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VintageKC / Spring 2014 1 + Girls Fashion 2014 Garden Guide Home. Fashion. DIY. VintageKC Spring 2014 | vintagekcmag.com DIY: HeaDboarDs & WooD slIces | bIz marketInG tIps | JennIFer bertranD’s blank slate aDvIce lIvInG HIstorY make a scene in every room

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Page 1: 0204 VintageKC Spring 2014

V intageKC / Spring 2014 1

+Girls Fashion2014 Garden Guide

Home. Fashion. DIY. VintageKC

Spring 2014 | vintagekcmag.com

DIY: HeaDboarDs & WooD slIces | bIz marketInG tIps | JennIFer bertranD’s blank slate aDvIce

lIvInGHIstorY

make a scene in every room

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Features14 Vintage Spaces Retro love abounds in a professor/ filmmaker’s Overland Park home22 2014 Garden Guide Run to the outdoors and make it yours with our garden inspiration30 Vintage Fashion The darling, pretty, fun, cool world of girls’ vintage fashion

C olumns05 Our Favorite Finds Items of woodland nature06 Design Book Bought a new house? Jennifer tells us how to design a blank canvas08 Buy & Sell The key to marketing success? Be awesome. Here’s how.44 Stores We Love Studio 1404 and As Time Goes By46 Vintage Memories Heirloom flowers and traditions that last beyond the end of life

Do-it-yourself10 DIY Furniture Headboards 36 Renovated Recipes Cool spring picnic lunch38 DIY Crafts 10 ideas for wood slices

V intageKC / Spring 2014 3

ContentsSpring 2014 • Volume 2 Issue 4

30

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V intageKC / Spring 20144

ast fall, a Kansas windstorm knocked down a tree in my backyard. Well, half of the tree. The two big, looming elms in our yard weren’t the prettiest when we bought our first home five years ago. A severe

Kansas ice storm had stripped them almost bare and they were slowly reaching, making their way back. But inside, the trees had sustained too much damage. They were rotting. And the wind proved too much. It took two large branches from the middle of the tree and shoved them right between our screened porch and our barn-like-in-the-city shed, hitting the other elm on the way down. It wasn’t pretty.

We hired a crew to clean up the debris. The torn elm was in such poor shape it had to be removed altogether. And so did the

second. Suddenly these trees, which had given us such wonderful memories of swinging, laughing and playing in the shade, were gone. The yard was inexplicably bare (and bright). And I felt sad.

Life is like that sometimes. You’re trotting along, trying to do your best and somehow, usually suddenly, you end up standing in your empty backyard watching six men pull plastic bags and trash out of a hole in your rotting tree as they remove it from your property. A family of opos-sums was to blame for the trash. And it is comical.

Had I used an ounce of foresight, I would have kept some of the wood to cut up for future projects, but mostly I just wanted the mess gone. For some great ideas on how to use a fallen tree, turn to page 38 and see what our creative types came up with.

I believe that all change is an opportunity, and after this awful winter, I’m excited to get out into my barren backyard and make something new of it. Turn to page 22 for this year’s garden guide, full of tons of inspiration!

With the multitude of changes that can occur in life, it’s always a good idea to remember to have fun. When we stepped into Steve and Mary Pruitt’s house, I rekindled my love affair with mid-century pieces, and how genuinely happy they make me. Steve and Mary make me happy, too. Check out their house on page 14. And what could be more fun than jumping and laughing children? Our girls fashion spread in this issue will be sure to make you smile (page 30).

We’ve got great advice from marketing strategy for small businesses to room design tips for new home buyers from our favorite columnists and a spring picnic lunch beckoning you to eat in the great outdoors. Even if you happen to have recently lost all your shade trees.

One bright spot (ok, my entire yard is now technically a bright spot) is no trees means fewer braver-than-lions “tree rats” (some people call them squirrels) will be invading my tomato plants this year. They’ve all sought assylum in the nieghbor’s giant pin oak. She’s really happy about it.

from the editorPublisher/Editor

Erin [email protected]

Fashion Director/Editorial AssistantCalli Green

[email protected]

Copy EditorSusan Anderson

Staff

C ontributorsKim Antisdel

Jennifer BertrandMichael FryJames Fry

Courtney JenkinsJamie Kaczmarczyk

Megan KappleJenni Koch

Audrey KuetherAbbie MarshallAmy McCarterKristen Paulson

Angie SnowTeede Stipich

Deborah VoglerQuinn White

VInTAGEKC VOluME 2, ISSuE 4 IS PuBlISHED QuARTERly By ERIn SHIPPS

In OVERlAnD PARK, KS. COPyRIGHT 2014, ERIn SHIPPS. All RIGHTS RESERVED.

REPRODuCTIOn In PART OR In WHOlE WITHOuT WRITTEn PERMISSIOn OF THE

PuBlISHER IS STRICTly PROHIBITED. PRInTED In THE u.S.A.

P hotographyWilliam and Jill DiMartinolayne Haley Photography

Kelly Hutchinson

An Overland Park home steals the scene in every retro-inspired room.Photo by William and Jill DiMartino

On the C over

Comical Change

L

^V intageKC / Spring 2014 1

+Girls Fashion2014 Garden Guide

Home. Fashion. DIY. VintageKC

Spring 2014 | vintagekcmag.com

DIY: HeaDboarDs & WooD slIces | bIz marketInG tIps | JennIFer bertranD’s blank slate aDvIce

lIvInGHIstorY

make a scene in every room

Erinvintagekc

vintagekc

vintagekcmagazine

Fol low us!VKC vintagekcmag.com

vintagekcmag

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our favorite Etsy finds

All of these local Kansas City shops can be found on etsy.com, an online retailer.

Woodgrain Hand Stamped Coasters are stamped by hand in Kansas City. Pick a mixed color set or a single color. Options include Emerald Green, Cayenne Red, Dazzling Blue, Sepia, and Jet Black. Free shipping for local orders.thetullebox.etsy.com

This adorable stuffed deer is made of brown corduroy with cream accents. Marked R. Dakin & Co., it was imported in 1959. Well-loved condition. Measures 6x3.5x6in tall. local pickup available. kolorize.etsy.com

Vintage cast iron eagle figurine with a hook for hanging. Measures approximately 11x7x5.5in. Could be used as a candle holder/cover, or a tree hanging garden decor. local pick up can be arranged. intona.etsy.com

Created using scanned in images from vintage magazines and old textures, this moose is a one of a kind piece of art. Available in 8x10in, 11x14in and 5x7in. thecuriousnickel.etsy.com

Woodland Wonderful

Designed by Vera neumann, this “Woodland” pattern dinner plate was made by Mikasa. gaelianna.etsy.com

Enter to Win!One reader will win a set of four brown stamped coast-ers from The Tulle Box. To enter, mention VintageKC on Facebook/Twitter and tell us your favorite Etsy find. #vintagekcgives

Coyote is a full-bodied unisex fragrance made from 100 percent natural botanical extracts, with notes of bay, patchouli, orange, neroli, wood and musk.forstrangewomen.etsy.com

This sweet little bee, cut from an antique 19th century dictionary, is sealed under glass-like resin and sits atop a black vintage button. Ring size six and up.whybecause.etsy.com

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ello, everyone!Wowzahs, are you ready for

spring or what? Just remember all of that cold reminds you that

you’re alive and wakes you up! And if any-thing, it’s been so cold that you’ve had time to stare at rooms in your house and think of brilliant ideas on how to enhance them!

This column I wanted to discuss what happens when you have a blank slate in a home (even if it’s not all white). Your “blank slate” basically means you can push your home design where you want it to go, but you don’t even know where to begin. It could be that you just bought a house, or it could be that you’ve completely changed your style. For example, I had a friend who stopped having people over because she wasn’t a fan of her old European style. She was now feeling not proud of her home,

design book

and she didn’t even know where to begin on how to evolve style.

First, do your typical thing that everyone under the sun is doing — start a pinterest page and a house notebook. You don’t have to know why you like photos. But after you pin a certain amount of images, more than likely you’ll start to see specific elements repeat — like white cabinets, or lots of natu-ral wood or whatever! Then in your “house notebook,” start a list of goals for the house. Do a page for each room. This will help keep your thoughts organized. It will also give you a base camp for any contractor in-voices, paint color selections and so on. No longer will you have to rummage in drawers or look at old paint cans to have answers!

Second, don’t feel rushed. It never hurts to live in a space before you spend money on it. Design is a thoughtful process.

Sometimes it’s nice to see how light affects the space to know what colors you will want to paint. And most importantly, you may even want to redefine the rooms. Our din-ing room has become my office because we were honest with ourselves that entertaining people one time a year didn’t warrant wast-ing a whole room. Now it’s a space that I use every single day, and I love it. I’m up among the action in our house and I get natural light, which I didn’t get in the basement.

Third, know that your old stuff may need to be switched out. If it’s a new house, think of it like finding the right hair cut for your face shape. Same goes for furniture and accessories for your home. Something that may have been perfect for your old house may not be the right fit for your new house.

If it’s evolving your home style, then write a list saying what you have to keep and what

By Jennifer Bertrand

Ever wonder what an HGTV Design Star winner would say about designing your space?

Lucky you, we’ve got one!

Blank Slates

Designing

practicalowl/flickr. Image slightly altered, used under a CC license.

H

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you would be willing to sell or change out. This will help you understand what you have to make work due to budgets, heir-looms, etc. Also, next to that item, write if it can be recovered, painted or addressed in some new fresh way. I am a huge fan of the new Amy Howard lacquered paints sold in the West Bottoms. I would use them for lamps, chandeliers, dressers, front doors, kitchen handles and so on. It’s an easy way to give a happy and super shiny look to any piece of furniture or accessory. I just painted a pagoda shelf tower with them to use in my office to store paint decks and client notebooks. The Amy Howard paint line also has a zinc finish which is beautiful, a finish that can authentically age mirrors,

a chalk paint finish and more. You can find those at Restoration Emporium.

Fourth, remember less is more. For me to say that says a lot, because I’m the girl who has pink hair and loves Lucite. But remem-ber, sometimes when we don’t know what to do with design, we keep putting stuff on the walls and buying more stuff. Instead of buying lots of small inexpensive things, you want to save up and buy the appropriate size and quality item for a space.

Finally, if you keep putting off mak-ing changes or starting, you will never get anywhere! Start with a master plan and baby step one room at a time. Stop buying small things and save up for whatever you really need and remember it’s suppose to be

fun. If it’s not fun, you may need to bring in someone to bounce ideas off of and give you the confidence to guide you along the way. There are a lot of fabulous designers in Kansas City, and a lot of them will do small consultation jobs to get you started.

Happy designing! ^

Jennifer Bertrand is the winner of HGTV’s show “Design Star” season three, and cohost of “Real Life Design” on cravingtalkradio.com. She resides in Weatherby Lake, MO, with her lovely

English husband, Chris, and her happy son, Winston. She has big plans in life to conquer the design world … again.

design book

Email pics and questions to Jennifer [email protected]

Instagram hgtvdesignstarjenniferbertrandFacebook Jennifer Oldham Bertrand

Twitter jblovedesign

eO

JRiver Market

Antiques

TOpen Daily

10 a.m. to

6 p.m.

gFind your Own Look by Recycling some amazing Lifestyles from the Past

For information contact: [email protected]

k816.221.0220115 West 5th StreetKansas City, MO 64105

30,000 SQ. FT.

RiverMarketAntiques

~ ~

Remember less is more. For me to say that says a lot ,

because I’m the girl who has pink hair and loves Lucite.

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goes in their booths, they maintain a unify-ing look and feel, and they constantly update and refresh their booths. For the online seller, excellence means quality photos and detailed descriptions. Pay attention to lighting and photo backgrounds. One of the Brown Button regulars was telling us that he likes to find items on Ebay that have poor descriptions and even worse pho-tos. He buys them at a bargain, and then relists them on Ebay with professional photos. He can usually sell the same item for two to three times what he bought it for, all because he operates with excellence.

Most people understand that marketing a business in the 21st century means having an online presence. However, just having a basic website and posting links once a week on your shop Facebook page won’t get much traction with your customer base. To engage customers online, you must be engaging. You must post great content that is worthy of being shared.

One of the brands that we admire online is industrialartifacts.net. In addition to their web-site, they sell on Ebay and Etsy and post to Face-book, YouTube and Twitter. There are several things worth noting about Industrial Artifacts’ online presence. First, they and their products are remarkable (see excellence, above). Secondly, they have a consistent brand feel across all of the websites that they use to engage customers. You will see the company logo and colors every-where. Thirdly, and perhaps most importantly, their content is interesting and worth sharing. They have social media momentum and will continue to attract customers because they have an online presence worth following.

An often overlooked, but significant, part of marketing is customer care. In these days of Angie’s List and Yelp, an unhappy customer can do a lot of damage to your reputation. We don’t believe that the customer is always right, and we know that you can’t make everyone happy all the time, but a policy of caring for your customer, interacting with integrity and solving problems will take you far. For the vintage shop owner, customer care includes proactively assisting customers and answering questions, having an inviting atmosphere, and plain old fashioned friendliness. Online sellers need honest descriptions, timely shipping and detailed refund/exchange policies. Putting customer needs above profitability will ulti-mately put profit where you need it to be.

There are so many incredible vintage sellers in Kansas City. From the West Bottoms to the suburban antique malls you can see pieces of this engagement marketing in play. For your shop/booth/online store, take time to ask yourself: What are you promising? How are you delivering? What do you need to change?

o matter whether you are a vin-tage shop owner, antique booth dealer or online seller, your busi-ness only works when you reach

your customers and they buy your wares. You can have the coolest shop in the world or the best selection of the rarest finds, but if you don’t connect with the customers and give them a reason to buy from you, then all you have is an expensive collecting hobby.

So then the question becomes: How do you connect? How do you engage your customers? How do you market yourself and your shop (online or on-street) so that you stand apart and draw buyers? The answer, in a word: marketing. By marketing, we don’t just mean billboards, ads and social media (although it does include that); we mean every single thing that represents you and your shop to the public. On his blog (sethgodin.typepad.com), Seth Godin defines marketing as, “the name we use to describe the promise a company makes, the story it tells, the authentic way it delivers on that promise.” What are you promising? How are you delivering? If you are not delivering what you are promising, then what needs to change?

The NO. 1 way to market your shop is to be ... awesome. Excellence is in short supply these days. When you consistently deliver an experi-ence beyond customers’ expectations, they take notice. They come back. They buy. Being better doesn’t have to be expensive, but it does mean being purposeful. Our friends, Dave and Gail, who each have a booth at the River Market Antique Mall, understand excellence, and their booths stand out. They have a standard for what

N

^Michael and James Fry are brothers and owners of Brown Button Estate Sales.

let’s talk business: How to engage people with what you’re doing, online and on-street.

By Michael and James Fry

buy & sel l

101Marketing

Website brownbutton.comEmail [email protected]

Facebook Brown ButtonPinterest theebrownbutton

Twitter brown_button

marketingAVE

strategyST

Brown Button will speak as part of VKC’s Small Business Academy. Sign up to

receive more info at vintagekcmag.com/small-business-academy.

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This past season, my wife and I have found a great deal of enjoyment read-ing out loud together. Our vintage fiction of choice recently has been the “little House” series by laura Ingalls Wilder. We’ve been on a slow and steady hunt for each of the books in the series. We’re espe-cially fond of the original 1950s copies with the Garth Williams illustra-tions. The books are quite refreshing in their focus of family values and togetherness. I think that is one of the reasons I’m so drawn to the stories. living in our current cell phone society, it’s quite enjoyable to read about a family that spends so much purposeful time together. The books are also fascinat-ing to read just on a historical level, learning about how homesteaders lived in the 1800s. Of course, our reading time would not be complete without a roaring fire and a hot cup of Roasterie coffee.

He said ... He said

buy & sel l

I love old black and white movies. Getting cozy on the couch with my wife, a bowl of popcorn and a movie from the pre-Tech-nicolor era is my idea of a good time. I love every-thing from the big clas-sics like “Citizen Kane” and “Casablanca” to the Sunday night Disney movies of my childhood like “The Shaggy Dog” and “The Absent-Mind-ed Professor.” Created

in a time before computers and special effects, these motion pictures required great writing and engaging stories. Great films, such as Hitchcock’s “Psycho,” used the audience’s imagination to make it that much more thrilling. I will round out the old b&w list with “Dr. Strangelove,” “To Kill a Mockingbird,” and my personal favorite, “It’s a Wonderful life.” Corny, you say? Maybe, but I’ll take a little ideal-ized sappiness verses 98 percent of the movies out today.

How do you share vintage with your family?

Michael James

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V intageKC / Spring 201410

diy furniture

Doors, mantels, dresser tops, book pages — when it comes to the bedroom, the sky’s the limit!

Head boards8 Ideas for

I come across old, sad, unuseful dressers all the

time — ones that are in shambles with all the drawers missing, yet have somehow survived with their tops in one piece. So why not salvage that good, solid piece of wood and turn it into something beautiful again? That is exactly what I did to make this twin headboard. I simply pried the sucker off the dresser, gave it a good scrub-bing, painted it grey, distressed to my liking and then hand painted a whimsical "hello." To add some color

and texture, I took some scrap fabric and a bird stencil and cut out a few to place along the bottom. I used Mod Podge to adhere and seal the birds in place. I then got some heavy duty hanging eyelets and placed them equi-distant on the back of the headboard for easy mounting to a wall. The beauty of this easy DIy headboard is that it can be placed at your desired height and when you’re sick of the painted finished, it can simply be sanded down and refinished!- Abbie Marshall, ecolectickc.com

Curvy & Cute

My husband and I made our headboard from an upcycled vin-tage door. The door was removed from a home in Brookside to

be replaced with a new door. The door and window company was going to toss this one, so we rescued it. Molding was

attached, and in the windows we've placed black and white photos from our travels.

- Johnna Perry, InJohnnasKitchen.com

Picture Perfect

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I first painted this mantel, and then in the opening, I covered a piece of plywood with cotton batting and muslin. I attached that to the back of the mantel, and my husband drilled holes for mounting to the wall.- Winnie Curtis, Lawrence

Mantel Mojo

This headboard was a birthday gift for my wife a couple years ago, and has since become one of my most-loved pieces. It is covered in a smattering of real vintage book pages, carefully selected and placed for cohesiveness and beauty. To DIy this: Adhere pages to a headboard, and then treat with a poly protectant to minimize tearing or ripping later on. Purchase a similar version in the etsy shop below.- Joey Williams, toolshedoriginals.etsy.com

Stack & Layer

diy furniture

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diy furniture

This headboard came as a part of a vintage bedroom set I bought on Craigslist. While it has nice curves, the woven center with oval cutouts wasn’t doing anything for me. I painted the outter edge with CeCe Caldwell’s Pittsburgh Gray chalk clay paint. Then I stapled a layer of batting followed by a layer of second-hand sale remnant fabric, and finished with upholstery trim from Hobby lobby.- Erin, VintageKC

Upholstery Update

As Time Goes By• Antiques

• Collectibles • Vintage Home

Décor

816-366-0545Greenwood, MO 64034

Visit Greenwood’s 7 Shops As Time Goes By in Greenwood

Proudly stockingMother Earth Paints!

Custom painting & paint classes

6015 Johnson DriveMission, Kansas 66202

Hours: Mon-Sat 10am-6pm913-333-0026 [email protected]

My husband and I found this screen at Savers for $50. It was dark brown and dated. We sanded, primed and spray painted it to give height to our existing headboard.- Kim Antisdel, interior designer

Thrifty Revamp

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diy furniture

C omfort By Designby Deb Vogler, Interior Designer

ElEVatE your housE to a homE

14111 W. 95th st., lenexa, [email protected]

913-522-2860

Vintage Shabby

f lickr faves

We love the simple painted wood for this headboard. But it’s ador-ableness is furthered by the monogram, garland and vintage painted Homeco ship.photo: aquaowl/flickr used under a CC license

Button Upupholstery doesn’t have to be complicated with this easy DIy tufted head-board. Check out the Flickr stream for more photos of the DIy process.photo: Jeremy Wilburn/flickr used under a CC license

In addition to the obvious inspiration of Pinterest, try perusing flickr.com for more ideas, like these!

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V intageKC / Spring 201414

By Kim Antisdel | Photos by William and Jill DiMartino

It’s all fun and games — and pretend household inhabitants — in the Overland Park home of a professor and filmmaker, and his retro-loving wife.

Antique Affection

vintage spaces

hen Stephen and Mary Pruitt moved to their new Overland Park home in 2001, they had one goal: find a way to hate it less. The UMKC professor and his wife have been married for 31 years and share a very specific love for a mid-century modern

aesthetic. Moving into a home built in 1993 didn’t exactly fulfill their greatest visual desires. Thankfully, one Christmas tree would change it all.

W

Stephen and Mary Pruitt

Details of the Pruitt’s mid-century-loving home.

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vintage spaces

The beautiful art collection in the Pruitt’s piano room has been loaned to museums. Their dog (at right) has not. But she’s cute.

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When their two daughters, Becky and Barri, moved away for college, Stephen had a dé-cor epiphany. It was no longer necessary to have a real tree in the home for the Christmas season. The sense of freedom went straight to his head, and he made a decision.

“I decided to get a fake tree,” Stephen said. “But the requirement was, if we were go-ing to go fake, we’re gonna go really fake.”

Stephen called on his inner 21-year-old, visiting an antique store in Indianapolis one time with his aunt, where he purchased his first mid-century masterpiece, a set of cobalt blue bottles. The experience resonated with him and has never left. So it was no surprise that

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vintage spaces

Opposite page: A cool mid-century lounge took over the Pruitt’s 1993-built home, with a working television, bright curtains and every detail in its place. This page: The dining room is painted Flamingo Pink from the 1950s, and features fun mid-century place settings.

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vintage spaces

Top and above left: Stephen and Mary’s bedroom features his parents’ refinished bedroom set and a perfectly matched table they found at Good JuJu. Above and right: A guest bedroom is strictly mid-century with blond wood, floral patterns and an original desk pad complete with Frank Sinatra’s picture. Opposite page: A fictitious little boy’s room showcases mid-century toys.

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the Christmas tree he chose would be a huge, tacky (in the best way possible) alumi-num Christmas tree.

“That first year, we just had one,” Stephen said. “Then it grew to eight. Then 30. We became obsessed. We have blue trees, black trees, you name it. We even lent them to Powell Gardens several years ago for one of their arboretum displays.”

But Christmas trees are just the tip of the antique iceberg for Stephen. As you walk through the Pruitt

home, you begin to feel as if you’re living in another era. Each piece that adorns the home is in amazing and original condition, even if it means it takes longer to find. For example, the Heywood Wakefield buffet in the kitchen looks as beautiful as the day it was made, but it took Stephen more than two years to find it at Retro Inferno. On the living room coffee table, the cover of an original 1950s magazine touts what to do in case of an atomic bomb. The fiber glass

lamp shades near the couch look like they’ve just been unwrapped from a lifetime of bubble paper and placed in this living room just for today.

Stephen doesn’t stop at furniture and accessories, though. His pen-chant for beautiful and original pieces is most reflected in his favorite subject: art. Since 1989, the couple have collected numerous pieces ranging from paint to charcoal to photography. They have even gener-ously loaned out portion of the collection to museums over the years to allow others to view their beauty. Of course, the storyteller in Stephen occasionally takes over, and he is known for trying to locate the actual artists of his pieces. For one contemporary painting, Stephen was able to track down the artist after some digging. When he did locate her, he asked a question that had been on his mind.

“The painting seemed very dark to me,” Stephen recalled. “So when I found the artist, I asked her about it. She said she had indeed been in a dark time in her life, and that fact obviously came through in the paint-ing. I was right!”

The crown jewel of Stephen’s massive art collection is a small pho-tograph placed in his kitchen, where he can walk by it daily. The black and white 4”x5” photograph from 1950 is by Frederick Sommer and is entitled “Circumnavigation of the Blood.” Though many friends assured Stephen he would never be able to afford the piece, he was determined and it ultimately became a part of his sterling collection.

All of this attention to detail and authenticity stems from Stephen, who is also a filmmaker (Never2Late Studios), wanting his home to tell a story.

V intageKC / Spring 2014 19

lamps to loveEvery good mid-century home has great lamps. Here are some of our favorites from the Pruitt house!

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vintage spaces

And the story is communicated through the pieces he and Mary seek out. In fact, the narrative is of the utmost importance to the Pruitt home.

“I don’t just buy something antique because I think it’s pretty or interesting or from the mid-century era,” Stephen said. “We work within a set of limitations as to what goes into this house.”

So what are the requirements for the pieces in the Pruitt home? When Stephen and Mary are asked this question, they smile at each

other quickly and inevitably decide to let us in on the secret. There are actually two fictitious families living in the home with them.

“This all came to pass because our daughter’s friend made a good point. When we would show people a piece, we would use the term ‘her’ a lot,” Mary explained. “Like, this is ‘her’ radio, or ‘her’ dishes in the dining room. We decided we should actually decide who ‘her’ is.”

Eventually, the family decided together that the fictitious Clara, who is

“Clara’s” room is filled with pieces from 1860-1901. The Pruitt’s invented her character as a way to give life and story to the room and their love of late 19th century ephemera. Pieces include tribute shadow boxes made with human hair and fish scales, and a large Murphey bed.

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absolutely love this look. Mixing modern and vintage is very in right now. It couldn’t be a better time to find inspiration and pieces all around us. Some people may have 20th cen-tury legacy furniture (better known as hand-me-downs) that

they would like to showcase. Or you may love to hunt and scour estate sales, flea markets, etc., for that one perfect vintage fabric, wallpaper or accessory. When combining the two, establishing a dominant style is key. It will help tremendously in avoiding a clut-tered look and an all-out war where there is clearly no winner. you want the two styles to complement each other rather than clash.

It really is true that opposites attract. Don’t be afraid to pair a modern sofa or chair with a vintage fabric. Geometrics played a huge part in mid-century textiles. Take a vintage headboard and style it with a fabulous Eames fabric. By the same token, you can let similar elements of both eras rest side-by-side for a polished look. Add modern chairs (think ghost chairs) to a worn and weathered farm table. Hang a flat-screen TV above that 1950s bar cabinet.

lighting is the most important element when designing/decorating any room. There are so many mid-century lamps to be had out there right now — everything from sleek and sexy to downright kitschie, and they all make for a great look and great conversation. Put a new/contemporary shade on a vintage lamp. Or better yet, strip the old shade off completely and showcase the wire form of the shade. not only does it provide a lot of light but a lot of look — quite industrial.

Clean lines. This can be achieved in so many ways. Combine a sleek new faucet wall-mounted over a farm sink. you can warm up the sleek, clean lines of mid-century modern by creating a backdrop of rustic wood floors or a simple trim around windows and doors.

Color. This is definitely one of the very few times you will ever hear me say you may want to think about painting your walls white. It is the perfect canvas for highlighting those killer textile patterns and colors of both the vintage and modern periods.

named after Mary’s grandmother, is a Victorian seamstress who lives in the bedroom at the top of the stairs. Consequently, every object in the room comes from 1860-1901 and tells Clara’s story. Her intricately constructed dress from 1870 hangs on a mannequin and has never been worn. The heavy drapes that surround the windows are from 1890. Framed in a large shadow box is a wreath with bits of a woman’s hair woven into it, which was a common art practice in the 1800s. The room is a collection in every sense of the word, and no piece goes in that doesn’t contribute to Clara’s story — even if Stephen has to improvise every now and again.

“Mary and I found an ear horn from this period that didn’t really make sense for Clara, but we loved the piece,” Stephen explained. “So we decided the ear horn belonged to her father, and now it can go in this room. Problem solved!”

With the exception of the Victorian room, the home is mainly made up of mid-century pieces, which are attributed to Clara’s granddaughter and her family. And just like with Clara’s room, each piece in the house contributes to the family’s narrative and timeline. Even the dining room wall is painted Pink Flamingo, a color from the archives of the 1950s.

For Stephen, it is these fic-titious families that make the difference between a cohesive collection and a smattering of random objects. Stephen’s wife and children joke that he is a frustrated curator living in a professor’s body, and he has to agree.

“I simply want to live surrounded by a museum quality collection,” he shrugged. “If you have something from every time period, then it becomes an antique mall. That’s fun to visit, but I wouldn’t want to live there.”

Stephen and Mary’s dedication to recreating the past has begun to

pay off dividends in their future. They have fused their love for unique pieces together with their passion for cinema. Several pieces from their home have made appearances in both of their completed movies, “Works in Progress” and “Terminal.” Their newest cinematic endeavor, “Dust,” might even feature a woman who is a collector.

The Pruitt’s home has come a long way since 2001, and though they aren’t searching for as many pieces as they have in the past, Stephen and Mary know their eye will never stop wandering.

“What we’re really doing here is creating an environment,” Stephen said, “and I view that environment as a part of my art, whether it’s for my house or for one of my movies. I’m just always creating.”

V intageKC / Spring 2014 21

Do you have any tips on merging a modern aesthetic with a passion for vintage?

- Brown Button Estate Sales

Deb Vogler has been creating her own brand of Comfort by Design for more than 15 years. She deals with all aspects of design, from budget-ing, to floor plans (renovation or new construction), to furniture, to color at her full-scale design firm. Have a designing question for Deb? Send it to [email protected].

I

-Deb

Ask a Pro

Deb Vogler

Kim is a writer, interior designer and sales rep. She is also a complete klutz that can crank out a killer cartwheel on demand. Her favorite place to write is curled up on the couch, with her weiner dog and two cats fighting for a spot on her lap.

^

Stephen and Mary’s Fantastic Finds

Boob Tube The 1950s television in the Pruitt family room was found at an Antique Mall in Columbia, MO. And of course, it works.Reflections The mirror in the Pruitt liv-ing room is from 1958 and was a Retro Inferno findHeirlooms The furniture in Stephen and Mary’s bedroom are the only pieces in the house that are refinished, due to the condition they were in when they acquired them. The furniture was Mary’s parents’, and she has a deep emotional attachment to the set.Game Time When Stephen and Mary host parties, people love playing “Mystery Date” and “Careers” — board games very popular in the 1950s.

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garden guide

Photos by William and Jill DiMartino

From a small city backyard to an expansive country setting, get back to nature with inspiration from two of our favorite gardens, filled with vintage and DIy pieces.

For the Love of the Garden

Photos from the garden of Teede Stipich

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garden guide

^

Photos from the garden of Teede Stipich

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eauty is in the eye of the beholder. There are no right ways or wrong ways when it comes to incorporating art in your yard. The only thing I try to avoid is the number of pieces I will have to bring inside for the winter. Ideally, I would like to

leave most of it out in the environment. This not only cuts down on my trips to the basement, but it makes an interesting winterscape to view from my windows that also overlook the garden.

Several years ago, I tore all the grass out of my small backyard and installed pathways and beds. This allowed me to turn my back-yard into an outdoor art gallery.

If you are a hands-on do-it-yourselfer, there are classes you can take to experiment making things. Gardeners Connect member Steve Hess offers classes in hypertufa. I have taken classes in welding and casting at Johnson County Community College. you might check out other lo-cal community colleges and art schools. Red Cedar Garden Center of-fers classes in yard art. The Clay Guild in Waldo offers pottery classes. It’s an opportunity to make something fanciful for your patio or yard.

If you tend to be a “shopper,” there are numerous venues to encour-age the “creative artist” in you. Thrift stores, garage sales and art fairs are some of my favorite venues.

A fairly easy piece of art to make is an inexpensive glass totem. I buy several pieces of vintage glass at thrift stores and stack them on top of each other. Epoxy glue will help them in place. you can start with a rebar pole and build from the ground up. For photos and inspiration, go online to see what others have created.

Remember, when decorating your outdoor art gallery, the sky is the limit — literally. Go high and low. I put an old blue wooden chair up in a tree. Behind the tree is my privacy fence lined with colorful wine bottles. When the sun hits the fence, it is like a stained glass mosaic. I have lined the top of my detached garage with 21 birdhouses. Most of them were purchased on sale at a huge dicount at summer’s end.

I found an art student on Craigslist who was eager to make some extra summer money. He painted murals on the side of my garage underneath pieces of Haitian metal art I collect.

utilize all your spaces. What to do with empty picture frames? Collect all sizes, shapes

and colors. Hang them on a bare fence or up in trees. I put mine together with dowels and ribbons, mobile style and hung it high in a tree. They are ever changing “natural pictures” depending on the changes in the yard.

I’ve tucked mirrors and stained glass pieces into green settings.I found an old-fashioned sampler that said, “The Flowers of all the

Tomorrows are in the Seeds of Today.” I had it reframed, and it hangs on an outside wall facing the garden. I have scrounged flea markets for old plates, platters and cups. They hang all over the back of my house facing the garden. If I lose one in a windstorm, I’m not devastated.

I, like many women, love shoes. I went to a thrift store and bought a whole family of shoes: wingtips for dad, sneakers for mom, pink Barbie boots for sis and miniature sturdy work boots for brother. In subsequent years, I added faux alligator pumps for a visiting aunt. I planted them with annuals and perennials and set a pair under each patio chair. Tree stumps are wonderful natural pillars to place art on. With the advent of lED lights, you can highlight certain areas of your garden.

If it all seems confusing or overwhelming on how to get started, start with a theme. It may be as simple as collecting unusual stepping stones, bowling balls or kites.

Because I am not a painter or photographer, I purchased an all-weather photographical canvas to adorn a space on the back fence.

I think the key to successful yard art is: Think outside the box, and have fun. nothing is off limits. It’s your outside art gallery. Plant it with things that please you.

Teede Stipich is a master gardener of greater Kansas City and member of Gardeners Connect.

Your Garden, Your Art Gal lery

BBy Teede Stipich, excerpted from Gardeners Connect

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garden guide

Photos from the garden of Maurice and leanna Holdgraf

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Simple, early summer arrangement of mixed pink peonies and white anemones, placed in an antique mercury urn.

Jenni is a local floral designer and owner of Wild Hill Flowers. She and her husband, Charlie, live in Spring Hill, KS, with their sweet and active 2-year-old daughter, Katie. Check out her store at wildhillflowers.com.

Summer bouquet of dark purple lisianthus, dian-thus, sweetheart roses, ranunculus, dusty miller and limonium in a large ceramic pot.

Trim away foliage. Anything that will fall below the water line needs to be removed to help decrease microbial growth that can rot flowers. Also, remove any unnecessary leaves as they increase the rate of dehydration. Cut stems. Use a sharp knife or floral snips to cut stems at an approximate 45-degree angle. Design. Begin placing larger stems in the con-tainer and rotate it as you work until reaching

desired fullness. Ideally, you want your flower height to be no more than 1-1/2 times your container height. Add in any foliage to make it fuller and give it a little extra life. There are no rights or wrongs to colors. Play with different flowers and styles to create something that’s truly your own!

How to Keep Cut Flowers Fresh• use cool fresh water• use flower food • Keep vase water clean and free of debris• Keep them cool and out of direct sunlight

Homemade Flower FoodEffective and easy-to-make preservative that uses products you have around the house.1 teaspoon sugar1 teaspoon household bleach2 teaspoons lemon or lime juice1 quart lukewarm water

hoose a container. This will help deter-mine how many flowers you need to avoid overcutting. Pitchers, urns, pots,

boxes (you might need a liner) or tin cans are all great options that you probably already have on hand. Clean the vessel and fill with fresh, cool water and flower food (see homemade recipe, at right).

Bringing the Garden In

lavender is a charming addition to your home décor! Stems should be cut just above the leaves when the flower buds are about to open and have good color. This is when they are the most fragrant. Tie them into bundles and hang upside down in a dry, dark place. They will take a few weeks to dry!

An easy guide to cutting, arranging and choosing the perfect container for your homegrown blooms.

Floral Design by Jenni Koch Photography by Kelly Hutchinson

C

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V intageKC / Winter 201328

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Photos this page and left from the gardens of Maurice and leanna Holdgraf

Grow Wild Give wildflowers a try with these species, which grow wild in Missouri.Order these and more at mowildflowers.net.

BluebellsMertensia virginica

Queen of the PrairieFilipendula rubra

Indian PaintbrushCastilleja coccinea

Spring BeautyClaytonia virginica

Cardinal FlowerLobelia cardinalis

Fremont’s leather FlowerClematis fremontii

Shade Sun-Med Shade Full Sun

Bluebells, Spring Beauty, Queen of the Prairie, Cardinal Flower: tgpotterfield/flickr. Indian Paintbrush: jmtimages/flickr. Fremont’s Leather Flower: jacki-dee/flickr. Images used under a Creative Commons license.

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vintage fashion

s there anything sweeter than a little girl’s enthu-

siasm for life? We think vintage clothes match

perfectly with the spirit of the young. From

pretty to cute, spunky, cool, and everything in

between, we adore these littles and all they embody.

Vintage clothing for kids can be hard to find, but

keep your eyes open. If you’re lucky (like us) and

come across a treasure trove at an estate sale, don’t

pinch pennies. You never know when you’ll see

items like these again. Also, don’t be afraid to ask

boutique stores if they have any kids clothes not on

display. While they make their big bucks in adult

clothing, they will often have kid items in storage.

i

girls just want to have fun

Photos layne Haley Photography | Hair lotus Beauty | Styling Calli Green | Producer Erin Shipps

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vintage fashion

On Lula, Joanna and Jane: All handmade vintage dresses from Brown Button estate sale.

jane

lula

joanna

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vintage fashion

VintageKC / Spring 201432

On Jaslene: Glasses, Vintage Vogue; shirt, Vintage Vogue; belts,

Xhilaration, Target; jeggings, Circo, Target.

jaslene

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vintage fashion

On Camdyn: Handmade vintage dress from Brown Button estate sale. camdyn

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vintage fashion

ehler soha

willow

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On Ehler: Handmade vintage dress, Brown Button estate sale; cardigan, Just One you Made by Carter’s, Target; headband, Bizzy Diva.

On Soha: leopard shirt, Vintage Vogue; tank top and jeans from model’s closet.

On Willow: Handmade vintage shirt, Brown Button estate sale; jeggings, CR ITG, Target; hand-made poncho sweater, Vintage Vogue; hair bow, Target.

On Mya: Vintage lacoste dress, Vintage Vogue; vest, Vintage Vogue; shirt, model’s closet; leg-gings and hair bows, Target.

On Isabel: Shirt, Vintage Vogue; bandana, Party City; jeans, model’s closet.

isabel

mya

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renovated recipespring is my favorite time to sit down with a cool refreshing cocktail and snack on light chilled treats. These are three

of my newest recipe restoration creations that are the perfect addition to any spring menu.

The vintage recipesBeverage: The juice of four grapefruits (when pressing the fruit be careful that the juice does not come in contact with the rind), one teacup sugar, bottle and cork. Add to spring water. (“The Times Cook Book, No. 2 – 1905”) Celery Sandwiches: Two cups chopped celery, two tablespoons chopped walnuts, two tablespoons chopped olives, a quarter cup mayonnaise dressing. Spread between slices of thin buttered bread. (“The Inter-national Jewish Cookbook – 1919”)Cream Salad Dressing: Made by mixing sour cream with enough vinegar, pepper and salt to season the salad palatably. (“Miss Corson’s Practical American Cook-ery – 1886”)

S

By Courtney Jenkins

Welcome spring with a fresh take on a picnic lunch.

Spring

Courtney is part of a cute little family of four (including twin sons Parker and Eli) residing in Kansas City, MO. She’s owns a local natural solid body company called Milk and Honey Naturals (milkandhoneynaturals.net).

P icnic

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Pink Grapefruit and Fresh Mint MargaritasSERVInGSApprox. 6

InGREDIEnTS5 large pink grapefruits, room temperature15 fresh mint leaves2 oz. orange triple sec8 oz. tequila1/3 c. agave nectar1/2 c. sugar

DIRECTIOnSCut one grapefruit into wedges and place sugar on a small plate. Juice the other four grape-fruits into a large pitcher. Add agave nectar and stir well. Tear mint leaves and add them to the pitcher, then add the triple sec and tequila. Add ice and give it a good stir. Take a wedge of sliced grapefruit and run it around the edge of the glass, then dip into the sugar. Fill up and enjoy!

The Renovated Recipes renovated recipes

Chicken, Celery and Olive Salad SandwichesSERVInGSApprox. 6

InGREDIEnTS1 c. celery, diced2 T. black olives, chopped2 T. walnuts, chopped1 c. cooked chicken, diced1 t. spicy brown mustard2 t. shallot, minced2 T. fresh dill, chopped1/4 c. mayonaiseSalt and pepper to tasteWhole wheat bread

DIRECTIOnSMix all of the ingredients together and spread onto bread to make sandwiches.

Creamy Cilantro VinaigretteSERVInGSApprox. 6

InGREDIEnTS1/2 c. olive oil3 T. red wine vinegar2 T. sour cream1/2 t. salt1/2 t. spicy brown mustard2 T agave nectar1 T. fresh cilantro, chopped1 clove garlic, mincedDash black pepper

DIRECTIOnSWhisk everything together until well com-bined. Chill in the refrigerator for 6 hours to let the flavors develop, then serve!

Jenni Koch, Owner/Designer913-486-6178

[email protected]

WeDDing | PersOnal | event FlOWers

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vintage crafts

“Full of eclectic style, wood and metal mix with a decorative bulb and colorful cord to create a one-of-a-kind wall sconce. A porcelain light socket and basic lamp kit turns this wood slice into unique decorative lighting perfect for any room in your home.”Jamie from Kolorizekolorize.etsy.com

Slice ofLife

If a tree fell down in the woods and no one was around to hear it, would you cut it up and use it around your house in a fun attempt to bring the outdoors in? We totally would.

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“I decided to add a little bit of glamour to my rustic wood slice with some gold leaf. I used vinyl stick on letters directly on the wood, applied the gold leaf on top and then carefully removed the letters when everything was dry.”

Megan from Homemade Ginger homemadeginger.com

AVAILABLE NOW AT:Studio 1404

1222 W. 12th St., West Bottoms

reChic Boutique and Decor6015 Johnson Dr.,

Mission, KS

As Time Goes By605 W. MainGreenwood, MO

Liberty Antique Mall 1005 N. State Rt. 291

Liberty, MO

Locally Crafted Chalk Enhanced Paint from Robin Hammond of Junkfest Studios

For more info and retailers:motherearthpaints.com

So soft,so smooth& so easy

to use!

“To make these rustic shelves, I cut off about 1/3 of each slice and added a metal

L bracket to the bottom. I lacquered them to help seal the wood, but you

could also paint them a solid color or paint a fun design or pattern. Use dry-

wall anchors if added support is needed.”Abbie from Ecolectic

ecolecticKC.com

As fresh-cut wood slices dry, they crack. Seal them with a wood stabilizer like Pentacryl or Wood Juice. To keep bark on a slice, cut the wood during the winter. Wood that has been outside, especially in the cold, should be brought to room temperature before soaking in or brushing on the stabilizer. After treatment, dry the wood evenly, making sure it is exposed to air on all sides. let the wood dry naturally; do not heat or use a fan.

Woodworking Tips

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“Inspired by Anthropologie, I made my wood slice into a mirror simply by using wood glue and nailing a vintage western young boys belt as a strap for hanging.” Amy from Buffalo Roambuffalo-roam.com

“I decided to turn my wood piece into a simple, earthy tealight candle holder. This centerpiece would work well for an intimate Fall dinner party, Thanksgiving gathering or even a rustic wedding.” Audrey from Oh So Lovely ohsolovelyblog.blogspot.com

Sentimental JourneyANTIQUE MALL

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK! Monday-Saturday 10-6 • Sunday 12-5

913-768-8088 • 907 S. Chestnut, Olathe

14,000 square feet of antiques and collectibles

Raised in Cotton

200 N. Madison (58 Hwy), Raymore, MO816-318-9009

Wednesday - Saturday 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.www.raisedincotton.biz

Finds for the Wonderfully Spoiled Home

vintage crafts

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One block west

20 S. Gold St., Paola, KSOpen M-F 10-6 & Sat 10-5

[email protected]

913-294-8499

Antiques & Collectibles

V intageKC / Spring 2014 41

913-209-94796009 Johnson Dr.Mission, KSvintagemissionkc.com

“I am always looking for a neat way to display my favorite scented candles, so I used these two cross-sections as a foundation. I glued some buttons and vintage game pieces on the birch slice, and knitted a coaster out of twine to frame the candles.”Quinn from Ktogktogether.wordpress.com

“I used vintage decorative stakes from an old garden gate, spray painted them with a metallic sheen (they were a bit rusty) and drilled them into the wood to create a jewelry display.” Angie from MoVi Modern Vintage Mobile Boutiquefacebook.com/shopMoVi

vintage crafts

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vintage crafts

“My 3-year-old son is obsessed with space, but he had yet to learn about constellations. Now he looks at this on his wall and learns.

He even knew the Big Dipper by the time we saw the Sesame Street show at the planetarium! He also loves to read and dance to music, so

this saying from Voltaire was the perfect complement. To make the perfect quote, first space our your words by character on a piece of

paper. Then measure equidistant lines, and draw them with a pencil across your surface. Next, use a stencil and align each letter with the

line you’ve drawn. Trace the letters with pencil and then go over them with a paint pen. Erase the pencil lines, and you’re done!”

Erin, editorVintageKC Magazine

Secret hanger trick: Use a pop can top to hang art inexpensively. Attach the pop top wtih a nail, bend it slightly away from the back of the art and hang it on another nail using the other hole in the can top.

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Silver-SchnauzerANTIQUES

Now Presenting

Antiques | Needlework | Estate Sales | Art Gallery10912 W. Winner Road, Independence

800-256-3029 | 816-336-1595silver-schnauzer.com

facebook.com/SilverSchnauzerAntiques

For more great ideas, visit our Pinterest page: pinterest.com/vintagekc/wood-crafts.

And while you’re there, check out all the fun stuff we’ve pinned — everything from offices to kitchens, from weddings to fashion, from lights to do-it-yourself projects. If it’s vintage or awesome or funny or helpful, we’re pinning it. Come join us!

Are you crafty and have a store or blog? We’d love to see if you’ve got what it takes to be on our panel of creative experts. Do you have a craft idea you’d like to see our locals tackle? Are you just the chatty type?

However you roll, just drop us a line at [email protected].

P interest

Help us out!

vintage crafts

Tues-Sat 10-5 • Sun 10-34045 Broadway, KCMO

816-931-7999

Antiques, collectibles

and fine vintage furnishings

Westport on BroadwayANTIQUES

In the heart of Historic Westport

Discover the past, invest in the future

Photo

by

Bra

ndi N

icol

e P

hoto

grap

hy

“I originally envisioned this as being a momentous embroidery challenge. I was amazed at how easy it actually is to stitch on wood! Depending on your access to a wood pile and a few key tools, this can be a quick and easy project.”Kristen from Hey Paul Studiosheypaulstudios.etsy.comheypaulstudios.com/blog/woodsliceembroidery

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VKC: How long have you been into vintage?Kris: Since my early 20s.VKC: What got you started?Kris: I was very frugal (think broke college kid) and filled my first apartment with mid-century furniture I’d inherited from my grand-mother. Blonde furniture with avocado upholstery ... yum!VKC: When did you decide to open your own business and why?Kris: Four years ago the owners of As Time Goes By were relocating and asked if we’d be interested. We thought how hard can this be? While it’s a lot of work, it’s way more fun than I’d ever imagined!VKC: What advice do you have for amateur pickers?Kris: Buy what you like, unique items are always popular, and look at pieces with a creative eye. Can it be used for a different purpose?VKC: What are your favorite pieces to buy?Kris: Furniture with character, vintage light fixtures, crusty metal pieces like tool boxes, ceiling tin tiles, outdoor furniture, buckets and anything unusual.VKC: What is your favorite furniture refinishing technique right now?Kris: We now carry a line of chalk enhanced paints, Mother Earth Paints, that has become wildly popular. It paints any surface smoothly and we have more than 20 colors. I’m currently coveting shades of blue finished with a dark wax.VKC: How do you choose vendors for your store?Kris: I call it, “choosing team players with diversified junque.”VKC: How would you describe the style of the items in your store?

Kris: Eclectic and reasonably priced. We have two floors ranging from primitives to retro, painted and unpainted furniture, a great man cave with old tools and fishing gear, windows, architectural pieces, and a lot of crusty goodness piled outside.VKC: Describe your favorite pieces in your own home, the ones you could never sell. Kris: I have a harvest table my husband made from reclaimed oak and an upright piano my kids learned to play when they were young.VKC: What is the biggest item you’ve ever sold? The most expensive?Kris: This piece also qualifies as the heaviest. It was a tremendous, ex-quisitely painted buffet (by Studio 1404) that sold within two hours.VKC: What is your business philosophy?Kris: Keep it light-hearted and inviting; work hard, but make it look easy; and show customers they’re appreciated.VKC: What experience do you hope your customers have in your store?Kris: A fabulous experience! I want each visitor to love our store and return regularly!VKC: Why do you continue to do what you do?Kris: I’ve met some amazing people, and have had some amazing ex-periences. I never knew owning an antique store would be so much fun and the people so warm and genuine. I love it!VKC: What other stores do you love?Kris: My six Greenwood neighbors, Studio1404 (West Bottoms), Senti-mental Journey (Olathe), Timeless Treasures (Claycomo), and Lawrence Antique Mall.

Greenwood

Nestled in the smal l, rural town of Greenwood, we consider this store a beautiful — and fun — hidden gem!

stores we love

As Time Goes By

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stores we love

West Bottoms

A fast-growing store in the West Bottoms, 1404 features local ly crafted paint and tons of inspiration!VKC: How long have you been into vintage?Amanda: As long as I can remember! Shopping garage sales and antique stores with my grandparents as a child was one of my favorite things to do. VKC: What got you started?Amanda: My husband, Brian, and I purchased an antique dresser for $10 at an estate sale in 2008. We painted it, sold it on Craigslist, and never stopped. VKC: When did you decide to open your own business and why?Amanda: We had been vendors at other stores for about a year and a half and loved what we were doing. We had dreamed of opening our own store and learned that our space would be available in April 2013. It was meant to be!VKC: What advice do you have for amateur pickers?Amanda: Buy what speaks to you. Whether you’re buying things to fur-nish your own home or to sell, you can’t go wrong buying things you love.VKC: What are your favorite pieces to buy?Amanda: Beautiful, ornate furniture made in the 1920s. The more detail, the better. I also have a soft spot for vintage kitchen items and anything found in a barn.VKC: What is your favorite furniture refinishing technique right now?Amanda: We’ve been using and selling Mother Earth Paints for about six months. We’ll never use anything else. The coverage is amazing and the colors are simply beautiful!VKC: How do you select vendors for your store?Amanda: We look for kind, friendly, creative people with a passion for picking and painting.

VKC: How would you describe the style of the items in your store?Amanda: We’re probably best known for Shabby Chic, but offer retro, farmhouse and industrial as well.VKC: Describe your favorite pieces in your own home, the ones you couldn’t bear to sell.Amanda: There are so many! At the top of my list would be the six-piece mid-century modern credenza and dresser set that belonged to my grandparents. It’s the only MCM furniture in our home and it’s the perfect storage solution in my home office/studio.VKC: What is your business philosophy?Amanda: You get what you give. VKC: What experience do you want customers to have in your store?Amanda: We hope each shopper finds something that makes them happy. Whether it’s a beautiful piece of furniture for their home, some-thing that brings back a childhood memory, or a new friend! VKC: Why do you continue to do what you do?Amanda: We wouldn’t dream of doing anything else! We’re surrounded by beautiful things and wonderful people every day. VKC: What else do you want people to know about your store?Amanda: In addition to First Friday weekends, we’re open every Sat-urday 10-5 and by appointment. We also offer Mother Earth painting workshops several times each month.VKC: What other stores do you love?Amanda: As Time Goes By (Greenwood), Genevieve’s (Blue Springs), Charm (Martin City), and any store in the West Bottoms!

Studio 1404

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vintage memories

VintageKC / Spring 201446

One woman takes a tradition from her childhood and passes it to the next generation, with respect and heirloom flowers.

SpringRevivaln addition to the very tangible revival occurring outside in spring, the season awakens something inside the human spirit. It causes a stirring that we nearly forgot existed. For Barb Schoen, this transition — from the long, dead Minnesota winters of her childhood — is highlighted by the enduring memory of her mother’s meticulous tending of her

lilacs, lilies of the valley and peonies, that began each spring. “Mom would spend hours in the garden. She lined it with rocks that she spray painted to look

just like she wanted them,” Barb remembered. “She was the original ‘DIYer.’ She would get an idea of what she wanted something to look like and figure out a way to do it on her own.”

Each year, Barb and her six siblings would gather the flowers their mother had labored over, wrap the plant ends with wet paper towels, and place them in a sandwich bag. They would carry these spring treasures to the bus stop and wait for the bus to take them to the cemetery.

“I never met my grandparents, so this is the way that I got to know them,” Barb said. “Mom would tell stories about her mom and dad as we visited.”

The family would offer the cherished blossoms to these bygone relatives who they were learning to love with each story that was told.

“This taught me that cemeteries are not scary, but places where you can go to share memories and talk to loved ones,” Barb said.

These experiences were formative for Barb, and they instilled in her a great appreciation for the lives that have gone before her and the ways that people are united through a common story. She has carried this tradition into adulthood. With her own children, she adorns the graves of loved ones each spring, reviving through story the personalities that are no longer embodied. She also led a group of women in the celebration of their shared friend, Colleen.

“Colleen has been gone for 14 years,” Barb said. “We visit her on her birthday, but we don’t just bring flowers; we bring everything we need for a tea party. We put out a quilt and share memories of her. We laugh and we cry, and this brings us closer to her and closer together.”

As Barb’s own parents reached the end of their lives, it was important to her that she honor them and convene with them in the same way. Before moving her parents into an assisted living home, she made sure that she and her siblings salvaged the bulbs and seeds from her mother’s garden. She planted these in her own garden, and she now shadows the motions of her mother’s careful hand when the sun kindles the numbness of the passing winter. They bloom each spring, in the same way that they did when she was a child.

On her mother’s “first Mother’s Day in heaven,” as Barb refers to it, she and her siblings had brunch at Ft. Snelling National Cemetery, read from their mother’s prayer books and said the Rosary together. On this day and all visits since, she and her family share stories like the ones her mother used to tell. They laugh, they cry, and they draw nearer to one another. She brings with her the tangible sign that the memories of her parents still stir within her, and that she holds her mother and father near. She leaves this symbol at their resting place and reminds them both that they are to share this gift that they first shared with her.

I

Photos from top: Barb Schoen’s parents; lilacs from her garden; her sister Trish reads from their mother’s prayer book; and her brother Bob sharing memories at Ft. Snelling national Cemetery.

By Quinn White

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Page 47: 0204 VintageKC Spring 2014

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