Well, I went to the auction, with my little list, but only bought one thing from it. I had 2nd thoughts on the display cabinet as so much glass to potentially break, and difficult for me to manouvre on my own. It went cheaply enough too, but I made the right decision.
Wasn't this a fabulous piece of Anglo-Indian furniture - I nearly wrote art, because the carving on it was so fine. The table I quite wanted was the piece to the left, but all the examples I saw on line had an extra tray on the top, which was missing on this piece. It was quite heavy and difficult for me to shift on my own and I would have had to wait another hour or so, and I decided against it. In fact, I bought nothing that I had marked down when viewing the auction on line!
At the front was a Sundanese/Ethiopian shield from around the very late Victorian period.
So, what DID I buy?
Then, two unfinished quilts which of course had to come my way. This will need a couple of borders on it to make it single bed size. Looks like she may have intended it as a lap throw originally, but love the design.
Hah - this will take a little more fettling! Of course, I don't have any of the prints she has used to will have to improvise :) I'll lay it on my bed today and see what prints I have in my stash which I could use, though I don't buy much in pale pink as a rule. More work than I foresaw as I have NO pinks that match. I am going to unpick the top edge, take out a row of blocks and use those for the centre, and then put the border back on. No-one should notice. A rainy day job or perhaps when I am "resting" this afternoon!!
So, all in all, a lovely afternoon out. It's always a beautiful drive there and back through varying countryside - fields and woods as you go over the county border, and then wilder hills on the Welsh side. Lots of Dog Roses blooming, and Foxgloves heralding the start of summer, and gardens full of beautiful plantings, roses especially. I listened to The Three Ravens on the way there, but it went from the end of Merlin to the Langs Red Fairy Book which wasn't to my taste, so it was Dan Snow on the way home, a brilliant epic of Harald Hadrada, who I hadn't realized travelled and fought over half the known world including battles in Sicily, and he lived for varying periods in Constantinople and Byzantium and Kiev. Mention of the Varangian Guard and daring exploits. How I missed not having Keith here to discuss this with as he was so well read and would have been able to discuss this with me at length, bless him.
So, to sum up yesterday, what did I buy? WORK!!!








Hope you can find the right pale pink fabrics to finish off that big quilt and get the chairs repaired.
ReplyDeleteI have zilch that matches that particular pink which has an ashes of roses tint, and the brighter prints, no, nothing to match those either, I shall be unpicking a row to reuse and move the border across.
ReplyDeleteChiming in with a podcast recommendation...I very much enjoy The Rest Is History podcast (I was reminded of it as they did an episode/series on Harald Hadrada). ~ Melanie ps.those chairs are beautiful!
ReplyDeleteI have always loved history, despite the way it was taught at school! I am late to podcasts, but wouldn't be without them now.
DeleteAs I was reading this my first thought was that you had bought yourself a lot of work. But it will be so worth it when it's done won't it. That box especially will look brilliant after a good polish and with a lovely tassle for the key.
ReplyDeleteIt's a little work to improve good things. The caddy will come up beautifully.
DeleteThe wooden tea caddy would be much my choice instead of anything made of metal. I'm wondering what scent or 'smell' it holds when you open the lid? The only drawback in my thinking, to old wood is that musty smell it sometimes holds.
ReplyDeleteAgain, I'm intrigued with the quilts. Both are variations on what I know as 'trip around the world' although the large plain centers I've not seen before.
When I worked at the quilt shop in Wyoming we sometimes let out repairs of vintage pieces to a lady who specialized in such. She told me that much of the fabric she used for repairs or replacement blocks/patches came from older pieces of clothing--items scrounged at rummage sales or charity shops. She could often find prints that were similar to the original fabrics, and older clothing had the much washed and softened 'feel' that blended well with the quilt.
I'ver just had a sniff! and it smells of no tea - probably been empty for 50+ years, and up in the attic, judging by the dust on it.
DeleteThe lady was good with her sewing machine, but the quilt I'm "fettling" at the moment is a combination of polycotton, 100% cotton and a heavyweight fabric heading towards linen, so NOT the ideal combination as there will doubtless be stretching when I try and reassemble that central missing area. Ah well, if I struggle I will take it along to get Alex to sort it at my patchwork class next week.
How lucky you were to have that vintage stash lady to repair the vintage quilts you had in the Wyoming quilt shop. I have SO few pinks and none at all in that dusty-pink colourway. Hence the unpicking of a row (which took HOURS). Hopefully my idea will work out. I am hoping she has just spray-basted the top to the back . . .
A very interesting pot to the right of the helmets....
ReplyDeleteQuilts.. As you say, buying yourself work! But very nice and worth doing thise
I thought so too. Had NO idea what it might go for, and so hadn't left bids on anything. It was a big chunk to carry around too.
DeleteYup, bought myself work, but a good way of turning a lesser thing into a good one and I am fortunate to have the skills (or at least, I hope I have!)
I listened to the podcast on Harald Hadrada. He really did live an amazing life.
ReplyDeleteWow, what lovely quilts. Getting them finished properly will make a difference. Love the chairs and that tea caddy is amazing.
ReplyDeleteGod bless.