Saturday, September 12, 2015

When I want a melody---



Decor/crafts for Advent Fest


Rescued a hymnal from Hillsdale UCC from a garage sale. The lady felt badly that it ended up in her sale; so she gave it to me. I'll try to get it back to the church where it belongs.
The bling wreaths were $2 for all four. The ornament tree was $5.


This made my day: a musical box from Germany that plays a section from the Blue Danube. $5.
It's made by Steinbach in Hohenhameln.  On the inside of the box it says West Germany, so it's from before 1990. Play the video (below, right) to see how sweet it is. 



Dishes for the 2016 Afternoon Tea at First Congregational in Salem, Oregon. Reserve your tickets now! :)
Dishes set me back $30. 


Wooden candlesticks from Sweden. $1 for all three.
Five books for $1




Monday, September 7, 2015

Where there is tea, there is hope.

Finds from about six garage sales and one thrift store in Seattle this Labor Day weekend.



Wooden Christmas tree candlestick with elf, made in Sweden $1.
Turtle and whale a quarter each.
Scented candle $2
Necklace $3 (thrift store)
CD's were $1 each
Letter game $2
Vera Bradley bag $10 (thrift store)

Tea Cosy 50 cents
Crate & Barrel Jingle Bell Picks $1
Stack of melamine plates to add to collection for church picnic $5
Mug 50 cents (thrift store)
Aprons $2
Infinity scarf (blue floral) $1

Big books were $2 each; small ones ten cents each.
Langston Hughes bookmark fifty cents
Note cards $1.99 (thrift strore)
Card game $1.50


Monday, August 31, 2015

Dishes!


The spoils of last weekend's garage sales.

Eight place settings of these Czech dishes to be used at the afternoon tea of 2016. I paid $12.50

It's blue. It's white. It's pretty. It's only $3.

Gold colored box with chargers $3. My daughter wanted the box. I added the chargers to my charger collection.


Believe it or not, I found another turkey platter with the same acorn/wreath design. It's the exact same one as last week's. This one cost $10 (no chip). I will put them both to good use. Two, red, wire cupcake holders $1 each. Alarm clock tea pot $3. All mugs $2.50 total. CD fifty cents. Homestead kitchen knives $1.50. Christmas scarf $1. Citrus press fifty cents. Assorted wooden spoons one quarter. Mary Engelbreit book $2 (Estate Sale).




Two sweet mugs. The one on the left is by Waechtersbach, Germany. The one on the right is by Otagiri, Japan. 



Saturday, August 22, 2015

Something in the air








On Friday, we shopped near the location of a major gas leak. The smell of rotten eggs was very noticeable. Fire fighters, police and the gas company had cordoned off a small area. We were joking that we might land in pieces in a free box if there was an explosion. Not really funny, I know. 


Today, we braved smoky air from forest fires in Eastern Oregon and Washington.
The sky is still very hazy. But none of that kept us away from garage sales.
Here's what we found:








A Ravensburger puzzle for $1
A new Vera Bradley bag for $5
books for fifty cents each, mug for a quarter
cotton tea towel from Scotland one dime, aprons fifty cents each
lot of Clinique make-up fifty cents
box of Yankee Candle tea lights fifty cents.


You didn't know that this Playmobil family lives in a teapot, did you?
Teapot $3; Holy Family $4


Los Angeles Potteries Bread Dish $1
It has a chip and a hairline crack, so I paid exactly what it was worth.


This might be the find of the weekend: a vintage Pepsi tray
with a scene from Coney Island.  Paid 75 cents.


$1 for this wood-mounted Mary Engelbreit mini poster.


Holiday platter $2 (has a chip) made in Italy
and a brand new, sealed Putomayo Christmas CD $1.50


Sunday, August 16, 2015

Too much to list!

This week's treasures. 

$1 for all candles in the picture.
CD's were expensive this week: $1 each.
$1.50 for all fabric in the picture.
$2 for the counted cross stitch kit.
$1 each for the large Kirkland conditioner and the Matrix foam.

$5 for the Teapot. I've been good about teapots this summer: this is only the second one I bought.
It's sitting on a stack of 8 square Crate & Barrel plates. I paid $6.00

Nordicware cake pan. $3

When I bought the teapot, the lady said she had matching cups in her kitchen. She went inside to get them. I paid $5 for 4.

Two of them are in this picture. Front right.
The floral cups are Spode. They were $6.00 at Goodwill. 


Blast from the past: 1970's stationery. I had similar notecards as a kid. You write your note on the inside, fold it over and seal it with a matching sticker (a strawberry in this case). I have no idea what I will do with them. But they were only a quarter.

Find of the week: a salt glaze jar. I know these as Jars from Cologne (Keulse Pot). I Googled those today and learned that this type of jars (made from river clay) did indeed originate in the region around Cologne. And as German emigrants settled elsewhere in the world, this pottery technique was introduced in other places. These jars are the predecessor of canning jars. The salt glaze made them impervious and resistant to acid. People would stuff them with vegetables (cabbage for instance), fill the jar up with vinegar, put a clean cloth over the opening, close it off with a wood lid, put something heavy on the lid and store it in a cool place. It was the way to preserve the summer harvest and have fresh vegetables, eggs, and even meat in wintertime. 

Saturday, August 8, 2015

This weekend's stuff


Starbucks Verismo: $20 (we get the coffee for free: the advantage of having a barista in the family)
Set of nice Libbey juice glasses: fifty cents
Set of 6 Zak! Design melamine plates: $1
Two sets of Christmas coasters: quarter
Hurricane candle holder (Ikea) with candle: $10
Books: $1.25
Boeing paper clips: $1
CD+DVD: $2
Apothecary jar: $5
Practical finds not pictured: Pack of Dockers men's t-shirts and cedar BBQ planks: $5 all.

I love it when I can buy a book at a g-sale that's on my Amazon wish list: This is San Francisco $2
And one on William and Catherine $1
Set of 6 melamine plates: $1
CD's: quarter each
$4.50 paid for all 6 mugs in the photo.
Billy book end (Ikea): quarter
Trader Joe shopping bag in the background: free box

Swimmer: $3
I have several Halloween figurines from the same artist (whose name I don't know)
This was the first time that I found a figurine of the same make at a g-sale.



Sunday, August 2, 2015

Tchotch·ke noun informal: a small object that is decorative rather than strictly functional; a trinket.

The haul from this weekend: $32
We shopped garage sales in spite of the 100+ degree weather. On Friday, I scored a nice (new) San Diego Hat Company hat for $1, an angel from Germany's Erzgebirge $1 and a made in Germany Tiddlywinks mushroom with a still-sealed bag of winks inside $1.50
Then on Sunday, we went to the neighborhood sale around a golf course. Upscale neighborhood= Upscale prices. I ended up with tchotchkes (or in Dutch: Hebbedingetjes)-- plain kitsch. But we had a lot of fun and walked for 3+ hours and bought bottled water at many a sale to keep going. 


Made in England kitsch is still kitsch. But I couldn't pass up on this Liliput Lane Tea Room Cottage.
It's a miniature of my dream house. 


Jemima Puddle Duck made by Royal Albert not Beswick, alas. $10
Martha Stewart banquet size table cloth in the foreground $2.50
Melamine plate for the July 4th picnic collection fifty cents
New Pear tea towel fifty cents


From Germany with love: Waechtersbach mugs. A quarter each.