Saturday, December 29, 2007

Recently Rescued

These goodies are from a house in Wilmette, IL

  1. Lined Window Boxes
  2. Great Arched Transom Window from the coach house
  3. Chimney Pot also from the Coach House
  4. Porch Light

Monday, December 24, 2007

Handbags and Rings These are two of My Most Favorite Things

Pivot EcoSmart Fashion New York designer Beck Hickey creates these one-of-a-kind handbags from recycled skateboards.


Zola Jones Designs The Bumpy Ride Handbag. Recycled Car Seat Belt Closure. Fabric Handles Inner Patch Pocket Outer Side Pockets

Jessi Taylor Etsy Shop or website

I just loved this and she used vintage tile.

Friday, December 21, 2007

The Green Project of New Orleans


I was lucky enough to attend a trade show in New Orleans several years ago that coincided with Mardi Gras. I know all sorts of imagery come to mind. It was my first time in The Crescent City and I felt right at home. Like all of us, when Hurricane Katrina hit I sat glued to my television crying over the enormous loss. Since then we've received several emails from residents of New Orleans asking if we'd be interested in purchasing salvage from homes ravaged by Katrina. It breaks my heart because New Orleans has such a unique architecture. And while I understand the need for immediate financial support I firmly believe that local preservation of this architecture is the long term answer to financial stability of the city through tourism.

The Green Project is an organization that goes above and beyond the call for preservation and being green.

The Green Project operates a WAREHOUSE STORE that resells high-quality, salvaged building materials at low cost to the community. They feel strongly that the materials from New Orleans stay in the city and they won't knowingly send materials to buyers out of the area. The store is dedicated to helping the environment by reducing the amount of usable materials placed in landfills or disposed of improperly. They also SALVAGES AND DECONSTRUCT damaged or collapsed buildings by hand, in a way that saves between 45 and 70 percent of the materials. This preserves New Orleans' unique architectural history and benefits New Orleans' residents by returning their ruined building materials to use elsewhere in the city. These services alone make my heart happy but this group takes even further steps to protect their environment. The Green Project store also serves as a local RECYCLED PAINT resource by reclaiming, combining, and reselling surplus paint. This keeps paint out of the region's landfills and water system while providing affordable paint to the community. They also serve as a RECYCLING center. They currently recycle cardboard, newspaper, regular paper (plain and colored), aluminum cans and household e-waste (electronic equipment like computers, stereos, printers, monitors, cell phones, etc). They don't accept plastic or glass at this time because no one in the city can pick it up. And scrap metal has to be disposed of at the scrap metal yard, not The Green Project. But that's not all!

Our GARDEN is blooming. The Green Project provides gardening workshops where residents can learn how to make the most of a small space, recycle yard and kitchen waste into compost and improve the soil. RECYCLE FOR THE ARTS merged with The Green Project in 2003. R4A provides art materials to individual artists, schools, art programs, galleries, and other non-profit groups at minimal cost, as well as offers monthly recycled art workshops. THE GREEN ROOM is an interactive community space that promotes using garbage and salvage as artistic material. The space is used to display the work of local artists and is available for workshops and community events.
The Green Project is also involved in GREEN BUILDING & SPECIAL PROJECTS like our solar panels, biodiesel and community outreach. Prior to Hurricane Katrina, The Green Project had the largest array of operable photovoltaic solar panels in Southeast Louisiana. The photovoltaic solar panels were damaged in the storm and are FINALLY back up on their roof. They work with NOBI (the New Orleans Bio-Fuel Initiative) and the Alliance for Affordable Energy to create a recycled vegetable oil mixture as fuel for their diesel vehicles.

Truly a well-rounded organization doing their part to save our environment! Kudos to The Green Project! To find out more contact The Green Project at info@thegreenproject.org or visit them on the web at http://www.thegreenproject.org/
Thanks, Tab

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Photography

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Cliquot Club Extra Dry Ginger Ale

We were at a house the other day and the great thing about it was there were all these crawl spaces and attics all over the place. In the attic above the garage we found these two old bottles from Cliquot Club. One is Root Beer and the other is Ginger Ale. I found quite a bit of information on the web about the company. It is finding things like this that is one of parts I love best about what we do. A glimpse into popular culture and business history. As for how two empty bottles of soda came to be up in the attic above the garage, I can only guess but I like to think that this was the secret hiding place of some young boy or girl and they spent many hours with friends up there drinking soda and playing games.

The following ad from a 1920 Ladies Home Journal matches the label on these two bottles.

Founded in 1881 in Millis, Massachusetts, the beverage company was built by Henry Millis from money he had received from his father Lansing Millis. The company produced mainly sparkling cider for the first few years but later on Millis would experiment in other flavors as well. The sparkling cider was soon dropped and the company began focusing mainly on ginger ale. In 1885 the town of Millis, MA was founded in his family name. During this time the soda company hired a significant amount of the town's residents and would continue to do so for years to come. Millis continued to improve upon his beverages through his philosophy of making the drinks as though he were making them for his own friends. He imported high-quality exotic ingredients including Jamaican ginger, and Cuban pure refined sugar. These two were the key ingredients to his ginger ale making the company stand out in this field.

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Bryant Electric Company Sconces Patented 1907


The Bryant Electric Company was a manufacturer of wiring devices, electrical components, and switches founded by Waldo C. Bryant in 1888 in Bridgeport, Connecticut, USA. The company was purchased by Westinghouse Electric in 1901 and continued operation as the Bryant Electric subsidiary of Westinghouse. By 1928, Bryant sold over 4,000 different products and eventually became the world's largest plant devoted to the manufacture of wiring devices. As part of a larger process of regional deindustrialization, Westinghouse shut down the Bryant Electric plant in 1988. The closing exacerbated the neighborhood's already bleak economic situation. Westinghouse sold its remaining interests in Bryant Electric to the Hubbell Corporation in 1991. Bryant's 20 building, 6-acre site in Bridgeport's West End was torn down in 1996 to make way for a new industrial park.
For Bryant Socket Patent Information click here. We have a pair of these sconces marked Bryant, 250W 250V, PAT May 7, 1907, Made in USA.

Saturday, December 15, 2007

Victor S. Pearlman Co. Patent #D49075

Victor S. Pearlman design for a bowl (shade) for lighting fixtures.
Patented May, 1916 filed Mar 31, 1916. Shade is marked Pearlman Co PAT. NO. 49075. Pearlman filed in Cook County, Chicago. Click here for the actual patent filed. We have two of these fixtures rescued from a home in Wilmette, IL.

History on Pearlman: From the Baraboo Daily News of November 18,1915:
The lighting fixtures that have been installed in the new A1. Ringling Theatre are as beautiful as found anywhere. The central chandelier in the auditorium has forty-eight lights, trimmed in silk and verre de sole glass engraved panels. Each of the seventeen boxes has a Pearlman antique provost finished light with a silk tassel on the stem. There are silk light fixtures in the ladies rest room and through the foyer are candelabra bracket fixtures trimmed with silk shades. In the stairwell is a Pearlman design, cathedral glass panel. There are six tubular candelabra lamps inside. Many of the fixtures mentioned have gold wreaths on the outside design. The lobby fixture is antique gold, finished with soft highlights. There is a calcite cut glass bowl, inverted top, and three large lamps in the bottom. About the fixture is a laurel band of cast bronze, hand done. The fixtures are finer than in most theatres, seldom being so rich in design, quality, and finish. Victor S. Pearlman, 75 Adams Street, Chicago, designed the fixtures and they have been installed under the direction of Leslie C. Milner of the same city.

On Monday, June 5, 1916, hundreds assembled for the dedication of the Jesse W. Fell Memorial Gateway. The plan was instituted by The Woman’s League of Normal as a gateway that connects the university (University of Illinois) with the town. They stipulated that it should be plain and noble in design—a tribute to a great man of the community.
To the Founder of Normal Jesse W. Fell, Friend of Education, Lover and Planter of Trees, Philanthropist of Mighty Vision, This Gate is Dedicated by The Woman’s Improvement League And His Many Friends.
The massive bronze lanterns, which sit atop the center pillars, were made by the Victor S. Pearlman Company of Chicago, and complement the entire design for the gateway.

CHICAGO THEATRE: Owners of the Chicago Theater, Balaban and Katz spared no expense on the workmanship and materials for this miniature Versailles. Marshall Field's supplied the drapes, furniture and interior decoration. Victor Pearlman and Co. designed and built the crystal chandeliers and lavish bronze light fixtures with Steuben glass shades. The McNulty Brothers' master craftsmen produced the splendid plaster details and Northwestern Terra Cotta Company provided the tiles for the facade. The Chicago Theatre first opened its doors on October 26, 1921 with Norma Talmadge on screen in "The Sign on the Door." A 50-piece orchestra performed in the pit and Jesse Crawford played the mighty Wurlitzer pipe organ. After a "white glove inspection," a staff of 125 ushers welcomed guests who paid 25 cents until 1 p.m., 35 cents in the afternoon and 50 cents after 6 p.m.

1975 Application for the National Register of Historic Places for Shea's Buffalo Theatre 646 Main Street, Buffalo, NY
With a Chicago architectural firm and a Buffalo contractor, John Gill and Sons, the finished theater was the combined product of technical expertise and materials from both cities. The terra cotta for the Main Street facade came from an architectural terra cotta firm located at 203 South Dearborn Street in Chicago. The interior decorations were done primarily by William Hengerer Co. of Buffalo [Ed. note: the design of the interior was by the Louis Tiffany Co., as is evidenced by the drawing on display in the grand lobby], while the lighting fixtures were the exclusive domain of Victor S. Pearlman and Co. of Chicago. Heating and plumbing contracts went to George H. Drake Inc. of Buffalo. Another local enterprise of international fame, the Rudolf Wurlitzer Co. was responsible for the mammoth theater organ which was built at the time of the building's construction with pipes ranging from the size of a straw to 32 feet in length.C.W. and George L. Rapp's movie theaters were widely acclaimed in their day as "outstanding architectural creations" of the motion picture industry. Likening these splendid theaters to Roman amphitheaters and "Temples of old," P.G. Carlson wrote in 1928 in "Theatre Management" about the sumptuous interiors of Rapp theaters, "other theatres of course may have all these colors, but once a theatre built by the Rapp family is seen, there can never by any doubt as to the style they affect" (Carlson, P.G., "In the Motif of the Ancients: A Firm of Chicago Architects Lean upon the Splendors of Old to Build the Motion Picture Theatre of Today," "Theatre Management," January, 1928).Fifty years later, these sensational movie theaters have become rare monuments in urban downtowns. They have disappeared at an alarming rate or have suffered drastic interior renovations to simplify maintenance. "The Buffalo" has been spared this fate despite the presence of the same economic forces. The building was sold by Shea's Publix Theater chain to Loew's Theaters who more recently sold the building and continued to rent it. In December, 1974, the theater fell into the city's hands through foreclosure when the former owner failed to pay back taxes. A non-profit group known as "Friends of the Buffalo" is seeking an arrangement with the city to handle the maintenance of the building while Loew's continues to rent it.One of the best preserved big city movie theaters of its vintage, "The Buffalo" still contains an overwhelming amount of its original decor. It is representative of the most lavish of Rapp and Rapp's commissions and is a priceless record of an exuberant period of American history.

Light Fixture Patents and Company Info.

When we do our own fixture salvaging, seldom are we able to know what we are purchasing until we have the fixture down from the ceiling. This causes quite a bit of excitement over who made it and when on the drive back to the shop to start the investigation. Today, Liz and Jim picked up a set of three fixtures that have no markings on the wrought iron frames but the shades are marked with the name and patent number of the maker. The patent number is the key that opens the door to the past. From here on out we'll post our findings as there is very little even on the Internet that can help fill in the pieces. Please let us know if you have further info to broaden our references and let us know if you find this helpful. To find fixture history I'll tag all entries as Lighting History going forward.

Thanks,
Tab

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Energy Efficiency Myth-Busters

I picked this up at my local Green Drinks meeting in Chicago. I don't know who actually put this list together but it has some helpful tips for all of us Green Thinkers that are concerned about energy loss in our homes.

Myth: Compact Florescent Light Bulbs (CFLs) are harmful for the environment because they contain mercury.

Fact: While it's true that CFLs contain trace amounts of mercury (according to the EPA), CFLs can prevent mercury from ending up in our environment due to their energy efficiency. Because of this, fewer emissions are created by the coal power plants required to create electricity.

Myth: Leaving your thermostat at a constant temperature 24 hours a day uses less energy than setting your thermostat back and then having to continually heat up/cool down the air temperature.

Fact: The longer your house stays at a reduced temperature when heating, or at an increased temperature when cooling, the more energy and money you'll save. This is because your heating or cooling costs depend mostly on the temperature difference between the indoor and outdoor environments. When you adjust your thermostat down in the winter, or up in the summer, you reduce this natural temperature difference. If you set your thermostat back 10 to 15 degrees for 8 hours while you are asleep or at work, your energy savings range from 5% to 15% of your monthly energy bill.

Myth: When an appliance is turned off, it is no longer using energy.

Fact: Items turned off continue to consume power, sometimes as much as when they are on. There are a large number of appliances that continue to use power unbeknownst to consumers. This is called "standby power," and can only be eliminated by unplugging an appliance.

Myth: There is no point in insulating ceilings and walls if doing so will just allow more heat to escape in less insulated areas.

Fact: The insulation of certain areas of your home will not place more pressure on less heat efficient areas. However, poorly insulated areas in a home do lose the most amount of heat and should be addressed before improving better insulated areas.

Myth: Washing dishes by hand uses less energy than running an electric dishwasher.

Fact: According to Gaiam Community, "this is one of the few instances where modern technology beats the old fashioned method." A recent study showed that using a dishwasher does not require pre-washing by hand; this practice can waste up to 20 gallons of hot water.

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

GreenDrinks Chicago

We've written about Green Drinks before but we attended another get-together this past Monday and as always I was blown away by the organizers, attendees, and the speaker panel. The subject of the evening was finding "green" or sustainable jobs. Great information, attentive and enthusiastic audience always makes for a wonderful evening. Green Drinks is an international organization. Check out there website to see if they have a group going in your area.

Monday night we met Dr. Sarah Warren. She's a sustainability coach here in Chicago. To learn more about what she does you can visit Dr. Warren here.


Tab

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Tiling a Hearth

Tiling a Hearth from This Old House Online
By: Harry Sawyers, , December 2007

www.islandgirlsalvage.com/Tile

Garden Displays


Just some photos of some of our Garden Displays that we have had at one time or another.

Monday, December 10, 2007

I Can Garden

Gardening is a year round passion for some and while we are on the periphery of the gardening community we love what we have seen done with the garden architecturals that our customers have purchased. Along the way we have hosted a few garden clubs at our shop. I was really pleased to find this website and the wealth of information about gardening called ICanGarden.com.
ICanGarden.com began in 1995 by Master Gardener, Donna Dawson, with a view to providing information to gardeners. Since its origin, ICanGarden has grown to include information on over 480 garden clubs, reviews of over 700 books, almost 300 public gardens, over 6300 articles from over 150 garden writers, gardening events from around the world, over 1200 links, over 940 suppliers and thousands of forum and member items. Be sure to also check out the garden tours!
With the holidays upon us bringing the outdoors in is a wonderful way to create that wonderland feeling at the table or in the gathering room in your house. Here is a lovely article that I found on the site.
With the holidays upon us bringing the outdoors in is a wonderful way to create that wonderland feeling at the table or in the gathering room in your house. Here is a lovely article that I found on the site.


Holiday Greens
by Lisa Halvorsen
December 9, 2007


Many people usher in the holiday season by decorating their homes with evergreen boughs, sprigs of holly, garlands, and mistletoe. Although now considered a Christmas tradition, the origin of this practice dates back many centuries.

The Greeks and Romans were among the first to bring evergreen boughs indoors in winter. They were amazed that the evergreen remained green year-round, even during the bleak winter months, and decided that it must have supernatural powers. To them it symbolized nature and the promise of spring when the earth would be verdant again.

During the Victorian era, the custom of bringing evergreen boughs and other greens into the house at Christmastime was revived. Many people made elaborate arrangements for mantelpieces and tables using boughs, ivy, laurel, yew, and hemlock.

In the 1800s greens were used in this country to make memorials to honor loved ones who had died. Evergreen boughs and other greens were woven into wreaths, crosses, and stars and placed on graves in cemeteries. Around holiday time, they were brought home to use as indoor decorations.

A kiss under the mistletoe, another popular American custom, came from Scandinavia, where according to mythology, Balder, the son of Frigga, the Norse goddess of love, was struck dead by an arrow made of mistletoe. As Frigga wept, her tears fell onto the mistletoe and turned into small, white berries. She declared that mistletoe should no longer be used to kill, but to encourage love. Thus, anyone found standing beneath the mistletoe must be kissed.

Mistletoe also played an important role in the Druid celebrations of the winter solstice. Because it appeared to grow in the air--the plant wound itself around the tree, its roots never touching the soil--the Druid high priests believed that it was a sacred plant. During the solstice, they would climb the trees, cut down the mistletoe, and toss it to the crowd below. It was considered bad luck if even a single sprig touched the ground. Catching the mistletoe ensured that livestock would be fertile and reproduce.

Holly and ivy are often used together in holiday decorations, a tradition that stems from a Middle Ages belief that holly was male and ivy, female, and so the two should forever be intertwined. Holly was also thought to have protective powers while ivy stood for love.

The tradition of decorating evergreen trees for the holidays began with Martin Luther in the early 1500s. Legend has it that he was walking through the woods one Christmas Eve and noticed how the sparkly stars shone through the branches of a snow-covered fir. Wanting to share the magic with his children, he chopped down the tree and brought it home. He decorated it with candles to represent the stars.

In the 1600s families in France decorated fir trees with gold foil, paper roses, apples, and sweet treats at Christmastime. German immigrants brought the tradition with them when they settled in America. However, Christmas trees did not become widespread in America until the 1800s. Although first sold commercially in New York City in 1851, it wasn't until four years later, when President Franklin Pierce placed the first tree in the White House, that many Americans adopted the tradition. Electric Christmas tree lights were invented in 1882 by Edward Johnson, Thomas Alva Edison's assistant.

This year, as you deck your halls with boughs of holly, ivy, and other holiday greens, think of the history behind these traditions and of the many generations before you who heralded the arrival of winter holidays in much the same way as we do today.


Lisa is a Garden Writer with the University of Vermont Extension

Monday, December 3, 2007

Curly Hair Blues

Sorry to have been off the blogging for the past week or so. I was visiting with my family in NY and things have been a little bit crazy. Though I have one or two new subjects for posts from this experience.
On the same day that we met Angela of TodaysFind we met Diane who was with Angela. Well She and I share a similar problem; crazy curly, thick hair that we like to wear straight. I am here to tell you that it is all about the brush. I have tried everything, from infomercial blowdryers, two flatirons one ceramic, I cannot even count the amount of products that I have on my bath vanity to try to make this easier and it still took nearly an hour to fully dry my hair and iron it.
Invest in a really good brush that grabs the hair. I have gotten my routine down to some anti-frizz leave in conditioner my brush and my blow dryer and 1/2 for drying time. Take a look at picture on our Blog home page "Meet Our Wrecking crew". Guess which one is me? In the humidity the mess just seems to get bigger and bigger.

This week I have been staying with my sister whose hair is twice as bad as mine in the humidity. So I let her use the brush and she loves it. Biggest plus in her mind is that it doesn't get tangled at all. I promised to get her one. I got mine at Ulta in Chicago. There is one near my Mom's on the Island so I ran out really quick before the family dinner and of course they are completely sold out of that particular brush. Here is the brand Double S Pro Brush



New Friends

On Saturday morning we had the pleasure of meeting two women who came to our store to shop. Angela Trainor has a shop in New Buffalo, Michigan called Today's Find, she gives new life into older, not in the best shape furniture. Here are a couple of samples from the Gallery page on the website.