Amongst the colorful crowds, in a sea of merchandise, wedged between vendors selling vintage laxatives on one side (!) and artwork on the other, Laura & I assembled a cozy little nest of a booth~
Our goal this month was to create an atmosphere as soft and lovely as a vintage French chemise and as thoroughly feminine as this Empire bust~ Vintage powder compacts and crocheted linen gloves graced our tables~
Part boudoir, part dressing (as the French call a dressing room), thoroughly feminine~
The focus of our central table was a collection of vintage glassware & bottles with ostrich plumes~
Our collection of vintage bottles filled in the space~
this trio of amber bottles would be lovely in a kitchen for oils or vinegars with a pour spout...
Bookending the bottles were a pair of commercial-grade etageres in osier blanc~
which held jam jars filled with lavender, and many other lovelies, on soft beds of moss and excelsior~
Dozens of Laura's sweet lavender sachets were piled high~
Priced from $5 - $10~
each one individual, each one lovelier than the last~
the little nests with real blown quail eggs were tucked all over the booth; we included some French farmers market soaps to deliciously scent the booth~
Vintage jam jars in assorted sizes sold quickly, though some will be available on the Blogtique~
19C monogrammed kerchiefs made of toile d'Arles perfectly complemented the yellow jam pots from the Paris Flea~
One large pot, one small, label says "comme a la maison"
"just like home(made)"~
various pieces of vintage mercerie or sewing items were presented; vintage clothes pins, spools of thread, here new old stock linen thread, with the pretty packaging depicting a baptism~
Holiday greenery lined the entrance to the booth, and more vintage French clothes pins held up our laundry line on the walls~
Rolls of napkins were held in a wire boat; we have many more new pieces in, with and without monograms~
The petticoat totes were much admired and sold well~
as did les chemises~
Sweet little birds were found in various places,
like a winter garden~
hung with the chemises~
Did we mention it's tough business setting all of this up? This time, we were prepared; we brought French cider in our carry basket~
and set up an antiquaire's lunch for ourselves & our favorite shoppers. Well, we started with the baguette, cheese and grapes at 9am. At that point we had been up for about 6 hours so it felt like lunchtime~
these labels or etiquettes as they are called are from the Paris Flea; we will post this week on them, there's a story of course~
New items for sale, including these plus many more, are going up on the Magasin de Metis aka our Blogtique this week.
2 comments:
I have fainted! Wowza. After this, you could start another career as booth stagers, beautiful. Between the sachets and the luncheon, it must have smelled as wonderful as it looked.
Andrea, Your booth is wonderful! Both you and laura do such a wonderful job on the displays. The vintage bottles and rolled napkins are fabulous and of course I love all the vintage linens.
Hugs, Sherry
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