pottery was in dire straights and was sold privately after selling off many of its museum artifacts. Poole Pottery survived the bankruptcy and by 2007 operates under a new group producing giftware and unique pieces.
http://www.etsy.com/listing/87754282/vintage-poole-pottery-aegean-ware-large



http://www.etsy.com/listing/87753876/vintage-poole-pottery-aegean-ware-large