Keeping the decorating budget close to zero

And… we’re back! With a story from Cara of Casa Cara about how she repurposed most of the items in her living room:

 When I bought this cottage in May ’09, there were 15 or 16 pieces in the house and basement that I’ve kept and used, including a 1930s stick rattan sofa I painted and fitted out with cushions from Restoration Hardware, a Gothic-style cabinet from a church that now supports my  TV, an antique gate leg table that’s my ‘tech center’ (with modem, phone, printer, etc.) — even mirrors and framed Impressionist prints. The rest of the furnishings here I found on the street in Brooklyn or bought for a few dollars at tag sales and thrift shops. I’ve tried to keep my decorating budget as close to zero as possible. The only thing in my living room I spent real money on was a white couch from IKEA.

All images via Casa Cara

Cara’s not the first person to tell me the previous owners of a home or apartment left items that they’ve ended up keeping and using. I love the idea of finding something really small, like a child’s toy, left behind in a secret hiding spot for years and years. Has that ever happened to you? 

Check back tomorrow to read about one of Cara’s renovation projects.

Vintage Candlestick Cake Platters

See these brownies?

They’re my great-grandmother’s secret recipe brownies and arguably the best brownies that ever were. 

See these cake pedestals from Iacoli & McAllister? They are vintage candlesticks, painted bright colors, with corian tops added. I need these lovely cake pedestals for my grandmother’s brownies. That is all. 

Mini Pedestal Select 45 - Yellow

Mini-Pedestal Select 200 - Black

Mini-Pedestal Select 141 Aquamarine

Grandma Polly’s Chair

 

My Grandma Polly was a redheaded, storytelling spitfire of a woman who loved life and loved sharing it with others. Her home was filled with fleamarket finds, homemade jewelry, canned vegetables from her garden, original art, vintage magazines and curiosities of all kinds, including an actual voodoo doll and the murder weapon from one of my grandfather’s trials. Everything had a story that she was always more than happy to intrigue you with as you sat at her kitchen table with her dog Atom Baum (her maiden name). This chair was a fixture in her shag-carpeted living room next to her antique lava lamp. It was here she sat to entertain us with her tales as she enjoyed her tradition of a daily “happy hour” of a corona and a lime. Years later when I acquired the chair, it was still in its original black lacquer and dark floral upholstery and was showing its lifetime of love. The memories in this chair warranted rescuing it, so mom and I repainted and reupholstered it in a pink and green motif to match my couch and other furnishings. This special chair joined me in my apartment in Atlanta and now New York, and every once in a while, I take a seat and indulge in my own happy hour of a corona and a lime. I think Grandma Polly would be pleased.

Contributed by Caroline Shirley

A Sentimental Salvage is the story behind that truly special, one-of-a-kind piece in your home. It may be furniture that’s been in your family for years or an accessory you delighted in finding yesterday. However long it’s been in your life, this piece of your home holds special meaning and sentimental value. Email salvagedgrace@gmail.com if you’ve got a Sentimental Salvage of your own to share.

She salvages whole houses!

I had the good fortune to run across the fabulous blog Casa Cara, where writer and old home collector, Cara Greenberg charts her adventures buying and renovating old houses. That’s right – she salvages whole houses! I figured after 20-something years of collecting homes, Cara might have a few gems of wisdom (or many!) to share…  Each day this week, I’ll post one of Cara’s awesome tips for flea marketing, renovating older homes and repurposing antiques. To start things off, Cara provides a little flea marketing 101:

Cara, tell me about your approach to flea marketing and yard sale-ing (sailing?) Do you look for specific items or just good deals? Do you have any best practices that you can share?

Specific items. I even have a list to keep me on track. Right now I’m looking for an umbrella stand and coat rack for my front hall and a dining table for my porch. I’m always on the lookout for garden tools, kitchenware, and lamps to fill in what I don’t have here at my Long Island cottage. Recently I found a fabulous rustic hutch, made in the 1970s out of 300-year-old barn wood.

image via Casa Cara

My yard sale tips are only two: go early and ye shall find. And do not saddle yourself with unnecessary items, unless you want to have your own yard sales.

I am pea green with envy over that hutch – she is a beauty. I love that it was made using 18th century barn wood!

Tomorrow Cara tells me about her experiences repurposing…

Hello and welcome!

I’m so excited to welcome you to Salvaged Grace. I hope that within this blog you’ll find a multitude of ideas and inspiration for designing and decorating using salvaged materials. In the months I’ve spent researching and gathering information for this blog, I’ve certainly learned a lot!

This week you’ll see posts about Casa Cara‘s adventures collecting old homes, a couple of awesome Sentimental Salvages, a pair of lamps from antique shop, Colonia (you’ll never guess what they originally were) and more!

To be sure you don’t miss a thing, sign up for a blog subscription or add SalvagedGrace.com to your Google Reader. Enjoy, and let me know what you think! 

Salvaged Filmstrip via Joiseyshowaa's Flickr photostream

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