My Husband’s Advice for Collecting & Curating

Last time, I wrote about my reasons for wanting to fully curate my collections:

**Having an accurate inventory keeps us organized, prevents costly duplications, and might be needed for insurance purposes.

**Storing our treasures properly keeps them safe, organized, and accessible.

**Displaying them is immediate assurance of their appeal, beauty, or interest.

This time, I’d like to share what my husband thinks about taking the time to count thousands of buttons, box fragile porcelain figurines, and hang unwieldy metal advertising signs.

His advice is pretty clear:

**If you haven’t been bitten by the collecting bug, please don’t start.

**If you’ve already started dragging home shopping trophies, bargains, more of the same, and related objects, stop—just stop cold turkey. You’ll be all right

**If your motto is “the more the merrier,” have a change of heart and become a minimalist.

**If you must collect, set a limit, like 10 or 20 items in your collection, and then eliminate an item from your home, storage area, and inventory, every single time you acquire a new piece.

**Better yet, don’t actually acquire the collectibles at all. Just take pictures of them with your smart phone—and your display, storage, and inventory time will be dramatically reduced.

**In other words, take pity on your spouse, partner, or children. They want to live with you—not your collections. They want to see you—not your collectibles.

Hmm. They do say opposites attract.

I say our spouses, partners, or children should give collecting a try. There’s so much variety out there, we’re sure to find things we both enjoy having around.

Happy Collecting—and Curating!
Patti
The Committed Collector

So what do you think? Are you a collector or a long-suffering spouse? Leave a comment and let us know how and where your collections fit in your lives. We’d love to hear from you.

© 2019 The Collectors of Western New York Museum.
All rights reserved.

Three Reasons to Curate Your Collections

I’ll be the first to admit that collecting is much more fun than curating.

Collecting involves hunting and gathering, going, looking, searching, and finding. Collecting means unearthing treasurers, discovering illusive pieces, and finding things we didn’t know we need.

In collecting, there is the thrill of the chase as well as the thrill of victory (as ABC’s Wide World of Sports once told us).

Curating, on the other hand, often feels more like work. Once we’ve added items to our collections, it’s time to get down to the business of identifying, organizing, and storing or displaying the individual pieces.

Whether or not you actually enjoy the detail work of curating, doing so is a vital part of the process of collecting. Otherwise, we’re merely accumulating things or even outright hoarding them, which is a chilling thought.

If you need encouragement when it comes to getting down to curating your treasures, here are the points I like to keep in mind when I’d rather be shopping.

  1. Curating is the necessary next step to acquiring. Pieces need to be identified and inventoried, so we have accurate records of our collections. This makes life easier for us collectors and for our loved ones who might inherit a variety of things that are unknown to them.
  2. Pieces need to be stored properly, so they are protected and so we stay organized. Treasures deserve to be kept safe, packed appropriately, and easily accessed. Likewise, our homes should be kept tidy, with room for living and room for displaying.
  3. Our beloved treasures also deserve to be displayed attractively. If they’re treasures to us, they deserve to be seen. They should be organized, arranged, and in some sort of showcase. If we truly appreciate them, we should be able to see them regularly, on display in all their glory.

Of course, there are other reasons to go the distance and curate our collections, but these are the three primary things I keep in mind:

I want to know what I have. I want to know that what I have is organized and accessible, and, most of all, I want to be able to display my collections around my home.

Patti
The Committed Collector

How about you? What inspires you to keep you collections organized and on display? Please leave a comment and let us know.

© 2019 The Collectors of Western New York Museum.
All rights reserved.

Two Ways to Corral Collections

The brutally cold weather we’ve been having in Western New York has kept me at home lately, which has been rather helpful.

Since my resolution is to spend less time adding to our collections and more time curating them, staying in and organizing what we already have is fine by me. The only problem has been deciding how to rearrange some of our collectibles.

You see, there seem to be two main systems of corralling collections: segregating them or integrating them.

I used to think it made more sense to segregate pieces, which means dividing up collections and then storing like things together, especially when it comes to boxing up collections.

All my postcards (even the seasonal ones) are in their own albums, for example, and our holiday decorations are boxed up not only by holiday, but also by type, such as “Plastic Figural Christmas Ornaments.”

(Yes, we really have several boxes labeled “Plastic Figural Christmas Ornaments.” Labels that actually identify what’s where are imperative, regardless of which system you choose.)

On the one hand, this storage system divides up items in a collection; on the other hand, it places similar things together, which often saves time and space.

I relearn this every time we move. For example, plates and bowls and cups simply have different shapes and don’t want to cozy up to each other efficiently. Since getting various shapes to fit nicely in the same box is a challenge, it’s faster and easier to wrap and pack dinner plates in one box and cups in another.

The problem, however, comes later, when all the various cartons need to be located and unpacked simultaneously to put a collection back together.

After segregating some of my china before we moved in 2011, I went without the saucers for one of my favorite patterns for two years. I found the individual boxes with the plates, the cups, the bowls, and the serving pieces, but I just couldn’t find that last box with the saucers.

We also decorated our Christmas tree with only our collection of plastic figural ornaments until 2017, when we finally unearthed our boxes of glass ornaments and were able to change things up.

Clearly, dividing up collections and separating them into similar pieces has its drawbacks, so now that the wintery weather is keeping me in, I’m rethinking my system.

I now wonder if integrating my collections would be more efficient—especially since our goal now is to use them or display them.

We’re not planning to move any time soon, so we want to have easy access to our things, which includes being able to retrieve what we want when we want it, which means my “china closet” needs some work.

I currently have my sets of china separated on their own shelving units, and my glassware on different units. I know where my sets of china are, and I know where my stemware and tumblers are.

Likewise, all my vintage tablecloths are together, and all my vases are on yet another set of shelves, and my husband’s assorted Currier and Ives tins and trivets and plaques and pictures are stored as tins and trivets and plaques and pictures (rather than farm scenes or city scenes).

Now, I’m thinking about integrating together the various pieces that I use together.

If my blue glassware were lined up next to my Poppies on Blue china—and my blue tablecloths and napkins were folded on the top shelf—wouldn’t it be easier to set the table for a family dinner?

If I included the two rose bowls that are in the exact same shade of pinkish red as the poppies in my china, I’d have easy access to them, too, and a ready-made excuse to pick up a bouquet of posies while I’m grocery shopping.

Similarly, if I reorganize a couple of shelves to house my mother’s Apple Blossom china and the soft pink glassware and vintage ivory linens I’ve collected to go with it, I’ll be all set for my next tea party—especially if I add my gold luster teapot, creamer, and sugar bowl to the mix.

I also have a few postcards with sprays of apple blossoms on them, so they could join the party, too—and our Easter, Thanksgiving, and Christmas postcards could be stored with our other Easter, Thanksgiving, and Christmas decorations. No need to hunt, no need to make an additional effort to bring all of our displays together.

Perhaps that will be how my resolution plays out this year. With each season and holiday, I could reorganize our collections so storing them takes a backseat to using or displaying them—which is why we have our collections after all.

Happy Curating to you,

Patti
The Committed Collector

And how do you organize your collections? Do you keep like things together, or do you store things that go together–together? Please leave a comment. We’d love to hear how you organize your treasures.

© 2019 The Collectors of Western New York Museum.
All rights reserved.

Pictures, Postcards & Photographs

It’s a Saturday morning in Rochester, and the local shops are calling to me. How easy it would be to answer the summons and make the rounds of the thrift stores, antique shops, and retail outlets.

I know one of my favorite co-ops, The Shops on West Ridge, is having a sale today, and I recently heard about some markdowns on vintage merchandise at Henrietta Mall Antiques. One friend told me about all the treasures she found at Savers thrift store in Webster, and another collector says the Goodwill store in Brockport is the best in our area.

What’s more, I really do need a new purse—something functional yet stylish—so TJ Maxx, Marshalls, and Stein Mart are on my mind, too, especially since they usually have great china and glassware.

So why am I resisting? Why am I at home gearing up to tackle one or two long overdue projects? Well, because they’re long overdue and because I’m being mindful of my resolution:

Collect less; curate more.

Among my overdue projects is framing a variety of pictures, postcards, and photographs that I have amassed over the years, and, unfortunately, amassed is the right word. It’s not unfortunate that I have lots and lots of artwork; it’s sad that I haven’t done as much as I intended with them.

I’ve become the keeper of the family photographs, so I must have thousands of photos. I’ve also been collecting postcards for a year or so and already have a few hundred—or more. Then, there’s my “art” collection. I love pictures and paintings, prints and posters, so I have dozens of them. Most of which, however, are lined up in closets.

In fact, I have an entire closet (albeit a small one) with two shelves filled with rows of vintage pictures and department store art and stacks of decades’ old calendars meant to be matted and framed.

Then there are the dresser drawers crowded with small photo albums filled with postcards, old and new, as well as numerous shoe boxes packed with all those family photos.

Now, however, it’s time I did something with these collections. Fortunately, Santa’s on my side.

This past Christmas, St. Nick gave me a handsome frame for the Hallmark poster celebrating 100 years of himself, which we’ve had since it was produced in 1992–1992! The poster is still under plastic, against its cardboard backing, so some years we simply propped it up, but other times, embarrassed to display an unframed poster, we left it in the closet and decorated without it.

Getting the Jolly Old Elf’s poster framed is first on my to-do list today. And when I have it framed, we might just decide to leave it up in a place of honor for the entire year because it depicts such beautiful antique images.

Santa also brought me a half-dozen mattes, in a lovely shade of sage-green, for my collection of Audubon-like bird pictures that I’ve always intended to hang along one side of the staircase. I previously bought frames for them, so getting the pictures up on the wall should be easy.

Along the opposite stairwell wall, I intend to hang some of our treasured family photos. Sepia-toned pictures of our grandparents have been waiting for decades and decades to take their rightful place in our home. Photos of our parents and our brothers and sisters and the next generations, too, also need to join the reunion in our personal gallery.

Sorting through the photos and albums and then choosing our favorites will take some time. Then finding the right mattes, frames, and layout will turn creating this gallery into a project, but that’s okay.

Since I’m focusing on curating the collections we already have, and then enjoying our treasures (rather than shopping for more), I should have plenty of time this year to make real progress.

Patti
The Committed Collector

How about you? Which collections do you need to organize and display? Which ones do you want to integrate more fully into your lives? We’d love to hear about your plans, so please leave a comment.

© 2019 The Collectors of Western New York Museum.
All rights reserved.