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Category Archives: Vintage Shopping

 

This week I worked out that the reason I have so many WIPS isn’t as I thought because  I can’t make up my mind about what I am making…it is purely mechanical! And not my creaky old body mechanical either…it was my stupid machine! I hadn’t realised just how poor a condition my twelve year old Janome was in!  I spent one hundred and thirty five dollars last year on a service to be told there was nothing wrong with it! Maybe nothing wrong if you manually adjust the tension of the seams by stretching the fabric and the stitching in opposite directions!

I have had a fabulous time sewing with my new Brother Quilter’s Edition machine. It is so smooth and quiet and it adjusts the feeds to the fabric and it threads itself and it has wonder of wonders a one step buttonhole. Oh the delight that is this machine! I might even be able to bring this through and sew in the night …as you know I have insomnia and often am up until five am…prior to this I was concerned at the noise of the machine waking my husband and downstairs neighbours but this machine might just save my night time sanity and get lots of work finished too!

Presently I have almost finished auditioning the half hexagon blocks for one of my quilts which will accompany the basic half hex tutorial.

 

I seem to have hit on  a nerve with the tutorial…most people seem to be nervous about the actual sewing together of the blocks and strips.

 

I have also been thrifting and have sold several of my finds this week….including  an Anthea Crawford jacket

 

and two skirts to go with it…one was brand new with tags in silk by Ralph Lauren and the other one one is by the Smithsonian store and is also silk chiffon. My friend is so lucky that these are her size!

 

 

 

Found today at Vinnies for three dollars a trio!

Whoops …will have to practise if I want to  continue to use the mosaic quilt as a centre piece for these photoshoots…ever so slightly crooked as you can see below!

I was really excited to find these Japanese trios as they go so well with the three Lustreware ones I found late last year. Those were ten dollars each…the story of how I found them is here.

Thrift Tuesday and the Unwanted Lustre Ware

So now I can have mix and match tea parties!

satin lace

Fabulous finds this week! A stunning pewter evening jacket..as new and very elegant.

cellini bag

A Cellini bag…I have been after one of these since they first came out..I found it on the way out of the store. It had been put out while I was upstairs looking at fabric!

Basque silk skirt

A fabulous Basque silk skirt which finishes off the outfit!

textures

The textures are fabulous…I even found an embroidered bag in silver/grey as well!

I found the skirt in a 22 but its easy for me to take it in to my size….its a fitted skirt so it will work well.

Now I just need somewhere to wear it!

Boussac throw

More of my rescued from landfill fabrics.  “Odalys” by Romanex de Boussac of France

Boussac

with blooms 15 to 20cm each…stunning…I made this bag set below with it.

Serendipity and Boussac

Though I still have heaps of offcuts if anyone is interested.

Antica

Xian chintz….1994 a panel about one metre in length…quite glorious and highly unusual…again thrown out of the charity shop by staff.

Tuesday Thrifting

This one I found for sale in a pile of what looked like a deceased estate goods at Vinnies. It is a gorgeous curtain panel from the sixties…as new and glorious in colour…..

Tuesday Thrifting

like a painting. Would look wonderful fussy cut and framed or fabulous in a retro home as an ottoman cover.

Tuesday Thrifting

I still have over a metre of this fabric left….would be happy to fussy cut it for you or provide a bigger piece if you wanted to make something larger. I am pretty sure it is a form of barkcloth…highly collectable and hideously expensive in vintage fabric shops online.

Deco Lady and Thrifted Tuesday

I was reading Kim’s post on her great thrift find for her Thrift Thursday post and it brought to mind an amusing incident a few years ago at my husband’s then workplace…Paddington Centre of St Vincent de Paul in Sydney.

Paddington Centre gets a lot of designer clothes and antiques donated directly to the store by well meaning patrons of the charity. My husband, once he started dealing with antiques started going to antique fairs and antique centres in his spare time and built up quite a knowledge base so that the charity would get a good price for their valuable donations.

In his time there as manager he was responsible for a lot of really valuable items fnding new homes, benefiting the customer and the charity. His main area of expertise, apart from everything that he was required to do to successfully run one of the most successful charity shops in an exclusive area of Sydney was the antigues and various bric a brac. While he pottered around with that he was able to see what was going on in the store.

One extremely quiet day he asked his staff if they would like to go up to the local Westfield [shopping mall] to get an idea of  pricing for the designer clothes which they were fortunate enough to receive…often new season designer originals. The store uses various magazines like Vogue etc and also phones shops to ask prices but he thought it would be a good idea and  also motivate his staff to actually go out to the centre and get a feel for what was currently in fashion and also to help motivate them in their work . One by one they refused, you could not even pay them to take a coffee break and have a few hours off window shopping! Is it any wonder that finds like my stunning Bally thong/ sandals slipped under the radar?

My wardrobe...summer 2009

My husband and I popped into Bally on Wednesday to see how much their sandals actually were, they do not show the price from the outside of the store, one has to go inside and actually lift a shoe to see the sticker beneanth! The flat thongs were six hundred dollars and the strappy sandals nine hundred, the sandals I found are in between that., strappy thong sandals…exquisitely made.

The dress above by Marina Rinaldi I found at Randwick centre, I paid eight dollars each for a lot of her clothing range which was donated, more and more came in each day and I kept on snapping it up as it is plus sized and quite sort after. After about three days the Supervisor in Charge realised, as well she might as I have googled prices for Vinnies for her on many an occasion, and upped the remaining items to between twenty and sixty dollars each! A good move considering one of the  new blouses had five hundred dollars on the attached label!

Kim’s story of the five dollar chest of drawers which was supposedly missing a drawer is a classic example of this kind of mentality, except in this case Kim was the winner, not the charity and certainly not the person who donated the item in good faith to the charity.

The table I have shown here is another case of the ignorance shown by some staff in charity shops, I found it early last year in Randwick Centre and paid eighty five dollars for it. It is a craftsman made mid twentieth century table, unusual to find here and my husband said it would have sold for around three hundred and fifty dollars in Paddington Centre. Unbeknown to me he later gave his Area Manager another seventy or so dollars for the table, which was not necessary in my mind, it was my purchase and if they wanted the right price for it they should have sent it to him to sell in the first place! So the charity gained an extra seventy dollars because of our knowledge and my husband’s honesty …..this is particularly galling to me because of  the way we have been treated by this charity recently.

Anyway, it is abut time charity shop workers lifted their game, and  it is up to the people who employ them to ensure that they are earning their salary. St Vincent de Paul workers in Sydney are relatively well paid for shop workers…they earn more than Myer staff and also receive tax benefits which boost their salaries even further…so come on…it is time these workers started doing the work necessary to earn their salaries and to honour the people who donate the goods which make their jobs possible!

table 1

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