vintage_jayhawk
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 109
- Location
- Expat in the Caribbean
Wow! Great find!!Picked this 1930 Regal TRF type Cathedral up at Saver's in Tuscon AZ over Christmas! $19.99 and it works!
Wow! Great find!!Picked this 1930 Regal TRF type Cathedral up at Saver's in Tuscon AZ over Christmas! $19.99 and it works!
Wow! If that radio were at the typical thrift store around here, it would be kept behind a counter or in a glass case and priced at well over a hundred bucks.
Whaddya figure you could sell it for, if you had a mind to? Not that I'm in the hunt for such an item, but had I come across that deal my heart rate would have ticked up several notches, and I would have found a place for it around here.
Picked this 1930 Regal TRF type Cathedral up at Saver's in Tuscon AZ over Christmas! $19.99 and it works!
Interesting or ugly. Can't decide.
Oooh, nice cufflinks! How old are they?
Actually this came from my local antique store but they often have thrift store prices so I will include it here. I was doing my semi-regular record shopping there when I noticed this leaning against a case. Having read a lot of books on design I recognized it immediately for what it was, a Charles Eames leg splint. I approached it wondering how many hundreds it would be priced at and was amazed to find that they didn't know what it was and had it priced at $12. Quickest purchase I ever made! For you who don't know Charles Eames (pronounced eems), he was a major mid-century architect and product designer especially famous for his iconic chairs. This leg splint, which was commissioned by the Navy during WW2 was actually the first mass-produced product Eames was involved with and a forerunner of those famous chairs. He learned much about the process of forming laminated wood during the design and making of these splints. They are much desired by collectors and there's even an example in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. There's a little bit about them here: http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/works-of-art/1984.246 I'm pretty thrilled about finding this and, though I will probably sell it eventually, I'm going to enjoy it for awhile before I do.
That's pretty darned amazing. I doubt one person in a thousand would have seen that item for what it is. Congratulations.
Wow! I didn't think there were any left.
Yeah, I'm kind of amazed too. As the tag says it was found in the loft of a vintage bicycle shop. I actually didn't have 12 bucks on me at the time and was a mile away from home on foot so I hoofed it home as fast as I could hoping someone who knew what it was wouldn't get there before I got back.