adimpleate

a mélange of light verse, descriptive schtick & snapshots of thrifted style.

the genuine pleasure of textures

The selective eye must be an experienced eye, an eye that knows the genuine pleasures of harmonious colors and textures, of sensitive line and proportion, of the play in contrasts of light and shade. The selective eye must see beyond immediate limitations, recognize possibilities that a fertile imagination suggests, and translate the difference between the genuine and the false.

The above quote comes from Michael Taylor’s book, The Finest Rooms. This week I am fascinated with texture, embellishment and ornateness. Below are some highlights of my recent thrift findings from Goodwill.

A vintage embroidered silk chinese robe or jacket in pristine condition. I am thinking just to display it on my white wall. Ever noticed when you browse any interior magazine or even Ikea catalog, you see a piece of clothing hang casually in the middle of the room.

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I also scored a vintage hand crocheted table cloth which I am going to repurpose as a throw at the end of bed.

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My favorite jewelry this week are a vintage dainty dagger pendant, abalone inlay earrings, silver bangle and turquoise nuggets bracelet. All sterling silver.

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Linking up to Thrift Share Monday.

of course it’s all luck

Of course it’s all luck, so said famous French photographer, Henri Cartier-Bresson. He spoke in the context of snapping candid photography, ..hmm… any avid thrifter could totally relate to the quote, dont you think so? Speaking of photography, I scored three vintage polaroid camera from my Goodwill Outlet.

1965 Polaroid Land camera Swinger Model 20

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1980s LMS Sun 600 and Polaroid Spectra 2. Now, if only I have room to display this new collection.

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My favorite favorite find of the week is this vintage Ray-Ban caravan sunglasses, paid $1.59.

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I also hauled a vintage Baldelli Italia wine carafe, which I use it to hold my Valentine roses.

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Vintage polaroid cameras – $1.00 each
Valentine roses – gifted, probably $15.00
Knowing you’re the lucky one – priceless

Linking up to Thrift Share Monday.

when a dollar brings a hundred pleasures

In a letter to Edward Dimmitt dated July 19, 1901, Mark Twain wrote:

The whole scheme of things is turned wrong end to. Life should begin with age and its privileges and accumulations, and end with youth and its capacity to splendidly enjoy such advantages. As things are now, when in youth a dollar would bring a hundred pleasures, you can’t have it. When you are old, you get it and there is nothing worth buying with it then. It’s an epitome of life. The first half of it consists of the capacity to enjoy without the chance; the last half consists of the chance without the capacity.

I dont know Mr Twain, my dollar certainly brings me hundred pleasures. Example is my latest acquisition of green and spring blossom Pyrex bowls, each is at $0.99, $0.59 and $0.49. I love my Goodwill Mr Twain. Yall’ dont have a thrift store back then, do you?

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My kitchen theme is blue and green. I have left behind many great condition pieces of pink gooseberry or the brown home & country Pyrex.

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I found these orange and yellow divided dish at Salvation Army for $0.50 each. The colors are beautiful, I figured they can act as accent pieces.

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These are my thrifted Corningware pans. I love banana bread, thats why I got two bread baking pans. I was roasting a chicken many moons ago and I havent figured out how to clean those stubborn oil spots. I learned my lesson, I should have lined the pan with aluminum foil in the future.

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Linking up to Thrift Share Monday.

at first sight

We sometimes encounter people, even perfect strangers, who begin to interest us at first sight, somehow suddenly, all at once, before a word has been spoken.
~ Fyodor Dostoevsky

I stumbled upon this belt buckle while diving the accessories bin at the Goodwill Outlet. The leather belt was really pretty beat up, yet at first sight I fell in love with the silver tone and the turquoise inlay. ‘W.Nezzie’ is stamped at the back of the buckle and after some googling, it turned out he is a Native American Navajo jewelry designer. On one website, a similar belt buckle is priced $129. I am thinking to tie a leather string and turn the buckle into a pendant. How gaudy would that be?

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More addition to my vintage Samsonite collection. Each of them cost me around $3.00.

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I scored this crystal Princess House cake pedestal from Goodwill a few weeks ago. Since then I have been baking every weekends–experimenting cakes, cookies and scones recipe using flaxseeds (I am allergic to eggs). The ‘sweetest’ $2.40 I ever spent.

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For more thrift galore, hop over to Selena’s Thrift Share Monday.

a vintage affair

I’ve no idea when I’m going to wear it, the girl replied calmly. I only knew that I had to have it. Once I tried it on, well… She shrugged. The dress claimed me.
~ Isabel Wolff, A Vintage Affair

When I saw this tapestry purse, I remember the above lines. Seriously I’ve no idea when or where I’m going to wear it. Intricately made and in pristine condition, I just could not leave it behind.

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Of late this hand-crafted Scala cloche wool hat is my favorite hat.

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I tried not to buy more shoes or boots, yet this Frye boots was left behind on top of the shoe piles bin. The mustard color really strikes me yet pleasing. For $2.50 per pair, a girl just got to have it.

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All this bounty is from the Goodwill Outlet where accessories sold by weight, $1.39/lb. I am a happy camper ;) … err ..thrifter.

Linking up to Thrift Share Monday.

between my pressing duties

Oh yes, I have been slacking big time updating my blog. On my off day, you’ll find me at the Goodwill Outlet, ‘treasure hunting’  ;) Sometimes the mindless thing, like digging through every pocketbooks, gives me an opportunity not for thinking but not-thinking. The mental blankness is restful. And sometimes you hit the ‘jackpot’. I think I’ve found more than ten pieces of 14K gold jewelry at Goodwill Outlet handbags bin. It is addictive.
But for today I’d share with you a few of my favorite finds. First a vintage boxed note paper by Current, Inc. From my google-fu research, I believe this Post-a-Notes was produced in 1950s. I love love the illustrations. Arent they gorgeous with cute phrases: ‘Just to let you know what’s cookin‘ and ‘Between my pressing duties‘.

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I am a sucker for vintage dress patterns. I wish I have the time to sew.

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I sketch and paint, I adore and appreciate beautiful old illustrations of stationery, patterns and books. One day I’ll snap some pics of vintage nature and garden book collection. Below are some of my black & white art, and sketches. All frames from Goodwill.

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Tove Jansson writes in The Summer Book:

A person can find anything if he takes the time, that is, if he can afford to look. And while he’s looking, he’s free, and he finds things he never expected

Linking up to Thrift Share Monday.

frugality & discernment

Instead of resolutions for the new year, I’ve chosen a few key words I hope will influence my life in the coming fifty-two weeks. They are: responsibility, eloquence, frugality, discernment. I hope that the writing I produce this year is both responsible and eloquent; I hope to maintain a sustainable lifestyle, to not live beyond my means; and I hope to more wisely choose how I choose to spend my time, and with whom. It seems wiser at this point to give myself broad directives than specific, and therefore potentially unattainable, goals.

~ by one New York City editor/writer, found via

Happy New Year my readers. :)

sweet sleep

So, this is a thanksgiving week, I am taking the whole week off.

Yesterday, I had an 8 am job interview. As much as I love my current job I hate the long hours. For the past few months my life has become work, sleep, work and sleep. Like yesterday, I got home from the interview I took a three hour nap. Then I fell asleep while watching the ten o’clock news. Today, guess what, I am still in my jammies.

Not poppy, nor mandragora, nor all the drowsy syrups of the world,
Shall ever medicine thee to that sweet sleep, Which thou owedst yesterday.
(Othello, Act III)

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suri under rug II
aslan in deep sleep

sublimated collection

A passage from The Volcano Lover:a romance by Susan Sontag:

Collecting is a species of insatiable desire, a Don Juanism of objects in which each new find arouses a new mental tumescence, and generates the added pleasure of scorekeeping, or enumeration. Volume and tirelessness of conquest would lose some of its point and savor were there not a ledger somewhere with one’s assorted mille e tre (and, preferably, a factotum to keep it updated), the happy contemplation of which at off-moments counteracts the exhaustion of desire that the erotic athlete is condemned to and against which he struggles. But lists are a much more spiritual enterprise for the athlete of material and mental acquisitiveness.

The list is itself a collection, a sublimated collection. One does not actually have to own the things. To know is to have (luckily, for those without great means). It is already a claim, a species of possession, to think about them in this form, the form of a list: which is to value them, to rank them, to say they are worth remembering or desiring.

What you like: your five favorite flowers, spices, films, cars, poems, hotels, names, dogs, inventions, Roman emperors, novels, actors, restaurants, paintings, gems, cities, friends, museums, tennis players . . . just five. Or ten . . . or twenty . . . or a hundred. For, midway through whatever number you settled for, you always wish you had a bigger number to play in. You’d forgotten there were that many things you liked.

What you’ve done: everyone you’ve gone to bed with, every state you’ve been in, country you’ve visited, house or apartment you’ve lived in, school you’ve attended, car you’ve owned, pet you’ve had, job you’ve held, Shakespeare play you’ve seen. . .

What the world has in it: the names of Mozart’s twenty operas or of the kings and queens of England or of the fifty American state capitals. . . Even the making of such lists is an expression of desire: the desire to know, to see arranged, to commit to memory.

What you actually have: all your CDs, your bottles of wine, your first editions, the vintage photographs you’ve purchased at auctions—such lists may do no more than ratify the acquiring lust, unless, as it is with the Cavaliere, your purchases are imperiled.

He wants to know what he has, now that it may be lost to him. He wants to have it forever, at least in the form of a list.

You probably know that the secret of wearing three inch heels is to always have a stash of flats in your car and your office drawers. Ummm …and band-aids in your handbag.
I scored some pretty cute flats from Goodwill Outlet, $2.50 per pair.

flats1Clockwise: Orange yellow Cole Haan, Bally loafers, Ettiene Aigner, Nine West red slingbacks, Coach, Steve Madden & Antonio Melani navy blue patent leather.

what’s in a name?

Juliet:
“What’s in a name? That which we call a rose
By any other name would smell as sweet.”
~ Romeo and Juliet (II, ii, 1-2)

What’s in a name, that which we call a coffee, by any other name would smell as redolent.

When it comes to coffee, Shakespeare is wrong. What do you value, the intrinsic quality to your taste or the external big name labels like Starbucks? Hmm …tough question! I want quality yet I love brand names. So what a girl got to do, I’d buy Wawa coffee, and pour it into Starbucks cups. :)

My Starbucks mugs and cups collection. All thrifted from yard sale, Goodwill and Salvation Army.

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