Tilt-A-Whirl

Winter Container Party 2010

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

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This is the second year for the Winter Party and I have a to say it was a great success.   St. Louis still had some snow on the ground and it was snowing the day before the party, but last Thursday turned out to be a  beautiful sunny day, the perfect weather to feel the beginning of spring at the shop.  Click on the images to enlarge them.

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Surrounding the 18th century English mirror are European wallpaper stamps from the 1950s.  The stamps make a dramatic wall covering and hence are almost all sold out.

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Miniature roses fit perfectly in the Dutch white ironstone “tub”  surrounded by French mother of pearl opera glasses.

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This French style chair has been upholstered in black silk with a hand-stitched Crane across the back.  The forged iron table has bronze detailing  in the manner of Oscar Bach.

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A French 19th century cast iron urn with more miniature roses poses in front of a pair of garden planters.  These smaller iron urns can be used in so many different ways inside the house as well as outside.  The urns can be changed out for the seasons with a variety of contents, ie: blooming bulbs in the spring, shells in the summer,for fall.. well you get the idea .  Click on images to enlarge.

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The theme for this Winter Party was “Spring” so fresh flowers continued throughout the shop .   In this photo note the wonderful European iron awning, for over a door, that hangs above the terra-cotta obelisk.   Hanging from the awning are several hand-painted Mexican pottery birds from the 1940s.

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A very whimsical European armillary sundial rests on the round marble top table.

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The teaching posters were printed in France in the Flemish language.  The circa 1940s posters have wonderful graphics and color.  Click on images to enlarge.

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The zinc downspouts on the left of the photo were found in Belgium.  I think it would be interesting to make lamps or sconces out of the pair of downspouts, the shadows that the light would create could be dramatic.

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The whimsical painted dove weathervane stands between several European cut stone planters.   To the right of the planters is a carved stone well-head of a mans face that has an incredible worn surface.

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In the two previous photographs you can see the window display is of Japanese paper lanterns from the 1930s.  Roxie is keeping watch in her window perch, a job she takes quite seriously I might add.  She often feels the need to alert everyone in the shop to the presence of a dog being walked in front of her shop, often loudly… unfortunately.

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The bookcases behind the counter hold an array of unusual objects.

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I have never seen the bronze pieces with hands mounted on stands shown in this photo ever before.  They are the pockets from a 19th century billiard table and are made of bronze.  The ivory balls shown in the hand-cups would fall through the hole and be “caught” by the small hand that is holding the round cup.

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To the right of the Italian Mirror is a very organic bronze light in the form of a gnarled grape vine with leaves.  It has holes in the base suggesting this wonderful bronze light might have been used on a newel post of a stylish house in Europe at the turn of the century.

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In this photo a wonderful 19th century religious artifact with carved gilt-wood rays hangs in a shelf above the ever wacky doll head mold forms.

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Blackforest antlers surround the wooden “gear” mirror made from an industrial mold form.


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The venetian mirror in this photo found a new home very quickly.   The owl sculpture is by a St. Louis artist, Tom Blaizer.  The owl body has been made out of tin and the eyes out of sliced agate stone.

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Nothing says spring like fresh flowers and we had a nice assortment of them at the shop for the party.  For me forsythia brings back childhood memories of my grandmothers gardens, she let it grow huge and wild, it always seems so bright,  bold and cheerful.   The forsythia is in a huge battery jar I found in Belgium.  The oversized chrome strainer also on the table is by Curtis Jere and dates from the 1970s.

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I currently have a great collection of vintage medical teaching aids in the shop.

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One of the more unusual items in the shop right now (and that’s saying something) is shown in the center of this photo…. the “mirror.”   A relief sculpture made from resin of a muscular nude male holding a woman in his arms has been applied to the mirror glass and put into a chrome frame, the piece has a Los Angeles label on the back and dates to the 1970s or early 1980s.  Click on images to enlarge.

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A Curtis Jere swan sculpture hangs above the 1940s machine age aluminum tricycle.

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One of my favorite pieces to just come into the shop is this European industrial cart.  It has great surface-ware and patina.

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The wire “donut” on the wall is actually a handmade wire crap trap,  I think the trap has a fine sculptural quality to it.   The tin trays, the lanterns, and the candlesticks are all from Mexico and date from the 1940s.

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Rosalie seems to be pondering the wooden bowling balls from Europe that are on either side of her carousel panel.

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I am fortunate to have tall windows in the back of the shop that really let the light pour in.  The anatomical charts on the back of the shop wall are from Belgium.  Click on images to enlarge.

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I wanted to end this post with a photo from the shop of simple a simple way to say spring.   I used green depression glass salt and pepper shakers for mini vases.  I placed three of the bouquets under a 19th century glass cheese dome on top of a plain glass cake stand.  The flowers have been in the shop for almost a week now and still look great.  There is so much we can all do to enliven our lives with fresh flowers without costing a fortune.  I try to have something blooming or have cut flowers in my house throughout the winter.  It makes the house smell great and it makes me feel good.  Until spring gets here and gives us fresh bouquets daily get out there and bring some flowers home.  You just might need an antique battery jar or garden urn for those flowers, luckily R. Ege Antiques has a few of those.  Come in and check us out.

Baby It’s Cold Outside!

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

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As of this morning my concrete pussy cat seems to have a new chapeau.  She looks amused, sort of.  St. Louis received more snow last night to add to the snow we already had.  Considering the problems those poor souls in the east are having with snow I will be quite content with ours.  Watching the snow fall from my window has got me thinking of warmer weather and travel, specifically last summer’s buying trip to Europe and our visit to Versailles.  Click on images to enlarge.

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Versailles for me is a time capsule of exceptional beauty and grandeur that exists just beyond those massive gold gilt iron gates.

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This photo shows the palace viewed from the  Apollo Fountain.  There are over 700 rooms in the palace at Versailles.  Visiting the palace is more than an overwhelming experience it is also tiring and so huge that the space lacks a comfortable coziness.  It was designed more for political show than for human scale.  Go to the Palace website here.  Click on images to enlarge.

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Marie Antoinette had her architect Richard Mique build a 12 building Le Hameau (the hamlet) in the manner of a true 16th century Norman village.  Rousseau’s theories on the nobleness of a simple rural life lived close to the natural world were very much in vogue at the end of the 18th century.  Marie Antoinette was trying to escape the confines of her courtly life into what she assumed was the “idyllic” world of a working Norman village.

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The hamlet was built on the banks of the Grand Trianon Lake from 1783 to 1787.   This photo shows the Marlborough Tower that was often used as a point of departure for boat rides or fishing outings.

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The restored Hamlet grounds and buildings have just recently been reopened to the public.

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Several of the buildings including this mill were reserved for use only by the Queen and her guests.  The peasants that tended to the gardens and the livestock lived in four of the structures.  The exterior staircases and balconies of the buildings were adorned with blue and white earthenware pots full of blooming flowers.

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Flowers everywhere!   I can’t wait to plant the flower pots on my deck, however I will refrain from planting in the roof-line of my house.  The flowers here seem quite happy growing in this thatched roof.

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White lilies line the path to the entrance of this charming cottage.  Click on images to enlarge.

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Every house has its own little garden.  Hornbeams were used as hedges and chestnut trees as fences.

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The hamlet had a working farm with assorted livestock, including cows, goats, sheep, and pigeons.   The Queen would dress as a shepherdess and visit her farm to watch its tranquil life unfold.  Marie Antoinette commissioned the royal porcelain works at Sevres to create beautifully hand-decorated porcelain china to be used in her hamlet, including porcelain milk buckets to use when “milking” the cows.

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I’m wearing shorts in this photo, it was warm, it will be warm again, I’m just sure of it.  A litany I have to say over and over again this time of year.  So this concludes our brief visit to Versailles in July.  When you visit France and go to Versailles I would highly recommend a quick tour of the palace and then spend the rest of the day on the estate.  The gardens, the fountains, and the Hamlet are enough to fill many a cold wintery day with fond memories of warmer times and beautiful places.  Click on images to enlarge.

Winter Container Party 2010

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

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Our Winter Container Party is February 18th, from 10 am to 6 pm.   Please join us for some tasty treats to make your taste buds happy and then feast your eyes on the new merchandise from Europe as well as a wonderful assortment of objects from several grand St. Louis estates.  We will be closed this Saturday for the St. Louis Mardi Gras festival in St. Louis.  It is a huge event held annually in the historic Soulard area of St. Louis.  You can check out information on the St. Louis Mardi Gras here.  If you would like to receive notices on shop events please click here and give me your contact information including: name, home address and email address.

New Thingamajigs February 1st, 2010

Monday, February 1st, 2010

These shop photos have a small sampling of some of the new objects for your consideration.

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This is one large wall panel.  It dates from the late 18th to early 19th centuries  and features finely reeded pilasters with acanthus capitals.   A small carved angel head with wings forms the keystone of the arch just below a robust crown with dentil molding.  Click on images to enlarge.

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The architectural panel is European and measures over six feet long.  It would make a great headboard or a focal point for a room.  On the far right of the French bamboo hall-tree is a wonderful 1920s screen wire lamp shade signed by the Rembrandt Lamp Co.

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Talk about a unique assortment of knives and daggers.   Bowie knives with antler handles are shown on the shelf.  A Persian Katar from the 19th century, hangs in the middle of the three daggers on the wall.  To the right of the Katar is an Italian 16th century left-handed dagger with  a forged iron head on its pommel.  All of these weapons have  distinctly different design elements that make them interesting and yet a strong sculptural quality runs through all of them.  The carved and polychromed masks that are hanging above the daggers are believed to be Tibetan and date to the early 20th century.

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Two different generations of little girls played with these toys.  The graniteware dates from the 1890s to 1910.   The cast metal dollhouse furniture is from the 1930s.   Most of the furniture was made by “Arcade” a toy company that was located in Freeport, Illinois.  These photos help show the diversity of the material coming into the shop as well as the quantity.   Although there  is always too much inventory coming into the shop to ever get it photographed before it all sells.   If you are in the St. Louis area please be sure and look us up.  Remember Antiques are the highest form of recycling.  I have a house full of recycled furniture and objects and would not have it any other way.  Click on images to enlarge.