Roses on Display-Sept. 7, 2019

It’s Labor Day Weekend, and sadly we’ve become accustomed to thinking of it as the end of summer. Certainly, it’s the end of summer vacation as students return to school and life gets back to normal.

However, the first official day of autumn is a good three weeks away, so that means there’s still more summertime to enjoy–and one of those joys is another flush or two of roses and other garden delights.

If you’re a gardener, you know what I mean. Many pretties–like zinnias, dahlias, and mums–will continue blooming until the first frost, and that’s true of my favorite, too.

If I’m lucky, my collection of 16 or so rose bushes will stay green for another month or two and put forth buds and blooms until there’s frost on the pumpkin.

If I’m really lucky, several of my rose bushes will be blooming next Saturday, and I can enter them in the rose show being held at the RIT Inn & Conference Center.

How I would love to enter my new favorite, the salmony-pink Tournament of Roses with its absolutely perfect blossoms, or my first love, the deep pink Heirloom and its old-fashioned, romantic blooms.

Just to be able to show them off would be lovely, but winning a ribbon (or two) would be great, too. You see, this isn’t just any rose show.

It’s the New York District Rose Show, which is part of the American Rose Society’s district convention, which is a pretty big deal for those of us who grow roses in the area.

And many of us members of the Greater Rochester Rose Society grow enough rose bushes to amass an impressive collection of them (even if most members don’t yet think of their “girls” as a collection–but I’m trying to convince them to see things as a committed collector would.)

More important to us Rochesterians is that the Greater Rochester Rose Society has the honor of hosting this year’s event as part of its own centennial celebration, for the GRRS has been promoting the appreciation of roses for one hundred years now and has been educating others about the best ways to enjoy roses in their own gardens.

At the show, amateur rose gardeners from Western New York and neighboring states are expected to enter rose blossoms by the armload as well as floral arrangements and photographs, too. The more serious “collectors” among us will be preparing their beautiful specimens before the sun comes up next Saturday, so their entries will be all ready for judging.

Once the ribbons are in place, the public will be welcomed in to see what’s expected to be a colorful and fragrant array of gorgeous roses, including many that are best suited to our region.

Whether you garden or not, if you love beautiful flowers, the District Rose Show should be something to see–but be forewarned: Collecting roses can become as addictive as any other collectible.

Hope to see you there. The rose show is free and open to the public.

The New York District Rose Show
Saturday, Sept. 7, 2019
1:30-4:30 p.m.
RIT Inn & Conference Center
5257 W. Henrietta Road
Rochester, NY 14467
rochrosesociety@gmail.com

Patti
The Committed Collector

© 2019 The Collectors of Western New York museum
All Rights Reserved

Shopping with a Purpose

With such nice weather in Western New York this weekend, it’s easy for me to be tempted by estate sale signs and flea market ads, yet I’m trying to remember my resolution to do more curating this year and less shopping.

Nonetheless, it has occurred to me that we committed collectors can do both at the same time–as long as we’re resolved not to buy any more for our collections as we look for things to organize and display what already waits for us back home.

If you like garage sales and thrift stores and any other kind of antiquing, you know that the Rochester region offers many opportunities to find the kinds of things we need to maintain our collections. If you haven’t noticed all the useful things a collector can find secondhand, read on because I’ve got quite a shopping list for you.

If we can resist the temptation of adding additional pieces to our collections, making the rounds on a Saturday or Sunday can result in the following items that are useful for curating the collectibles we already own:

  1. Price guides or other books and magazines are what all of us collectors need to identify and date our collectibles. The going rates may have changed, but the information and photographs are often still helpful.
  2. Storage tubs and similar plastic bins, which come in all sorts of sizes, keep all kinds of things clean and dry.
  3. Plastic shoe boxes, cardboard hat boxes, and padded round vinyl zippered bags are meant for three-dimensional things like, well, shoes, hats, and china.
  4. Wire milk crates, wooden fruit crates, glass canning jars, and decorative metal cookie tins can corral collectibles like records, books, buttons, and miscellaneous junk, respectively, and still look good doing the job.
  5. Albums and sheet protectors, as well as other kinds of binders and sleeves meant for protecting photographs and papers, help organize a variety of ephemera.
  6. Needless to say, picture frames, bulletin boards, and three-panel screens or room dividers are great for displaying flat items like photos, postcards, and pin-back buttons.
  7. Specialty display cases for treasures like coins, golf balls, baseball cards, and souvenir spoons are often found at sales or in shops and can hold the intended items or other, similarly shaped collectibles.
  8. Acrylic boxes and glass domes for displaying–and keeping dust-free–model cars, antique dolls, and taxidermy are worth looking for–again, for the intended pieces or for other things.
  9. Custom-made acrylic risers or things like cigar boxes and cookie tins can elevate items at the back of our displays–especially if re-purposed items are covered or painted (but painted only if they’re worn).
  10. Shelving, bookcases, and large entertainment units offer lots of open vertical display space.
  11. Curio cabinets and free-standing display cases offer enclosed, protected space, and some even lock for added security.
  12. China closets and corner cabinets usually provide display area up top and storage space down below, whether for the family silver or something else altogether.
  13. Obviously, dress forms and department store mannequins are free-standing ways to show off vintage fashions.
  14. Likewise, wooden hangers, peg racks, coat trees, and hat stands can be put to work holding accessories of all kinds.
  15. Piano lights, desk lamps, and floor lamps all come in handy when it comes to putting our collections in the spotlight.

With a list like that, I could spend the whole day making the rounds and never notice the things that usually tempt me.

Okay. I’d probably see plenty of temptations, but I’d be bringing with me something more important than spending money.

I’d be taking along my resolve to find things that help me safeguard and showcase the pieces I already have and love–and that would make for a worthwhile day of shopping.

Happy Hunting, Everyone!

Patti
The Committed Collector

And you? Would you find it difficult to make the rounds of the neighborhood garage sales or country flea markets and resist all the temptations? Or are you disciplined enough to shop for practical pieces? Leave a comment, why don’t you, and let us know. We’d love to hear about your strategy.

© 2019 The Collectors of Western New York museum
All Rights Reserved