Showing posts with label antique lighting Antique lights bathroom light Bungalow remodel bungalow remodel crafsman kitchen light kitchen lighting old house remodel vintage lighting vintage lights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label antique lighting Antique lights bathroom light Bungalow remodel bungalow remodel crafsman kitchen light kitchen lighting old house remodel vintage lighting vintage lights. Show all posts

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Antique Lighting Fixtures on parade


Well, not an actual parade, but a great weekend coming up Oct. 16 & 17 in Pasadena, Ca for anyone interested in the Craftsman or Arts & Crafts style. It is the annual Craftsman Weekend, sponsored by the Pasadena Historical Society. We have been invited back again to be a vendor at their juried showcase of antique and craftsman dealers. This year it is in a new location: the Pasadena Convention Center. Due to the new location restrictions we only have one day to set up and light our booth full of wonderful antique lighting fixtures. So to make this happen in only one day instead of two, we are already focused on building out the booth, adding new features, testing all the vintage lighting, and touching up the final presentation (and at-show specials).

The show prep is an almost full time job between now and then, but we also have customers new and returning who deserve our undivided attention. So if you notice a longer time between blog entries, or new inventory not showing up as steadily as before, this is the reason.

It may not be a parade but since this is the only show we will be doing this year, it is our time to shine our antique lights and we will be doing it up right.

Come visit us. You will be glad you did.


Listen To Your Eyes. PB

Saturday, September 4, 2010

Another Challenge of Antique Lighting Fixtures



Of the many challenges of working with vintage lighting fixtures, including finding antique lighting fixtures in the first place, is refinishing them to match the colors, depth, sheen, and the finishing process of the original finish. This is one of the most frustrating parts of restoring vintage fixtures as trial after trial often results in error. There is more than one fixture in the warehouse which has been set aside until an appropriate finish can be duplicate (I won't say it, but some of our antique fixtures have been waiting years for a vintage finish to be duplicated). Now, it is always difficult to tell just what the original antique finish looked like as the effects of smoke, smog, oxidation, waxing, and cleaning almost always alter the antique finish somewhat. Images in old catalogs are not much use either as the photographic and printing processes back then did not accurately reproduce colors. But there are clues which do show what the fixture would have looked like in 1924. The most accurate clue is found where two pieces have come together to cover a small portion of the fixture. As in the case above, another clue was found in the cavity under the socket bowl where any airborne particles landed on the top surface and where it was difficult to reach with wax or cleaner. And a closer look under magnification also revealed marks left from the original vintage finish application.



Taking these clues into account, along with the information we learn from hundreds and hundreds of trial & error experiments allows us to reproduce the above finish, which is an exact match of the original antique finish.



Although it is very frustrating when the failures at duplicating finishes reaches a dead end, when we can combine our experiences to faithfully and accurately produce a finish which mirrors the original, we are proud.



Listen to Your Eyes. PB

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Vintage lights addiction



Yesterday in an email conversation with a customer she called her passion for a certain type of vintage lighting a "disease." Then again yesterday I read a blog in which two people referred to their passion for vintage lighting as an "addiction."


It is clear to me some sort of intervention and remedy is necessary.


Stay tuned...

www.vintagelights.com


Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Play All Your Hunches


I just realized that it should be no surprise that I found my niche in the vintage lighting business. Growing up in Western Washington where there is about 8 months of gloomy dismal weather, I always felt drawn to the sun. I felt its warmth, its power, and even as a child, recognized it as the source of life on this planet. As I grew older I noticed my Seasonal Affective Disorder grew a bit more noticable each year until it was so bad I had to get out of there. So I moved to the mountains of Arizona where the sun shines year around, topping off at a pleasent mid 80s through the summer. My SAD has been replaced by a mild case of allergies, but the mild depression is gone. I'll take that trade.
Play all your hunches, and always;

Listen to your eyes. PB

www.vintagelights.com