A friend sent me a link to your blog and I am an immediate follower! It is also an inspiration for me to keep going with the "My Stash" posts on my own blog, www.carmenandginger.blogspot.com
I know you said you were aware of others doing this; have you seen the book In Flagrante Collecto? If not, I think you would be immediately sucked in...
Will keep watching,
Regards,
Christine
PS: Also contacted your rep regarding my illustration work: www.christinefrancisbarta.com Check it out if you get a chance!
I just found your blog and I am thrilled!!!! I think we must be kindred spirits. http://circlealine.blogspot.com/2009/03/list-150-visual-list-150-little-things.html
I'm really enjoying this project. It makes me think about the collections that I have as well as the collections that I must force myself to say "no" to because ... so many beautiful things, only so much space.
Thanks for embarking on this adventure. I'm along for the ride!
Your collection today reminded me that for several years I kept all the tail threads I cut from my sewing projects. I called it the end of strings collection.
This reminds me of my grandmother so there is great nostalgic attachment to these images. What a wonderful idea to photograph your collections over the span of a year. I look forward to it.
I just discovered this blog and I love it... You remind me of me. Sometimes I make poems that are just collections of stuff. One has a collection of stuff I found in an attic in rural Sweden. The house used to be the general store for the small town, and the attic had boxes of leftover things in it, such as rolls of vintage wallpaper, shipping tags with the store's address on it, and old cards of metal snaps (as you would find at a fabric store). This last thing fascinated me the most because there were multiple boxes of old snaps, like this was the one thing the store couldn't get rid of.
I am very happy to be here because this is a very good site that provides lots of information about the topics covered in depth. I am glad to see that people are actually writing about this issue in such a smart way, showing us all different sides to it. Please keep it up. I can not wait to read what is next. Hair transplant in Pakistan
you own a lot of vintage stuff.
ReplyDeleteA friend sent me a link to your blog and I am an immediate follower! It is also an inspiration for me to keep going with the "My Stash" posts on my own blog,
ReplyDeletewww.carmenandginger.blogspot.com
I know you said you were aware of others doing this; have you seen the book In Flagrante Collecto? If not, I think you would be immediately sucked in...
Will keep watching,
Regards,
Christine
PS: Also contacted your rep regarding my illustration work:
www.christinefrancisbarta.com
Check it out if you get a chance!
I just found your blog and I am thrilled!!!! I think we must be kindred spirits. http://circlealine.blogspot.com/2009/03/list-150-visual-list-150-little-things.html
ReplyDeleteI'm really glad I found this blog. Your collections are always so great, and I'm always so, so inspired by them!
ReplyDeleteI'm really enjoying this project. It makes me think about the collections that I have as well as the collections that I must force myself to say "no" to because ... so many beautiful things, only so much space.
ReplyDeleteThanks for embarking on this adventure. I'm along for the ride!
Your collection today reminded me that for several years I kept all the tail threads I cut from my sewing projects. I called it the end of strings collection.
ReplyDeleteLove this idea.
Abigale
lovely old threads..the cards they're wound on are just as lovely
ReplyDeletewhat a colours!! beautiful!
ReplyDeletethis is the greatest project and so ambitious. i'm looking forward to seeing all of your sketches and collections!
ReplyDeleteThis reminds me of my grandmother so there is great nostalgic attachment to these images. What a wonderful idea to photograph your collections over the span of a year. I look forward to it.
ReplyDeleteSuch a great idea!
ReplyDeleteCompliments for your work!
Wooden sewing boxes filled with balls of tangled thread, cards with embroidery silk, buttons, needles and pins clustered together with spit gone rust
ReplyDeleteMany of the marvelous collections posted here exists in my shop in İstanbul.. The Works, Objects of Desire..
ReplyDeleteYou may see some of the stuff by joining the shops group in Facebook..
Group name: ''The Works, Objects of Desire''
Karaca Borar..
I just discovered this blog and I love it... You remind me of me. Sometimes I make poems that are just collections of stuff. One has a collection of stuff I found in an attic in rural Sweden. The house used to be the general store for the small town, and the attic had boxes of leftover things in it, such as rolls of vintage wallpaper, shipping tags with the store's address on it, and old cards of metal snaps (as you would find at a fabric store). This last thing fascinated me the most because there were multiple boxes of old snaps, like this was the one thing the store couldn't get rid of.
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ReplyDeleteI am very happy to be here because this is a very good site that provides lots of information about the topics covered in depth. I am glad to see that people are actually writing about this issue in such a smart way, showing us all different sides to it. Please keep it up. I can not wait to read what is next.
ReplyDeleteHair transplant in Pakistan
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