Lately, I've been going through some serious Halloween withdrawals. So much so that I have been browsing the web for Halloween items on clearance. Hey, I still want a good deal! While walking through the toy section at Target yesterday I saw the Scooby Doo 3-D Haunted House Board Game on a clearance endcap. I held onto it all the way to checkout like it was the antidote to a Zombie viral infection. I don't think anybody else was remotely interested. I had a dream about a zombie outbreak last night. It didn't end so great. New Years Resolution #1- Learn to hot wire a car.
Thursday, December 31, 2009
Haunted Scooby
Lately, I've been going through some serious Halloween withdrawals. So much so that I have been browsing the web for Halloween items on clearance. Hey, I still want a good deal! While walking through the toy section at Target yesterday I saw the Scooby Doo 3-D Haunted House Board Game on a clearance endcap. I held onto it all the way to checkout like it was the antidote to a Zombie viral infection. I don't think anybody else was remotely interested. I had a dream about a zombie outbreak last night. It didn't end so great. New Years Resolution #1- Learn to hot wire a car.
A Clockwork Orange
Sunday, July 5, 2009
Storage/End Table
This past Friday, Chris and I went to a couple of estate sales. Meh! But, on the way home from eating at Bobby J's in Helotes...the best burger joint ever....we stopped at a new thrift store on Culebra. This place is very hole in the wall...the sign outside is like the plastic one you would put outside for a garage sale. No joke....it's black with the words garage sale printed in red. Once we walked in I felt like walking right back out. The cigarette smoke was THAT bad. It permeated everything. We spent about ten minutes in there...long enough for me to find a piece of furniture that totally rocks! It's a large wood end table with intricate wooden carvings on all four sides. One side acts as a door. The top piece opens up so you can put throw pillows or record albums or whatever you want in there for storage. It already housed five vintage pillows that smelled like, you guessed it, lung cancer. The tag said $25, but I brought the price down to twenty. With my t-shirt over mouth and nose, I pointed to it and asked Chris to pay for it as I waited in the truck. Every minute we were in there it was like we were smoking a pack of cigarettes. Once we got home, I took it out and wiped it clean with a towel and Lemon Fresh pledge. Good as new! Then, Chris put it in the corner of the dining/office area of our living room and I placed a set of Indian pillows that I found off of Craiglist inside. I love this piece! I imagine World Market would sell something similar for $100-150. Overall, the thrift store had a good selection of furniture, but I would suggest going only if you intended it as your final stop of the day and were going to go home and take a long and hot shower immediately after. I took a couple of pictures once we got it home and cleaned up. Note: To fit it in the corner we had to position the top at an angle. It also needs some refinishing and I plan on replacing the knob. I think I'll get one from Anthropologie seeing is that's all I can afford from there.
Saturday, April 4, 2009
Ingmar Bergman's The Virgin Spring
This is a 1960's Swedish film by critically aclaimed director, Ingmar Bergman. I saw this mid-last year. I rented it from Netflix (and...um, I still have it.) The Virgin Spring is a tale of faith and revenge. Envy and Lust. I absolutely love the character of Karin. She represents faith and chastity. And everything that is good in the world. But, alas she is torn away to soon from this world by its very savagery. The film is beautiful in its portrayal of innocence lost. Haunting. Many have said that this film is what inspired The Last House on the Left. And Netflix can go ahead and charge me for it.
Friday, March 27, 2009
Dumpster Dive
Last weekend Chris found the dresser above next to the dumpster of our apartment. Some of our neighbors were moving out. I wasn't home at the time, so he gave me a call and asked if he should pick it up. Not knowing what it looked like and only going off of his taste, I said, "Sure, I guess". I am so glad he has the same kind of vintage taste in decor that I do. Then, today we went to a local estate sale that had this exact same dresser along with the rest of the set for $350. I wish I could afford that right now, but I will call myself blessed to be the owner of this vintage dresser, which was absolutely free!
Other vintage finds from last weekend include an elephant planter and two strands of New Orleans Mardi Gras beads, Circa 1977.
Saturday, March 14, 2009
Calico Courtney Brooke, my muse
I love Flickr. I love pictures. I love the seventies vintage vibe that I get from Calico Courtney Brooke's photography. Her photos are just stunning! They remind me of innocence and seduction at the same time. Of being a free spirit..... Of me being on the road with Chris...not a care in the world, driving down some nameless stretch of highway in Tennessee singing out of tune to Johnny Cash. Of walking into a convenience store in the middle of nowhere in Arizona and having some handsome stranger smile and nod as he looked in my direction. And of Chris's overprotectiveness of me wherever we went, day or night. As a girl, you can never be entirely free.
Thursday, March 12, 2009
How I got here
When I'm not acting like I know what I'm doing at work or watching horror films with my sisters and brothers, I can be found at local thrift shops or estate sales trying to ease my restless soul with a fab vintage find along with my husband, Chris, who is equally enthusiastic about finding hidden treasures. This, I bore witness to when we went on our latest thrifting adventure. Yesterday, Chris and I spent the day driving around the city going from thrift store to thrift store. Our first stop was at a new thrift boutique called Anjou on the city's northwest side. I'm excited about it because there are not many thrift shops on this side of town. Anyways, while I was perusing the women's clothing racks, Chris walked into the room in the back next to the register and the shop's owners, saw an unopened box of old, beat-up cars on a shelf full of discarded toys and proceeded to sit on the floor indian-style, voraciously sift through the box, and pluck out old hot wheels and matchboxes one by one and inspect them as if he were Dr. Henry Lee, forensics scientist, trying to piece the puzzle of the events leading up to a murder/suicide at the scene of a crime. Yes, I can relate death to virtually anything. I don't know what to do with this talent other than create morbid metaphors and interject them in my daily ramblings whenever possible. This is not the first time he has done this. Chris, not Lee. And this is quite possibly one of the reasons why I love him so. He gets totally lost in the hunt as do I. And he's always on the lookout for one of my favorite vintage things, owls. So, after going to about seven or eight...lost count....thrift shops mainly around the Fredericksburg/West Ave area I came out with a pair of owl bookends, a girly kitsch stapler, a vintage nightgown, and a few shirts and blouses. The picture above is of the stapler on its side and an owl that we got from an estate sale last month. I just put them side by side because of how well the mustard yellow color found in both complement each other.
P.S. We ate lunch yesterday at the original Blanco Cafe. The one on Blanco. They have the best cheese enchiladas. Just like my grandma's. But, after eating the first one I felt like the bulimic model whose death was featured on the show "1000 ways to Die" who died after gorging herself on room service and couldn't throw up fast enough. No. I will not do this all the time.
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