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You are here: Home / Archives for antiques

An Edgar Guest Treasure

January 12, 2015 at 9:24 am by Claudia

You already know I’ve been slowly collecting the poems of Edgar Guest, who was my dad’s godfather. He was a very popular poet, known as the People’s Poet, was a reporter for the Detroit Free Press, had a long-running radio show and was, from everything I hear about him, a great guy.

I wrote about him recently when I found another volume of his poems. The other day, a package arrived in the mail from my cousin Eileen. Eileen’s mother was my Aunt Lettie, my dad’s sister. Aunt Lettie was my favorite aunt (my vintage dress form, Letitia, is named after her) and was the member of my dad’s immediate family who kept all the family records and memorabilia. She knew all the stories. Thank goodness she did. When Aunt Lettie died, Eileen inherited a lot of that memorabilia.

Back to the package. I opened it up and inside was a note from Eileen saying that my posts about Edgar Guest reminded her of something that was in Grandma Hill’s things. She wanted me to have it.

It’s a booklet. Let me show it to you.

Pelletiers1

 

It’s about 8 x 10 inches. As far as Eileen and my cousin Mike can remember, the Pelletiers were friends of my grandparents. I asked my dad and he concurs, but as the youngest kid in a family of six kids, he doesn’t remember much more than that. It sounds like the Pelletiers, the Guests and the Hills were all friends.

I don’t know whether this sweet booklet was sent out as a Christmas greeting or for some other reason, but let’s look inside:

Pelletiers2

Each page has a photo of the Pelletier’s home in the country, which was clearly a place that Edgar Guest loved to visit. We’re not sure where it was, and my dad reminds me that what was considered the ‘country’ in those days could have been on the outskirts of Detroit.

The little booklet is full of poems that Guest wrote about the Pelletiers. (Pronounced, according the rhymes in the poems – PEL a TEARS. Or maybe PEL TEARS?) I’ve done a bit of research and some of these poems were published. All of them may have been published, I just haven’t got that far.

Pelletiers -at pelletiers

Pelletiers4

It’s full of photos of their house, their horses…

Pelletiers5

Their prize cow, which Mr. Pelletier purchased for a rather exorbitant sum.

Pelletiers6

Their rather elegant dogs.

Pelletiers7

The living room of their home, which reminds me an awful lot of the living room in the Craftsman-style house we rented in San Diego. The photo caption on this one is “Caught Napping.” There’s another photo with a Mission-style rocker, so we’re talking early 1900’s (maybe 1910-20 at the latest?) which is also evident by the hair styles of the women and their dresses. I’ll have to take a picture of that photo and share it with you at a later date.

I’m still researching the Pelletiers. Their names come up as residents of Detroit and certainly in Guest’s poem titles. Interestingly, the announcer for Guest’s radio show was Vincent Pelletier, a well-known announcer in the days of radio. Whether he was some sort of relation to these Pelletiers, I don’t know.

Isn’t this amazing?

Imagine how flattered the Pelletiers must have been to have their pal, Edgar Guest, write poems about them!

I don’t know how many of these booklets the Pelletiers sent out, but I can’t imagine there are many of them around. One library has  a copy of it in their archives, but that’s the only mention of the actual booklet I’ve found.

I am so thrilled to have this in my Edgar Guest collection. Thank you, Eileen.

My dad’s parents both died before I was born, so the only way I ‘know’ them is through the stories of my dad and aunt. I have a lot of things that were my maternal grandmother’s, but nothing from the Hill side of the family. That is, until last year, when Eileen sent me this:

Pelletiers-grandmahill

A tiny little china dog, marked Germany, that was my Grandma Hill’s. She was of German descent. When I opened that package (not long after my mother’s death) and read Eileen’s note, I started crying. Funny how that happens. It meant more to me than I had ever realized it would to have something from the grandmother I never knew. I don’t know how old this little guy is, but Eileen tells me he sat on their hutch for as long as she can remember.

Neither Eileen or I knew Grandma Hill. Neither did my sisters. I’m not sure about my brother; if he knew her at all, he was just a baby. So this little guy means a great deal and I was so touched that Eileen shared him with me.

New post up on Just Let Me Finish This Page.

Happy Monday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

 

Filed Under: antiques, collecting, Dad, Edgar Guest, Eileen, favorite things 61 Comments

A Parrish

January 9, 2015 at 9:43 am by Claudia

Meanwhile, back at the ranch…

I was amazed at all the comments on yesterday’s post. Truly amazed. At one point, I sat Don down and read many of them to him out loud. When we were in the car, I read some more. (He was a captive audience.)

You brought tears to my eyes, you wonderful people. Yes, you did.

Thank you. If I needed some sort of jump start to get me going, I couldn’t have prescribed a better way to do it. I didn’t expect this outpouring, but I surely, surely appreciate it.

And by the way, don’t spend one minute worrying or feeling guilty about not commenting. That’s not why I wrote that. It’s simply a change that’s happening across the board – to all bloggers. I, myself? I’ve been a terrible commenter or lack-of-commenter. It’s something I’m working on, but I have a long way to go. No guilt, okay? Comment if you have time or are moved to, but only then. I just love knowing you’re out there reading the posts.

On to another thing.

Don had been asking me for the last two days if I wanted to go back to Rhinebeck. Rhinebeck, if you remember, is the town across the river that we visited recently. Well, it’s been unbelievably cold here, with wind chills taking the temperature well below zero – and I mean well below zero – so I politely declined.

He kept bringing it up. Finally, he said “I think we should go get that Maxfield Parrish print you love.”

What??

He’d been thinking about it ever since we saw it.

So, yesterday afternoon amidst frigid temperatures, we set off on our journey and arrived here.

Antiquing-Rhinebeck

The Antique Market at the Beekman Arms, which is a very, very old inn in the middle of downtown Rhinebeck. Actually, it’s America’s oldest continually operated inn. We’re talking beautiful, old and historic. The Antique Market is behind the Inn.

After looking at the print, then looking at another Maxfield Parrish print (which was more expensive) and almost choosing the other one, then asking some questions which a kind woman working at the desk relayed via the phone to the seller, we went for it. The seller, by the way, collects Maxfield Parrish and now I want to see his home. He doesn’t know me, but that doesn’t matter. I need to see his collection.

As always in this little cottage, the windows and light (even on this dreary day) make taking a photo of a framed object under glass difficult. So I moved it to the bookshelf to show you.

Antiquing-pierrot'sserenade

It’s called Pierrot’s Serenade. I usually go for the deep, luminous blues that Parrish is known for, but this particular print won my heart. The golden hues are incredible. The light in the print is the kind of light that happens in what filmmakers and photographers call the golden hour – that time shortly after sunrise or right before the sunset. Parrish’s illustrations are full of that kind of light. The hues are intensely saturated.

He did illustrations for books, magazines, and advertisements and was one of the leading figures of the Golden Age of Illustration, which included our other favorite artist, Norman Rockwell, who named Parrish as his ‘idol.’ To learn more about him, visit his Wikipedia page where you’ll see my all-time favorite illustration The Lantern Bearers.

Someday. Someday.

We’re not sure where to put it. Right now, it’s hanging over the music cabinet in the den, directly in front of me. But we’re not sure if that’s where it will stay. I will say that I sure like having it in my sightline as I sit here and blog.

I’ve wanted one of these original prints for years. Years and years and years.

I’d better stop or you’ll think I’m even older than I am.

I’m thrilled to have it. We were talking about Rockwell and Parrish on the way home and decided there is something in both men’s work, though they have very different styles, that is heightened, idealized, the kind of world you want to see every day, all the time. The kind of world you long for and need, especially in these troubled times. I think that’s why we’re so drawn to them.

Excuse me. I must gaze upon my Parrish.

New post up on Just Let Me Finish This Page.

Happy Friday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

 

 

Filed Under: antiques, collecting 50 Comments

A Tale of Two Chairs

January 6, 2015 at 9:23 am by Claudia

On Sunday, which was our little girl’s birthday, we headed to the town-next-door to buy some dog treats at a specialty pet store, which happens to be in the same complex as our local antique center. This antique barn/market is the one I go to most often, simply because it’s so close to our home. After a week of day trips to towns across the Hudson River in search of some chairs for our kitchen table, wouldn’t you know it? We found two of them just down the road from our cottage.

I spied this one first.

CHAIRS-greenchair

I fell in love. It looks like it should be sitting in a Swiss Chalet somewhere in the Alps, along with Heidi and her grandfather. It’s chippy and well-loved-and-used and I knew I wouldn’t see another one like it.

CHAIRS-greenchairtopdetail

It needs a bit of light sanding and some clear coat. I cleaned it up yesterday (after I took these photos.)

CHAIRS-greenchairlegdetail

Chippy isn’t everyone’s cup of tea, but to us, it’s a sweet brew. There’s a story to these well-worn pieces, isn’t there? Where has this chair been? Who sat on it? Was it part of a set? Was it loved?

Once I get it sanded and have applied a few coats of clear coat, those chips will be protected. In the meantime, it’s too cold outside to be doing that sort of thing, so it will exist as is for a bit.

CHAIRS-backofgreenchair

I’m in love.

So, back to the Antique barn – we took the chair downstairs for them to hold and went back upstairs to look around some more and what did I see?

CHAIRS-brownchair

This chair. With flower stencils. This isn’t a theme we were looking for. It just happened. (And we will probably confine the flowers to these two chairs.) But it seemed quite serendipitous.

CHAIRS-brownchairattable

CHAIRS-brownchairattable2

Both chairs are well made and very sturdy. I made Don sit in them as the final test. They were also very inexpensive, so if we end up finding others we like better down the road…no big deal.

We like old. We like used. We like formerly loved. We like weathered and chippy and timeless and, heaven knows, we like a good story.

There you have it. Two new additions to the cottage.

By the way, our other chairs, while lovely to look at, were rickety and kept coming apart. We could have had them professionally re-glued but the expense wasn’t worth it to us. They ended up being a big pain in the tush (literally and figuratively.) I still use one of them at the desk, and another is still in use at the table for the time being. Both of them will be replaced at some point. Pretty doesn’t always equal practical.

I’ve entered my cleaning and sorting and purging phase. Yesterday I tackled the little desk near the stairs. More on that tomorrow.

Happy Tuesday.

ClaudiaSignature140X93

Filed Under: antiques, decorating 56 Comments

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Welcome!

Welcome!

I live in a little cottage in the country with my husband. It's a sweet place, sheltered by old trees and surrounded by gardens. The inside is full of the things we love. I love to write, I love my camera, I love creating, I love gardening. My decorating style is eclectic; full of vintage and a bit of whimsy.

I've worked in the theater for more years than I can count. I'm currently a voice, speech, dialect and text coach freelancing on Broadway, off Broadway, and in regional theater.

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