Save Shopping blog on social network:
Showing posts with label shopping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shopping. Show all posts

The Find: Two Times Two

Today's entry looks a little different today because I'm reposting a guest blog I did for Kim over at Twice Remembered. Her blog is full of inspirational ideas and written with a genuine sentiment. If you haven't met her, go introduce yourself!

Guest Blogger: Author of "The Find", Stan Williams

{Please help welcome today's guest blogger Stan Williams, author of the book The Find: The Housing Works Book of Decorating with Thrift Shop Treasures, Flea Market Objects, and Vintage Details . Thanks for sharing, Stan!}



ello to all the talented followers of Twice Remembered. I’m honored to contribute a guest blog, especially since Kim’s work embodies exactly the kind of innovative talent that’s featured in my book, The Find: The Housing Works Book of Decorating With Thrift Shop Treasures, Flea Market Objects, and Vintage Details. I wrote The Find to inspire people to try their hand at decorating with vintage and thrift finds. And the most common question I get is “How do I know what to buy?”

Now I know that for the most part, Kim’s followers KNOW what to buy, because I see it in your own blogs, but here are a few ideas for those who might need a little jumpstart.

1. Set a budget. Going into debt buying vintage and thrift items defeats your thrifty fun. I always say pay with cash if you can. It gives you great negotiating power, and when it’s gone, well, you stop shopping.

2. Try to buy your vintage and thrift treasures in the condition you’ll use them, or in a state that you can easily clean or repair. I avoid items that are going to turn into messy projects or that I don’t know how to refurbish.


{New York decoupage artist John Derian bought this crusty metal chair and welcomed its weathered patina into his home. Photo from The Find by Jim Franco.}

3. Buy quality over provenance. I never worry about a brand or a label that’s attached to a potential piece that attracts me. Instead, I am a stickler for quality. Watch for thin laminates, drawers that don’t open easily, and furniture that’s over wobbly or warped. Now there is NOTHING wrong with collecting specific brands and marks, especially if it’s your passion. It’s just not mine.


{Hallmark VP and design whiz David Jimenez took this common Thomasville server and with a coat of black paint turned it into a focal point in his Kansas City dining room. Photo from The Find by Bob Greenspan.}

4. Paint is your friend! A shabby desk or a distraught table might gain a fresh new lease on life with a fresh coat of paint and new hardware.


{Jimenz found this chair at a yard sale and with a fresh coat of paint he turned it into a bedroom treasure. Photo from The Find by Bob Greenspan.}

5. Color is a great unifier. Dissimilar pieces all of a sudden appear as old friends with a consistent color story. This is especially useful when putting together a mix-and-match collection of china.


{Prop stylist Joe Maer used blue and white hues to unify his mix-and-match china. Photo from The Find by Jim Franco.}

6. And finally, only buy what you love. If you are just so-so about a piece, well just leave it for the next shopper. Thrift karma rewards those who are not greedy and leave a little something for someone else. Also, if you are truly drawn to an item, then if you buy it, it should be easier to to incorporate it into your décor, even if you have to get rid of something else.


{From the Birmingham, Alabama home of Coastal Living's Heather Chadduck. She loves decorating with numerals and everything French. Photo from The Find by Jim Franco.}

If you’d like your own copy of The Find, it’s available at Barnes and Noble, Borders and on Amazon. Being The Elegant Thrifter, it’s my frugal duty to inform you that the best price is at Amazon! Come visit me atwww.theelegantthrifter.com. I look forward to meeting you.

Always Frugal, Always Fabulous!

Stan Williams
The Elegant Thrifter
Read more from this post in Shopping blog »

The Gift of Thrift: Message in a Bottle

My pals over at The Hired Guns recently took a few select folks on a cocktail sea cruise around Manhattan, and here are the invites! They took easy-to-find bottles, glued a copy of a vintage map on the front and rolled the the invitation through the opening for a clever invite that definitely grabbed people's attention.

When I saw the paper portion of the invites, I suggested they go a step further and make the edges look weathered and rustic....sort of like the things we did in Cub Scouts. Now I'm sure there are other ways to do this (rip the edges and apply shoe polish, stain the paper with tea, and so on....), but I looked to my inner pyromaniac and burned all 40 or so pieces with a lighter myself.

I didn't realize what a project I had taken on, let alone how much smoke I would create, prompting several office mates to "jump ship," and the janitorial staff to make an unexpected visit. Either way, I love the way they turned out. Note the little red wax seal on each bottle that gives them an even more personal touch.

For more unique party ideas that won't break the bank, pick up The Find: The Housing Works Book of Decorating with Thrift Shop Treasures, Flea Market Objects, and Vintage Details at Borders, Barnes & Noble, Amazon or Powell's.

Drifting off for the weekend!

The Elegant Thrifter

Always Frugal, Always Fabulous!

Read more from this post in Shopping blog »

The Find: High Strung

While I was thrifting my way through the streets of San Francisco a few weeks ago, I dropped into a Goodwill in Pacific Heights and was greeted right inside the door by this funny hodgepodge of guitars and ukuleles. It was an instant collection ripe for the picking. Provided you had the space, I imagine an entire walled filled with these stringed treasures, hung just as they are, or even painted -- all one color or a mixture of hues -- for a visual treat.

These plucky items also made me think of a wall decorated with old tennis rackets that I relished when I was scouting locations a few summers back for The Find: The Housing Works Book of Decorating With Thrift Shop Treasures, Flea Market Objects, and Vintage Details. Hanging on the front porch of a beach cottage on the Fire Island community of Saltaire, a couple of the rackets had popped their guts, one was cracked and another was still hanging in its protective wooden frame.

The rackets appeared as if they were just waiting to be grabbed and toted off to the tennis court for a neighborly, early-morning match. Maybe they had hung there so long that when newer technology finally replaced them, they maintained their place of honor. Or maybe the trio is purely decorative. Either way, they serve up a pleasing focal point in this dreamy, relaxed locale.

For more images from Saltaire, pick up The Find: The Housing Works Book of Decorating with Thrift Shop Treasures, Flea Market Objects, and Vintage Details at Borders, Barnes & Noble, Amazon or Powell's.

Always Frugal, Always Fabulous!

The Elegant Thrifter




Read more from this post in Shopping blog »

Fabulous & Frugal Fun: The Frame Game

Empty frames are such common finds at flea markets and garage sales that they are often overlooked when they don't have their center of attraction. But a gorgeous frame is a gorgeous frame, encasing a painting or mirror, or not. I love the mysterious yet whimsical effect that Simply Grove's Kristen Grove of Boise, Idaho, achieved when she leaned two empty ornate frames against her bedroom wall among a set of fabulous mirrors.

For more unexpected uses for everyday discoveries, pick up The Find: The Housing Works Book of Decorating with Thrift Shop Treasures, Flea Market Objects, and Vintage Detailsat Borders, Barnes & Noble, Amazon or Powell's.




Always Frugal, Always Fabulous!

The Elegant Thrifter


Read more from this post in Shopping blog »

The Find: Comes Alive!

Tonight I'm heading over to the brand spanking new Housing Works store at 130 Crosby street for a meet and mingle full of fabulous shopping! It's from 7 to 9, and will be a ton of fun.

I made a video, which I'll be showing there, and will share 7 easy tips to thrift shopping.




1. Embrace the Unexpected

2. Paint is Your Friend

3. Seek Quality over Provenance

4. Buy and Use As-Is

5. Color -- or Lack-Of -- is a great unifier

6. Start a Collection

7. Turn Clothing into Home Decor.

Robert Elliott at elliottgdesign designed gorgeous slides and was the creative director on this project. And he'll be there, too!

Come by tonight to pick up your own copy of The Find, or visit Borders, Barnes & Noble,Amazon or Powell's.

Feeling a little teched-out today, but ready for a night of thrifting -- The Elegant Thrifter

Always Frugal, Always Fabulous
Read more from this post in Shopping blog »

Sublime Sundays: John Derian


John Derian is just another subject in The Find: The Housing Works Book of Decorating With Thrift Shop Treasures, Flea Market Finds, and Vintage Details, who so graciously allowed his home to be featured within his pages.

I was thrilled and honored The Find nestled prominently on one of his signature, grain-sack upholstered sofas in a charming corner of his whimsical shop.












Drop by the John Derian shop on East Second Street and buy a copy from him, or visit Borders, Barnes & Noble,Amazon or Powell's.

Enjoying a calm Sunday -- The Elegant Thrifter, Always Frugal, Always Fabulous!
Read more from this post in Shopping blog »

Fabulous & Frugal Fun: A Pause for the Cause

When you find a fabulous new thrift store, you almost want to keep it a secret because its wares are so fine that you want it all to yourself. But when it’s a benefit re-sale shop like The Cure Thrift Shop at 111 E. 12th St., that benefits the Diabetes Research Institute Foujndation, you want all well-heeled New Yorkers to know where to donate their best cast-offs.

 

I’m always amazed by my visits there, and can never just drop in witout picking up a thing or three Recently, I found a Radio City Music Hall program from the 1950s and turned it into a gift for a dancer friend. And then I found this funny compact with a glittery dollar sign atop it, a perfect boost to anybody’s economy!


For other thrift inspirations, pick up my book, The Find, The Housing Works Book of Decorating With Thrift Shop Treasures, Flea Market Objects, and Vintage Details at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Borders and Powell's. 

Read more from this post in Shopping blog »

The Find: Seven Tips to Decorating With Thrift













Based on The Find: The Housing Works Book of Decorating With Thrift Shop Treasures, Flea Market Objects and Vintage Details, tips to successful thrift shopping:

• Define your shopping budget. Spending more than you have takes all the joy out of thrift shopping.

• Make a thrift shopping kit that includes your thrift wish list, color tiles, fabric swatches, design inspiration from books and magazines, a tape measure and room and door measurements.

• Know how you’ll get your purchase home. Can you call a friend? Rely on a man with a van? Drag it into your car or a taxi? And once you get it home, will it fit into your space? Refer to measurements in your thrift shopping kit.

• Set your peripheral vision to see the beauty in the unexpected. A coat of cruddy paint might be hiding a lovely dresser or a rejected, printed cape might be transformed into a glamorous pillow.

• Buy only what you love. Just because a piece of furniture you spy might have a designer’s name that makes it valuable, if it’s ugly, then leave it alone.

• Check for quality. Drawers should open smoothly, legs and cases be sturdy, and upholstery free of odor and stains.

• Always carry cash. It’s a great negotiator in many places and helps you stay on budget.

Thrifty tips you can shop by from The Elegant Thrifter 

Always Frugal, Always Fabulous!

Reserve your copy of The Find: The Housing Works Book of Decorating With Thrift Shop Treasures, Flea Market Objects, and Vintage Details at Amazon.com



Housing Works photograph by Anna Moller: www.annamoller.net

Book cover photograph by Jim Franco


Read more from this post in Shopping blog »

© Shopping blog: shopping