Tuesday, April 12, 2011

my very favorite second-hand stuff. . .

Some of my favorite second hand stuff once belonged to my dear grandmother, mom to my mom.  Here is a story I wrote a few years ago for the blog of the consignment shop I worked for at that time. . . I share it now rather than write something new because I don't think I could tell the story any better by redoing it.  Hope you agree. . . .

When Grandma got older, she started giving her life's "things" to her descendents. She wasn't going to need them much for much longer. A sophisticated lady, she had many lovely things to offer us grandchildren.


. . . I was one of her's and Granddaddy's favorites, so I was pretty lucky to get first dibs. So many choices. . . jewelry, figurines, paintings. Nope, silly me, I went for the soap saver (an old metal kitchen utensil, like a little cage that you put slivers of soap in. Not very valuable). Always wish I had gotten the dachsund paper holder (long silly looking ceramic dog with a springy thing in the middle). I did take a few Royal Doulton because it made her happy. And I begged for the dishes.Not the china --- the dishes. The Johnson Bros. Windsor Ware, Garden Bouquet pattern, service for a family gathering with chips in at least a third of them. Why did I want the dishes? Because I knew that every time I would use them I would remember my grandparents. Thanksgiving dinners of years past would flood my mind on days when the kids were acting way too much like kids, and all of a sudden things would seem better.


Nowadays, having Cream of Wheat in a Garden Bouquet bowl transports me back to a pea green Michigan dining room on a crisp and sunny fall morning, watching my granddaddy eat his bowl of Cream of Wheat with his large, loving, little-bit hairy hands. Those breakfasts were special to we two. . . oh how I loved him. I adore these old, chippy dishes for all the joyful memories they have given me. . . and how grateful I am that they now grace my own cupboards.




2 comments:

  1. What a lovely heartfelt (and interesting!) story Cathie! Thanks so much for sharing. (*_*)

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  2. I have often said that antiques are like little time machines ... they take you right back. I also have a theory that it is individuals who had a happy childhood that like antiques, as other just don't want to go back!! :-)

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