(no subject)
Aug. 28th, 2006 11:26 amJust went to an antiques and collectors fair, which was unfairly loaded with things I couldn't afford. I was glad to see the only pocket watch I could find was entirely too brash to be my sort of thing, but there were gorgeous old compasses and barometers that made me squee. Also cameo brooches - I know they're dreadfully old fashioned, but I'd love to have one for the tweed winter coat I'm also on the lookout for.
*grins*
My life is lived in dreams.
What I was most particularly on the lookout for, though, was something I've been pondering for a while and was something I found in the first five minutes of getting in there - an old brass telescope. It's small and pretty, brass with wood inlay, made in Austria - not a clue when, but that's really not the point. It was only £19, too. I am a happy little Nny.
[eta: looking online it looks to be mid-late 1800's, and I unscrewed it and cleaned it a little and it totally works. So much more gleeful. Dude, how old do you reckon that dust is? XD]
The thing with me is that I will never be a very serious collector because I go for things I like rather than things of value. I'm not hugely bothered by first editions, I just like old and pretty books; if I can't read something, if I'm too worried by how much it ought to be worth to touch the book then I'm doing it a disservice. It's like a quote I saw once - you can't dishonour a book by underlining in it, annotating, dogearing pages; you can only dishonour a book by not reading it.
And now I've spent a couple of hours on my feet so I have to curl up on my bed for a bit. Going to work for seven hours tomorrow is going to be really bloody interesting.
*winces*
*grins*
My life is lived in dreams.
What I was most particularly on the lookout for, though, was something I've been pondering for a while and was something I found in the first five minutes of getting in there - an old brass telescope. It's small and pretty, brass with wood inlay, made in Austria - not a clue when, but that's really not the point. It was only £19, too. I am a happy little Nny.
[eta: looking online it looks to be mid-late 1800's, and I unscrewed it and cleaned it a little and it totally works. So much more gleeful. Dude, how old do you reckon that dust is? XD]
The thing with me is that I will never be a very serious collector because I go for things I like rather than things of value. I'm not hugely bothered by first editions, I just like old and pretty books; if I can't read something, if I'm too worried by how much it ought to be worth to touch the book then I'm doing it a disservice. It's like a quote I saw once - you can't dishonour a book by underlining in it, annotating, dogearing pages; you can only dishonour a book by not reading it.
And now I've spent a couple of hours on my feet so I have to curl up on my bed for a bit. Going to work for seven hours tomorrow is going to be really bloody interesting.
*winces*
no subject
Date: 2006-08-28 11:34 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-08-28 11:40 am (UTC):D?
no subject
Date: 2006-08-28 11:46 am (UTC)I mean, don't get me wrong, I love Faux Victorian. Loooove. I have a button fetish. Snape's sleeves/me OTP. I just don't like it when everyone is doing it, because then the whole world is wearing all the Cool Shit I want, but cannot justify spending €€€ on.
no subject
Date: 2006-08-28 12:53 pm (UTC)The thing with me is that I will never be a very serious collector because I go for things I like rather than things of value.
Pretty much sums up my attitudes to the antiques/vintage stuff I buy. Also, I like to *use* the things I collect, which would probably annoy the piss out of proper collecters.
no subject
Date: 2006-08-28 12:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-08-28 06:21 pm (UTC)