A dedicated source for pickers and collectors. We bring you articles on Antiques, Collectibles, and more! Our motto is "One Rhode Islander's junk, is another one's treasure!". We are currently located in Cumberland, RI and have sold products throughout the United States.
Thursday, June 21, 2012
Saint Joseph's Church - Woonsocket, RI Flea Market
Saint Joseph's Church in Woonsocket, RI 02895 will be hosting a flea market inside the gym at Saint Joseph's/Good Shepherd School located on Mendon Rd. The flea market starts June 23rd 2012 at 9am.
Friday, June 15, 2012
Precious Blood Church - Woonsocket, RI - Flea Market
Flea Market Alert!
Precious Blood Church in Woonsocket, RI will be having a flea market in their church hall on June 16th 2012 from 9am to 2pm. The church is located on Hamlet Ave.
Tuesday, June 12, 2012
The Lowdown: ‘Antiques Roadshow’ appraises Norman Rockwell painting
A Norman Rockwell painting of a young Vermont school kid eating Kellogg’s Corn Flakes could pay off big for Melinda “Chickie” Murphy.
Paintings of the southern New Hampshire woman and her brother, Gene, who posed for their dad’s painter friend when he was commissioned by Kellogg’s in the early ’50s, were rejected by the Battle Creek, Mich., cereal company.
Over the weekend, Melinda, now 65, was bowled over when the folks at PBS’ “Antiques Roadshow” appraised the one she still has by the master of Americana’s painting at $40,000 to $60,000!
“(Kellogg’s thought) we were too pretty,” Murphy (nee Pelham) told the Track at the Boston Convention & Exhibition Center. “They wanted red hair and freckles!”
But not all antiques aficionados, hand-me-down hoarders and yard sale scavengers are as lucky as Melinda, who said she’s going to hang onto her Rockwellian breakfast scene for the moment.
Appraiser Colleene Fesko, who specializes in American paintings from the 18th through 21st centuries, said that more often than not, folks who come to her thinking they’ve found a masterpiece are generally mistaken.
“It’s because of the accessibility of the Internet,” said Fesko, who once was approached with a painting signed by “Winslow Homer.”
Upon a quick analysis, Colleene knew the painting was no work of art.
“It was painted three or four weeks ago!” she told the Track.
Among the masses of eager New Englanders who packed into the convention hall on Saturday was Boston Mayor Tom Menino, who brought along an Aldro Hibbard painting rescued from the attic at the Mather School in Dorchester. It’s been hanging in the Parkman House.
“I heard everybody said its worth a lot,” the mayor told us.
And he was right. Fesko appraised the winter landscape scene, a classic example of the artist’s post-Impressionist style, at $50,000.
But don’t expect Hizzoner to sell off the Hibbard for some quick cash for city coffers.
“No, no, no,” said Menino, who plans to insure the painting. “We know how special it is.”
Monday, June 11, 2012
Overpriced Flea Markets & Yardsales
This past weekend I visited about a dozen or so yardsales/garagesales/flea markets. For the most part I saw items for sale for $1 or so. However, it amazes me when I pull up to a yardsale and see everything tagged. Once I see these yardsales I know I am not going to buy anything there. The owners seem to want outrages prices on their products they are selling. People who go to yardsales do not intend to pay retail. Just because you paid $10 for it in new condition, does not mean it is worth $8 in used condition. If you have stuff you truly want to get rid of, than you must price it to sell. If you want to try to get full value or what you perceive is a "fair" price, then put it up on eBay.
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
A shop on a mission
LIMERICK – For the past two years, Heather Labbe has made Labrador retrievers her life, running a rescue operation from her Limerick home and, she says, saving more than 600 animals from being euthanized at out-of-state shelters.
“I realized, ‘Oh, I can make a difference,’” she said.
Now, Labbe, 61, is looking to give the effort, called New England Lab Rescue, a more permanent home, and has taken an innovative approach to doing that. She has bought a 19th-century house in town that she converted into a new antiques shop, Custom House Antiques. Part of that building, Labbe said, will be used as office space for the nonprofit rescue, and a barn in the back will be converted to help house a small number of dogs waiting for adoption.“To have an actual building (for the rescue) is a really big thing,” she said.
The building itself is huge, with three stories, including a ballroom on the top floor that Labbe hopes to rent out. Labbe said that the portion of the whole building dedicated to the rescue will be small, and the barn will be closed off from the rest of the building.
No animals will be allowed in with the antiques, and Labbe said even once the barn is fully renovated, she only imagines two to three animals staying there at any one time. The rest, she said, will live in foster homes run by volunteers, just as the rescue has always done.
“It’s a very, very short-term visit,” she said.
Meanwhile, the rest of the building will be dedicated to showing off antiques for sale. Kathy Braley, a volunteer who is helping Labbe find antiques sellers, said that in less than a month, Custom House has found about 12 vendors who are renting display space for their items, and the building could accommodate up to twice that many.
With those renters, Custom House already has a full first floor, and part of the second floor is also spoken for. There is everything from plates, candleholders and fireplace pokers to furniture such as couches, chairs, tables and cabinets. Braley said she ran an antiques shop in Limington for years, and knew how to help Labbe find sellers to rent space in the new shop.
“I have a lot of stuff, and a lot of friends with stuff,” Braley said with a laugh.Labbe’s husband, Gary, said the building, located at the intersection of routes 5 and 11 in Limerick, dates back to 1803, and was known as a bed-and-breakfast until about 20 years ago. After that closed, he said, the building was home to an interior decorator’s shop, but the decorator moved out about three years ago. Since then, it’s been empty. The selling price, Heather Labbe said, dropped hundreds of thousands of dollars before the Labbes bought it a month ago for $112,000.
Heather Labbe said she and her husband came to Limerick in 1999, moving from Windham, where they had lived since coming from Cape Cod, Mass., in 1996. Gary Labbe noted that his wife already runs the Clipper Merchant Tea House, which is also in a refurbished 19th-century house, which went a long way with convincing the locals that the Labbes would be treating their newest acquisition right.
“They were thrilled to hear that we were now in this building,” he said. “They knew that it would be in good hands.”
Heather Labbe said she started the lab rescue informally about two years ago, when she learned via the Internet that a shelter in North Carolina was planning to euthanize a dog because no home could be found for it. Labbe bought the dog, and would have kept it had she not found someone right away who wanted to adopt it. Since then, she said, the effort has grown into an official nonprofit organization, with full licensing and vetting from the state.
As to why she wants to use an antiques shop to support it, Labbe said she has grown to love history and historic buildings, and it seemed a natural move for a building that has been a fixture in town for more than two centuries.“We decided the town could use an antiques building,” she said. “The history is very rich here.”
The shop is open, but Labbe is planning a formal grand opening on July 1. She said the shop already is making enough money in rental income to sustain itself, and in time, she expects it will go a long way toward supporting the rescue, which has existed so far on grants and donations that can be hard to come by.
“It’s a way of supporting the rescue in the long run,” she said.
Tuesday, June 5, 2012
Antiques Fair is an Old Favorite
The Grafton Historical Society has announced its 45th annual Antiques and Arts Fair will be held Saturday, June 16, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., on the Grafton Common. About 50 antiques and collectibles vendors will have their wares on display.“The annual Antiques and Arts Fair has become a defining event in Grafton,” said Linda Casey, Grafton Historical Society president, in a prepared statement. “It is such a pleasure for us to keep this rich and wonderful tradition alive. We hope everyone will come and join us for what is sure to be a great day of fun and enjoyment.”
In addition to antiques and collectibles booths, there will be live music on the gazebo, antique appraisals, and a wide variety of food vendors. The fair also will feature a variety of crafts demonstrations.
Admission is $5. In case of rain, the fair will be held at the Grafton Middle School, 60 North St. For more information, call 508-839-0000.
Source: www.Grafton.Patch.com
In addition to antiques and collectibles booths, there will be live music on the gazebo, antique appraisals, and a wide variety of food vendors. The fair also will feature a variety of crafts demonstrations.
Admission is $5. In case of rain, the fair will be held at the Grafton Middle School, 60 North St. For more information, call 508-839-0000.
Source: www.Grafton.Patch.com
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