The Background:
I found this great lamp on Ebay, and fell completely in love with it. While doing some research, I found another auction selling a pair of the exact same lamps, and gobbled those up as well! The lamps are primarily carved Italian alabaster, with teak wood details at the top and mid-base. I will probably do an entire entry on alabaster alone (Love it). The addition of teak in the lamp design clearly marks them as mid-century, if the design didn’t give it away already.
That’s actually a good general rule of thumb. When you’re looking at a thrift store piece of furniture and it’s made of teak or includes teak, it’s probably Danish Modern or at least Danish Modern inspired. One of the great things about vintage teak wood items is the fact that you’re getting pieces made from old-growth teak. The amazing and dramatic grain of the wood is impossible to get in farmed teak pieces. While I would never condone cutting old-growth teak forest down to make bowls, the fact is, buying vintage pieces is very “green”. Reuse & restore, people! There are also a lot of vintage Southeast Asian teak wood products on the thrift market. Some of these can be great:
- Teak bowls - if they’re solid teak and in good condition, they’re a great addition to the kitchen, and you will pay tons more for new copies.
- Occasionally, interesting boxes or platters - sometimes these have really nice designs and can be great additions to a modern interior.
- Oversized fork and spoon wall decoration - eh...they are everywhere…what were people thinking?
These tend to round out what you normally see around in thrift and resale stores. If you love it, get it. That is the cardinal rule of thrift shopping.
Well, one of the lamps has started to flicker when I turn it on, which means either the bulb is going to die, or the lamp needs to be rewired. I’ve tried a new bulb and had the same problem, so it’s definitely the wiring.
NEXT: Lamp disassembly and parts identification.
Nice post! I love teak and lathe work. My sister-in-law has this amazing oversized teak bowl she found at an estate sale for $7. I am obsessed with it!
ReplyDeleteYAY! My first comment! YES! I have a couple myself, and they never fail to be useful.
ReplyDeleteOk, I'm inspired already. I can't wait to see all the goodies on this blog! xo
ReplyDelete