Another Sunday morning, another flea market adventure. Let's see what vintage treasures we can find! Send Paper & Moose some mail! PAM PO Box 745 Bloomsbury, NJ 08804
I don’t know what a “jigger sundae” is, but this old 62 year old Grandma wants one if that fella is serving!! 😂😂 Thank you so much for sharing and giving me a laugh.......I really needed a laugh! ❤️
Love your videos. Think of you and your channel everytime I see a Moose. Here in Northern Ontario, they are just comming out from wintering in the bush. Still snow on the ground so they are quite noticable browsing young bushes. Spring is close though. Keep up your good work.
Easter will be put away, hopefully this weekend, so when I put out some of my other "collections", I'll be sure to film on a sunny day so you all can see!
Wonderful finds. Especially enjoyed the Frozen Charlotte. So big and intact. There is a plant in Europe that made lots of these and some how a lot were thrown away, people often go there to hunt for complete unbroken ones. Porcelain frozen Charlottes! Wow.
Yes, especially found by metal hunters and people looking for old war artifacts. There is an old, old factory that made the dolls that has thousands in the immediate area due to the plant being closed and left empty for something else. Also the flea markets in Europe are very good for ephemera according to a vintage button seller I met in Germany. (I got some wonderful buttons from her btw.) Another site in Utube I think you would really like is Bros of Decay. ru-vid.com/show-UCD2DbJnKu7pTLRNd0bsUopAfeatured?disable_polymer=1Just now they are visiting Japan's abandoned buildings left completely untouched with furnishings still in the home. Some astonishing stuff. Another site is Curiosity Inc. lots of ephemera available. From Canada. ru-vid.com/show-UCgclKg8oaVlkuCurCxo2hOw
Love the fabric...big and little flowers from the 70's! We wore the beaded collars ( and crochet ones) on sweatshirts to dress them up before they came out with embellishments. The silk spool of thread is very old. My family worked in silk mills in early 1900's in Belding, Mi silk mills. Love all the tac pins...good find! Thanks for sharing! 🙋♀️
The intricate white beaded piece is actually a collar, not a necklace. Was made to wear like a collar on dresses and such. You can sell it as a necklace, but may sell faster as the collar piece. More collectible and they are beautiful.
When you finish the "glider" you should invest in a few large hydrenga plants acoss your porch . Lovley. . . 🌸 👍Especially against the slate gray stone that cornfield blue of the plants would pop . . . 🌼✌you picked up some great stuff . . . 💞 TFS
Thank you! I'm planning on getting to the glider in May, so will post that video when I've restored the glider. Hydrangea also are lovely plants and have a great smell, great suggestion!
I have heard vendors who set out bins for people to dig in sometimes do better than those who set items on tables in plain sight. I notice you seem to enjoy digging. I’m not sure maybe it has to do with the heightened response to discovery when a person engages the sense of touch.
I think digging also conveys that things might be “undiscovered”. I’m not partial to whether or not things are on tables or on bins, I’ll look at both. Though I do enjoy the digging aspect (same at estate sales).
Found this: You might be wondering, what is a jigger? It is a sundae made with vanilla ice cream, cherry syrup, chocolate syrup, burnt peanuts, whipped cream and a cherry.
Just a note for you do not know when this video was aired but there is a way to make no sew decorative pillows by cutting a peace big enough to go around the back and top then add 3 to 4 inches on all four sides then being all four Connors and tired in the middle hope you hope it helps
I've been searching for a Popple for years! I've never found one in the wild. I don't even think they hold much value but I need to have one for my collection of nostalgic garbage. 😂
Haha. I didn't even look at the back of the film canister until I was filming. I was too excited that it was from a local shop. I probably should attempt to open it though... maybe there's actually money or something super valuable inside. Wishful thinking!
My aunt was president of a Jaycee’s Wisconsin local chapter for several years in the late 70’s and 80’s. “Wisconsin Junior Chamber (Jaycees), the U.S. Junior Chamber and Junior Chamber International (JCI), a worldwide federation of young professionals and entrepreneurs between the ages of 21 and 40. Purpose of the local chapter is to become a force for good in the community, determining community needs and providing solutions by planning and facilitating community service projects.”
I have my 1949 Vu Master hand viewer and the first generation projector and a large library of reels, going back the late 40's & up to the mid-fifties. Everything from the Three Little Pigs to all the national parks and views of cities around the planet. Bought all new...I was a real Vu Master fan at the time.Those "neon" velvet "paintings" were, to me, next to the Keene stuff the height of kitch!
Depending on the scene on the velvet painting, I would have bought it. The View Master in this video was a repro, I'm guessing from the 90s. I guess the reels could be considered a type of ephemera... almost like a postcard, since they are snapshots in time!
Not a frozen Charlotte. "Frozen" means there are no moving parts. That includes arms. The one you showed is more a Flapper style Kewpie. They made those to get around the copyright on Kewpie dolls.
Hey sweet girl!! I have been loving your channel and watching the flea market and estate sale hauls so much. I wish I could muster up the courage to film but I just haven't yet. Maybe soon though. You have given me a little more of a push because you seem to have so much fun doing them. Thanks for sharing your day , Pamela. p.s. Are you recording on your phone? The quality is very good on images and sound. I don't have a camera so just wondering. TIA :).
Milk glass and rhinestone brooch at 1:01. I'd be interested in a closer look at the clown brooch at 1:03 to see what its made of. Jelly belly turtle pin at 1:06. I would pick up that carnelian colored square stone ring to see if its silver and if its a stone at 1:09. Holly Hobbie mug at 1:39 --1960's-70's predecessor to Strawberry Shortcake that started out being featured in artwork. A velvet painting! I haven't seen one of those since the last time I went shopping in Juarez, Mexico. They were sold in every tourists shop in town in 60's, 70's and 80's. I think that brown second piece of cloth you held up might be vintage. My favorite find was the vintage skiing pins - and I don't even ski!
Did you get that velvet look wood frame picture? Probably Mexico. I have sold many of those for decent money Love the beginning of your videos. So pretty. I was ready to dig with you! Fun video.
Enjoyed your video...as always. Those pins on frame the one of the guy in the funny hat playing the banjo is an advertising character for Natty Boh a Baltimore Beer. Could be worth a premium to people that collect Natty Boh stuff. Some other characters they used I believe was a turtle and a pelican I know exactly what you mean about standing there watching someone trying to make up their mind to buy something you want. Come on it’s only a $1! Worse is to stand there and watch them talk the buyer down in price, you feel like saying “ hey I give you full price”, but that would be a really unpardonable bad break with flea market etiquette One thing I notice is that flea markets today seem to get going latter then they used to and dealers are more laid back too. 25 years ago you would be there in the dark setting up. I know some do still but not the same, maybe because they don’t sell as well. Now I’m regretting staying home last weekend and not going to the market!
For this market, many vendors do usually set up in the dark & then that brings out the "Flashlight Brigade" of shoppers. I think because of the holiday & the rainy weather the day prior, it caused vendors to get there much later for setting up.
I wasn't discounting the holiday at all. I was curious as to people's schedules and how that would play into the market, for vendors and resellers. Would people come after the Sunrise services? Before Easter brunch? After church? Just thought of those things.
Many vendors purchase the items this way at estate sales and auctions. If they are the quick flip seller, they just put the bins out and don't really sort through anything. Many people love to dig through the bins, as it is almost like a "hunt". Of course others prefer having items sorted out on tables. Everyone has their own preference & that's okay!