Category Archives: Thrifting

Time Spent at Value Village = Good Weekend

Hi everyone.  Have a good weekend?  

Ours started out with a bang.  One of the dogs (Sophie most likely) defiled the music room rug.  Thanks to it being Flor carpet tiles, I was able to pull up the stinky ones and hose them off in the backyard (it was unseasonably warm this weekend.  It felt like spring.  I started spring cleaning and actually hit the linen closet and some drawers pretty hard.)

I’ll let you guys know if the stink removal treatment is effective.  As it is, we started keeping the music room door closed when we’re not around to “supervise”.  I’m starting to wonder/doubt/question my idea of using Flor in the living room (and bedroom).  Those dogs look so angelic but they can be sneaky.  Well, Sophie mostly.  Shenanigan doesn’t care what anyone thinks, he just does what he wants.  It’s a dog’s life.

I digress.  I have actually been on the hunt for some picture frames for the Christmas gift artwork that I keep hinting about.  So I did what any girl would do and dragged my husband to our local Value Village (Goodwill-esque thrift store).  I never come home empty-handed from Value Village, it’s statistically/mathematically impossible.  Case in point.

Less than $10 later and only one item resembling a picture frame. 

I was most excited about the chalkboard so I got to work on it Sunday night while JT cooked up a fabulous Rick Bayless recipe for dinner.  First I sanded all the tape gook and things off the wood frame.  Next I removed the hanging hardware off the back and applied my own “hardware” – 3M command picture hanging strips. 

Yep, $1.81.

Then, I mounted it in the kitchen where we can use it to jot down grocery list items or the menu for the evening (if we’re feeling fancy).  Still no chalk though, so the picture looks a little bare.

Pardon the pictures, I was taking them late Sunday night without any natural light.  No amount of Photoshop can overcome that obstacle.  I realized I haven’t shown a lot of views of our kitchen.  I’ve been hiding it.  Now you’ll see why.  In the next few months I hope to replace the dingy, dying peel and stick floor tile from the 60s with a warm grey (recycled content) ceramic 12×12 tile.    In the next few months I hope to replace the stove entirely (it’s beyond gross).  In the next few months, I am going to do a total overhaul of the furniture, add window treatments, paint the upper and lower cabinets, add cabinet hardware, build shelving . . . the list goes on and on.

But I digress.  Here’s another before and after highlighting the Value Village rag rug.  I’m not 100% sold on it because right now it’s not holding a true rectangle shape.  It might end up out on the back porch.  For $2.99, thankfully, I’m not too concerned.

(See Sophie and Shenanigan’s new water bowl present peeking out from under the island cart?  I still love it.  Shenanigan was scared of it at first and started out only licking around the edges instead of actually drinking water but he eventually figured it out.) 

Since I’m going all out with these kitchen glimpses, I might as well show the other two (scary) views of the kitchen as well.  Keep in mind : WORK IN PROGRESS.

Yep, needs a lot of work.  We’re going to fix you all up kitchen, don’t worry. 

So, that’s it.  One tiny South City black and white tile kitchen.  It’ll be looking a lot better in a few months.  I already like it a little better thanks to our Value Village chalkboard.

The weekend finished out with Mexican Hot Chocolate (recipe by Rick Bayless, made by JT) and No-Bake Fig bars (recipe idea from Oh She Glows, switched over from dates).  Our center island cart came from the Gypsy Caravan (a big flea market held to raise money for the St. Louis Symphony ever year — I think I paid $20 to get in.  Antiques and classical music?  I’m in.)  It used to be in a medical and/or dental type office in probably the 1920s to 1940s.  It is a heavy-duty metal with a baked on enamel coat.  I like it a lot.  The grungy floor tile and oven you can see beyond it, not so much.

And here we are, back at Monday.  Have a great one.

Music Room Money Break Down

The music room has been “all done” for a little bit now and we have been enjoying it.  This room has been a storage closet for far too long. 

In the spirit of inter-webs oversharing, I wanted to do a budget break-down to see what our little make-over did to the pocketbook.

Furniture ($145 subtotal)
Shelving unit (3 piece) – Craigslist score  – $60
Wooden chairs (2) – Free in the alley
Black vinyl & chrome stool – from a hotel liquidation center – $10
White and wood Gap sweater drawer – from a different liquidator – $75

Accessories ($168 subtotal)
IKEA magazine bins (3) – $20
Target Missoni stash box – $12
IKEA clip lights (3)  – $36
Black floor lamp – college gift – free
New lamp shade from Target – $30
Guitar hooks (2) – $30
IKEA faux sheepskin – $10
FLOR area rug – found at St. Vincent de Paul – $30

Art ($160 subtotal)
Blues Guitar Player artwork – gift
Omaha train poster – from an antique mall, way back – $60
Johnny Cash, bird flipper, won in an auction  – $100

Supplies ($48 subtotal)
Blue paint (2 gallons) and some paint supplies – $40
Black spray paint – $4
Painter’s tape $4

Having a place to store your husband’s clunky, large  musical equipment so that it looks good — priceless.


Grand Total: $521

So . . . not the cheapest room make-over ever but really most of these items we have bought over the last few years or were lucky enough to be gifted or acquire for free.  It is funny to me that I spent more in the accessories and art category than the furniture category — that’s not typically how interior designers operate.  However, I do have a matched pair of alley chairs in the basement waiting for reupholstery. . .  So once that happens, the furniture part of the budget will jump up a little more.  JT suggested a home upholstery job, which might keep costs down but maybe not nerves and tempers.  We’ll see.

The biggest impacts in the room were probably the wall of storage ($60) and the sapphire blue paint ($40).  So even if I had just dropped that $100 to start out with, the room would have been on a good step towards being done.  That’s the little take-away for me.  Sometimes I have a tendency to not want to start a project until I have all the bank set to finish it up the way I want.  So then I never really start on projects!  With this one, I just jumped in and got it started.  It will be a work in progress but the paint and the storage made it feel enough like a new room to feel like Phase One of the makeover was complete.

Flor-ed

This weekend, between painting and moving furniture, I realized it had been a while since I had been to a thrift store.  The pull was growing stronger.  I couldn’t stay away any longer.

Off to the nearby St. Vincent de Paul thrift store for a quick fix.  The furniture seemed a little over priced.  I had my eyes peeled (gross saying I know) for a little mirror or something for the bedroom.  Instead I spotted this:

A whole table of Interface Flor carpet tiles, all boxed up.  Most of the patterns were not my cup of tea, but one caught my eye:

After I emailed my find over to my trusty Interface rep (the advantages of working in commercial interior design), he told me this was an old pattern called Jailhouse that used to go for $30 per square yard.  I had just bought a box of twenty 50cm tiles so about 6 square yards — what should have been $180 was $30.  We’re going to use this as an area rug in the music room/office. (The image below is an install shot from the Interface European website, it’s not available on the US site any longer. . . .)

There has been a lot of commentary on the passing of Steve Jobs.  I most certainly respect and honor Mr. Jobs’ contribution to technology — he definitely seemed to be a champion for form AND function — creating things that worked well and were well designed. 

However, another big CEO passed away this year — Ray Anderson of Interface Flor.  I think Mr. Anderson also “thought different” like Steve Jobs and pushed the boundaries of his industry.  Mr. Anderson wrote a book, “Confession of a Radical Industrialist” and understood that a eco-conscious company could also be a profitable company.  Interface Flor not only creates gorgeous carpet tile, it is a highly sustainable organization.  Plus and plus.

I was trolling around the Herman Miller website today for a work project and found an interesting article — “30 Successful Companies that Get It“.  Of course Herman Miller was in there, but so was Interface and Apple.  I hope more companies can “get it”.  Heck, I hope I can “get it” too! 

Every (furniture) addict needs an enabler . . .

Living in South City as we do, amongst many two and four family buildings, it is often moving day for the apartment dwellers.  The end of the month will reveal some marvelous treasures left behind in the alleys as the apartment dwellers head on to greener pastures. 

Right now, the basement is so full with said alley treasures that I didn’t think bringing in any more would be fair to the chairs I already have. Last Saturday, with such gorgeous weather and JT tethered to his work computer on call, the dogs and I ventured out for a long walk.  On the way home I spotted some more alley orphans.  They looked sad in the alley, cast aside and hopeless.  They didn’t deserve to go to the orphanage yet.  Once Shenanigan, Sophie and I got home, I told JT of my trouble. 

Me: “I need your help.  I spotted some more alley finds.  I know I don’t have any more room in the house though so I probably shouldn’t bring them home, right?”

JT:  “We could go get them if you want.  Maybe you should start an eBay store for all your furniture.” 

That was not what I was expecting!  But away we went to rescue some alley orphans and bring them home.

This guy (above, with Shenanigan watching over) didn’t have any cushions, but probably so much the better.  It has great lines and a good solid frame and I am going to have some fun picking out its upholstery fabric!

This was a matched pair, which is nearly impossible for me to leave behind.  They will need a little more help but overall had a good shape and were solid wood.  I want to try out the Minwax Antique Finish Restorer that Mr. Modtomic has posted about a few times (once here). 

At some point I’ll have to delve into the basement and really document all the extraneous furniture I have adopted.  You may be suprised at how much I have been able to hoard away down there.  It’s both a blessing and a curse of being able to space plan — I am able to fit a lot into a very compact area!  It’s probably a good thing the Fairlane takes up the garage or that would be full as well.  As to the eBay thing, I’m still not so sure, but it’s definitely something to consider. 

Anyone else had a really good alley score?  That’s the best kind of recycling to me!

Sometimes I feel like the internet is taunting me . . .

. . . . like today, for instance.  Browsing through the interwebs, I clicked through a few blogs to end up at Rocket Century, a local STL  MCM resource (but really it’s online only/mostly).  Not only do I find out I had missed an open house/warehouse sale there, but I see this  on their site . . . .

My dream home for my ‘ZZ’ plant, also affectionately known as Zappa or George.  He’s still sitting there in his sad Home Depot pot on his sad wanna-be-Alvar-Aalto-but-really-from-Target stool.  Sigh.  And this is honest-to-goodness vintage.  $125 is still a lot to spend on this right now considering all the other projects I want to do . . . Sorry Zappa.

The Internet continued to knock me around when I spotted this on SF Girl By Bay’s site:

The image was originally posted here on a Spanish (?) design site.  Even in Spanish (not a language I know, except maybe those few words that everyone knows – burrito, chihuahua, etc.), this image says “Here’s the Saarinen table you’ve been searching for to make your bedroom complete and perfect forever and ever.”  Well maybe not that, but you know, what I was thinking when I posted about my search for a Tulip Table earlier in the month.

And to add insult to injury, I saw on The Brick House (another blog I follow religiously) that Morgan just found a Tulip (Coffee) table on Craigslist for $100!!!  I’m glad the thrifting gods smiled on someone, even if it’s not me. 

The knock-out punch came this morning when I got an email from Design Within Reach (of rich people) that the Knoll sale (Tulip table is Knoll) was ending.  Sigh again. 


I think I may need to unplug from the internet this weekend to keep from being battered any more.  Is there a support group for Internet Bullying of the Online Shopping variety?

In all reality, I have my health, I have a wonderful husband and supportive family and fun, great friends.  I have a job that I enjoy, I have a place to live and I have the dogs for entertainment and companionship.  I have this blog to vent my frustrations and share my design ideas.  I don’t need a tulip table or a bullet planter to complete any happiness of mine. 

However, I do believe in surrounding oneself with beautiful, artistic, inspirational things that will last for generations to come, so one day when I’m making the big bucks (call me in thirty years?), they will be mine!!

White is nice . . .

I don’t know if you guys have started to notice my obsession with the color white . . . .white vinyl chair, new white bed frame, white floating shelves.  When it comes to decorating, it’s hard to go wrong with white (or black or gray for that matter but that’s another story).  If I had some chutzpah, I would paint my floors white, like this great space from the now defunct Domino magazine.

But that’s a bigger commitment than I’m ready for.  What I did commit to is a new old chair (as if I didn’t have enough chairs) . . .

TFA — The Future Antique — recently relocated to Chippewa near to Ted Drewes.  It also happens to be very close to my mother-in-law’s place so when we were over for a visit the other day, I persuaded JT and his mom to pop in and have a look around with me.  TFA is not known for their bargain basement prices but they do get some amazing stuff so sometimes the higher tag is worth all the editing and hunting they do.

Do you see our chair in any of these pictures?  I do!

The images above are from their website — there is a vast and ever-changing selection of 50s and 60s awesome (and sometimes uber-kitschy) items available.   The fiberglass Eames wanna be was $40 and I just couldn’t leave it be.  I think it might end up as a vanity table chair in the bedroom or maybe it will go to the office for JT to use at his recording equipment.  We’ll see!

Blog World Meets Real World

The interwebs just got a little smaller — I met a St. Louis blogger last night — Mister Modtomic.  His blog is a great one to follow with daily posts that keep you coming back for more.  Speaking of those daily posts, I’m not quite sure how he does it, but I’m definitely not there yet! 

So how did I get so lucky as to meet Mister Modtomic?  I was doing a little blog stalking reading and saw that he had a Mid-Century Modern fireplace tool set up for grabs.  I grabbed!  Up ’til now we were rocking the Target nondescript fireplace tool set that was missing the brush since JT accidentally used it instead of the poker one night and ALL THE BRUSH HAIR BURNT OFF.  Yep. 

So here’s the newly restyled fireplace in all its glory:

We still have the nondescript Target fireplace screen though . . .

It’s a small detail, but the tripod fireplace tool set base lets it fit more compactly and efficiently onto the hearth.  Those MCM designers were all about maximum usefulness and didn’t forget design either. 

According to Mister Modtomic’s blog, the tool set came from the Forest Park Salvation Army, the same place I totally struck out a few weeks ago.  (See Mister Modtomic’s post about its origins here.)   Thrifting is definitely a hit-or-miss venture.  I have been meaning to the check out the latest Goodwill location — where they are selling things by the pound – at the old Famous Barr warehouse along Highway 40 near Grand. 

Here’s what the Goodwill website had to say about it: “The Outlet Store is the largest Goodwill Outlet Center in the country, boasting more than 20,000 square feet of retail space, and 93 bins full of merchandise that rotate every three and a half hours. More than 2,000 new items will be placed on the floor every 20 minutes, including clearance clothing, shoes, accessories, housewares, glassware, some electronics, books and toys. “
Hopefully that won’t be a thrifting fail — I’d better put it on the calendar!

Greaser

We had some grease-related incidents at our house this weekend:

The first was homemade butter from a post I saw on Designsponge (not sure how so much food/cooking content has made its way into Designsponge but there you have it).  It was pretty easy and we’re going to use it for a quick and easy pasta recipe later this week.

And JT was out in the garage with the Rumble Fish (AKA 1966 Ford Fairlane) giving it a good helping of Mechanic’s Grease.  Which makes me wonder — is this where the term “greasers” comes from?  If yes, then I guess I married a greaser.


That took care of the horrific shrieking noise the gas pedal was making (and it was rubbing against our new exhaust, glad JT found that one . . . )  but now that the shrieking is gone, new rumbles and rattles that are presenting themselves . . . That’s for another weekend I guess.

Thrifting Adventure/Fail

A few Saturdays ago,  I convinced JT to go on a Thrifting Adventure with me (that was actually what I put it on the calendar as – “Thrifting Adventure”).  I concentrated on a cluster of resale/thrift shops on Forest Park Parkway in midtown St. Louis – nearby and hopefully prime for the picking.

Habitat for Humanity ReStore was the first stop.  We had an old nasty fan lingering in our basement that needed to be donated.  ReStore can be kind of hit or miss but if you are willing to put in a little time and dig through their offerings, you can get some good deals for projects around the house. 


See the whole aisle of tile (above) of trims?  Good stuff.  ReStore had some fancier (for them) pedestal and glass sinks in their inventory during our visit too.

See more photos of what they have in stock at their photoblog.  I was glad to get the fan out of the house (I should have taken a picture of it — trust me it was nasty!) but there wasn’t anything that called out for me to buy at ReStore that day.  Oh except some funky flat files that were, of course, marked Not For Sale.  Does anyone else have that problem?  All the items I like at the Antique (Junk) Malls are always marked with the dubious Not For Sale sticker.  Then why is it there?

Next stop was the Salvation Army.  This entailed walking by some of the “Army” on a smoke break. The whole area is a little on the dicey side.  I love love love industrial buildings though.  Someday maybe I’ll live in one . . .

A few items of interest there . . . make sure to go to the lower level first  for furniture.


And then finally down the street to good ol’ Goodwill. 

This place was hopping!  I didn’t even mess around with pictures inside of there because there was so many people.  We just made a quick loop and got out of there.   I do love the facade of this building though — such a neat use of brick.

And so we were headed home empty-handed and I had $20 burning a hole in my pocket from a recent Craigslist sale . . .  then I remembered a St. Vincent de Paul had recently relocated to our South City neck of the woods into what had been a dingy old Office Depot. 

Right away I started seeing some good stuff . . . .
(PS – I love this picture below — JT made it almost all they way through the thrifting adventure but a friend called to ask for guitar purchasing advice and he couldn’t resist . . . . You can see him in the background as he wanders away . . . )

And so I found some things to bring home!  Because what I need is more things, right?  You can even see the two alley chairs I recently snagged in the background of that picture.  I may need therapy.

The vase and bird house were $2 each and I think the portable speakers were $8.  JT pried them open when we got home and sure enough, all the parts were in there.  He’s going to iPod wire them and I think they might go traveling with the Rumble Fish (aka Fairlane).  They fold up together like a little speaker suitcase.  I’ll post more on the speakers when they’re up and running.