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.

Shopping at Home

A few months back, during the socializing part of the local Depression Glass Club meeting, another avid collector and I were talking about the upcoming weekend and where we were thinking of going to look for more treasures for our collections.

We talked about the estate sales listed in the classifieds and whether they would be worthwhile. We wondered about the possible finds at the newer Henrietta Mall Antiques, which we were both interested in visiting again.

I eventually confessed that I still needed to finish my inventory of some recent purchases, and my collecting colleague admitted that she should just stay home and go through some of the boxes of things she’d already purchased. Hmm. I had to agree with that.

What’s more, writing my last post—which itemized where collectors can find more pieces for their collections—reminded me of that conversation and the truth of it.

Committed collectors like I am already have houses and attics and storage units full of wonderful finds. Those of us who have extensive collections have often been forced to pack up and store away some amazing things.

Rather than go out and add more to our existing collections (which would likely be packed up, too)—or, God forbid, risk finding different things to collect—we could just go through the things we already have.

  • We could venture into the basement or attic and go through storage tubs or packing cartons and see what we wrapped up ages ago. Maybe we’ll find a charming old teapot or a rare medicine bottle.
  • We could spend some time at the mini-storage unit, open a few boxes, and find treasures to bring home or mistakes to donate or sell. Perhaps there’ll be an unusual advertising sign or a box of holiday decorations that we’ve forgotten about.
  • We could reach up to the highest shelves in the kitchen or closets, or back down into the recesses of desks and dressers, and wherever else we store the excesses of our collections and discover what we’ve hidden away there. In such places, we might find Mid-Century Modern martini glasses, Aunt Bea hats, commemorative stamps, or Bakelite jewelry.
  • We could even rearrange the pieces we have on display in our curio cases and china cabinets. By taking everything out and seeing each piece anew, we can put our treasures back on display in fresh ways that showcase different aspects of our collections.

Although there are many, many fruitful places to go antiquing in Rochester, “shopping” at home is a gratifying option, too.

Since we longtime collectors probably already have many, many treasures in our own homes, rediscovering them is a thrill in itself. It’s a trip down memory lane and a chance to make better use of what we already acquired.

In addition, “shopping” our own stockpiles and storehouses not only saves time and money; it also conserves space because we’re not bringing in more things to house and we might even end up relinquishing a few items we no longer desire to keep.

Over time, our talents improve and our tastes change, so we might find we own things that make us ask, “What was I thinking?” so we can let go of them now as we review our collections.

If we’re serious about collecting, spending time on our current possessions helps us keep our collections organized. It allows us to appreciate what we’ve already collected, and it asks us to consider whether we still value pieces as much as we did when we bought them.

What we value—in other words, why we collect—is an essential aspect of collecting, and it’s the topic of my next post. Until then, I think I’ll stay home this weekend and see what I can rediscover in the attic.

Happy Curating!

Patti
The Committed Collector

If you’ve rediscovered something wonderful among your own collectibles, please let us know. Leave a comment, so we can share in your joy.

© 2018 The Collectors of Western New York Museum & Gallery.
All rights reserved.

Collecting Takes Up Space

As I discussed in my recent posts, if you’re an avid collector like I am, you know the process of hunting and gathering easily takes up our free time. If you’re a dedicated collector, too, you also know acquiring additional pieces readily uses up our spending money.

However, those expenses are often all right. Most Americans have spare time to relax or even waste, especially on weekends. We look forward to our downtime and often make time for the leisure-time activities we enjoy. Most people also have discretionary money to play with; we have the means to pursue our hobbies, and we’re willing to spend money on our interests. In fact, most people think spending time or money on themselves is entirely acceptable, so these costs of collecting are often considered completely reasonable.

The third cost of collecting, however, can be substantially more problematic because that consequence is always present—for our collections must exist somewhere, so they take up our valuable space.

For us avid collectors, the point of checking eBay or going to a flea market, of course, is to acquire additional pieces for our collections, so after a Saturday afternoon of junking, we usually have lots to show for our efforts, so we’re faced with more items to bring home, squeeze in, and maneuver around.

At first, of course, our new finds are our treasures. They are trophies for our efforts, our dedication, and our great shopping skills. We looked, we found, and we admired, so we bought. Soon after getting home, however, longtime collectors often find that their new purchases can quickly become white elephants, which is an old-fashioned term to describe things that may be of some value but aren’t necessarily fully appreciated.

Our beloved collections can become white elephants, or even elephants in the room, simply because they take up so much space. Our collections can fill up wall space and floor space, living space and storage space, space at home and space elsewhere. Moreover, if large collections need large amounts of space, extensive collections need even more, so they can actually take up our whole homes.

Extra space is usually quite tight in our own apartments, condos, and houses. Once we fill a space, we can’t fill it with something else. We can’t eat our cake and have it, too, but we want too, so we collectors come up with creative ways to display and store our collections.

First, we fill our walls with paintings and pictures, shelves and racks. We then line our rooms with bookcases, display cases, and curio cabinets. Next, our collections creep from room to room: We first display our treasures in the family room, perhaps, then the formal living room, and eventually even in the guest bathroom. We turn narrow hallways, spare bedrooms, and bonus spaces into our private galleries.

We defy the principles of good interior design and cram rooms with oversized cabinetry, crowded displays, and clashing colors. We resort to displaying toys in the parlor and sports memorabilia in the dining room. Master bedrooms reflect only the style of the lady of the house, and man-cave gear sneaks into the laundry room.

Once we’ve filled all open living space with our collections, we take over the dark recesses of our homes, too. We start storing our overflow, our extras, and even our new purchases. We pack up our treasures and fill our attics, our basements, and our garages. We say, “Don’t open that closet, Molly.” We put up “temporary” tarp-covered carports, and we have permanent sheds built.

If that’s not enough space, and we committed collectors need even more, we’re then willing to pay for mini-storage. We rent small units, large units, climate-controlled units, and even second and third units—and we pay. Month after month, we pay for space off site and the “privilege” of storing our so-called prized possessions.

Even if we’re filling only the space in our homes, this third cost of collecting might be the dearest of all because it is an ongoing expense.

Extensive collections demand a considerable number of square feet in our homes. They fill valuable real estate, and prevent us from living appropriately in our spaces. The more we collect, the more space we have to give over to our collections—or the more our collections take over our space, and, if we’re not careful, our collections can overrun our lives.

No matter how much we love something, if we don’t really have room for it, it becomes a problem. Our collections can clutter up our homes. They can limit our activities, push out our loved ones, and exclude our friends.

While we might want new acquisitions for our collections, we might not be able to adequately or reasonably solve the ongoing problem of too much stuff and too little space—unless we find a better way.

Rather than cramming more into your homes, why not consider curating your collection and displaying it at The Collectors of Western New York? It’s in the works as a new way for serious collectors to manage their extensive collections.

Has your collection grown to gargantuan sizes? Has your collection overrun your home? Please leave a comment and let us know how much space you’ve given to your prized possessions.

Collecting Costs Money

If we’re itemizing the costs of collecting, we have to address the cold, hard fact that collecting takes cold, hard cash. Collecting takes time and it uses up space, but it usually requires an outlay of money, too.

Unless you’re a beachcomber, scraper or Dumpster diver, or the recipient of gifts and castoffs from others, amassing a collection takes a goodly amount of money, especially if you’ve been collecting for decades.

Hopefully, like me, you’re able to stick to a reasonable budget and invest only your pin money on your purchases. I consider myself a bargain shopper, so I’ve been known to say that I can have more fun with $20 and a list of garage sales and thrift stores.

Some people afford collecting by having few other interests and expenses. They use all their weekly pocket money on adding to their collections. Others know how expensive collecting can get, so they save up for big shows and sales and then give in on those occasions alone.

Some collectors ask for money or gift cards instead of presents, so they can use them toward new purchases. Some allow themselves one or two splurges a year on special acquisitions, so they dip into their savings or whip out their credit cards then.

Others give into temptation and spend too much or go into debt to support their hobby, which, some say, can indeed become a real habit.

Then, of course, serious collectors also spend money on furniture or fixtures to showcase their collections. They buy display cases, curio cabinets, and bookcases to house their prized possessions. They buy peg racks for their coffee mugs or baseball caps, cases or stands for their costume jewelry, or sleeves or binders for their coins, stamps, or postcards.

Ironically, shopping for a curio cabinet was how I started collecting restaurantware, those heavy, durable dishes made by companies like Buffalo and Syracuse china.

After I graduated, I went to a furniture store to buy a curio cabinet for my childhood doll collection. Even with a real job, the cost was too high to display only a dozen bedraggled dolls, so I started scouting out second-hand stores.

In the very first thrift shop, I discovered that nice curio cabinets were hard to come across, but knickknacks, bric-a-brac, tchotchkes, and others sorts of junque were readily available. After only a few months, I didn’t have a suitable display case for my beloved dolls, but I had enough decorated restaurantware to fill a china closet, which I hadn’t found either.

In the past 25 years, I’ve paid good money for a few dozen pieces of furniture to display my different collections. I’ve spent money buying bookcases and cabinets to fit one apartment or another, then donated them when they wouldn’t fit our new digs.

Over the past several years, spending money on my collections (rather than on collecting itself) has gotten worse. I want our house to be a livable home, so I’ve been restraining myself and limiting my displays to only one (or two) per room, so that means most of my collections are packed up and stored away.

Over the years, just to box up—rather than display—my collections that now include china, glassware, and holiday decorations, I’ve spend hundreds on packing paper and bubble wrap, moving cartons and strapping tape.

What’s really bad is that I’ve had to move my collections offsite and spend thousands storing my so-called treasures elsewhere. The monthly fee has crept up to $235, which is obscene: Storing personal possessions temporarily makes sense for a number of reasons; storing them for years and years is extravagant, wasteful, and even idiotic. I know my money could be better spent.

If I didn’t have a storage unit, I know I could start over each holiday or season, buy all new decorations, and still spend less each month than I do on mini-storage. However, I’m not just a seasonal decorator; I’m a collector, so by definition I like to keep my purchases and add to them.

What’s really sad is that I’m often too busy or too tired to wade through the boxes and find the ones I want for the occasion, so I make do without. The very things that I’m spending money to keep for future use are, essentially, inaccessible (even after my hours of inventorying and labeling), so they go unused.

That’s insane. Why am I paying money to keep things I can’t access and enjoy?

Have you ever felt that way? Have you realized that you’ve successfully collected more than you can properly display or readily use? Are you beginning to feel guilty, as I am, about keeping the things you love so much?

There has to be a better way, and I think my plan for The Collectors Museum and Gallery is it.

If I can open a venue where people like you and me can put our collections on exhibit, we can eat our cake and have it too. We can get our prized possessions out of the attics and basements and into the light of day—or better yet, under the spotlight.

I want to continue collecting, but I’ve gotten to the point where I want to be able to appreciate the pieces I already own ever so slightly more than I want to acquire additional items.

I think my time and money will be better spent investing them in exhibits, so I can see my collections as I’ve always envisioned them and others can enjoy them as well.

Are you a longtime collector with an extensive collection? Where are your treasures? Are you ready to bring them out and put them on center stage?

Please leave a comment and let us know where your collections are and how you feel about that.

Collecting Takes Time

Now that I think about it, deciding on just the right name for my new blog wasn’t really that difficult. It took some thinking and some searching, which meant it was time-consuming. That’s all.

What’s truly difficult is collecting, regardless of how much fun it is. Collecting takes effort. It, too, takes time, it takes money, and it takes space, so there’s got to be a better way for us serious collectors.

If you’re a natural-born hunter and gatherer like I am, you know exactly what I’m talking about: Collecting takes up valuable time.

We collectors like to check the ads for shows and sales, and then we’re willing to drive all over creation hoping to find the latest addition to our troves. Some of us even plan vacations as thinly disguised buying trips to out-of-state shows and sales. Along the way, we’ve been stuck in traffic or lost on country roads and stood in endless checkout lines.

Thanks to the Internet, we’re willing to spend our evenings and other free time looking for treasures that previously were inaccessible to us. We might not have to spend time traveling long distances, but we lose hours surfing the web to bag another amazing find.

Afterward, if we’re diligent, we take the time to inventory our incoming purchases, and then spend more time figuring out where to put them—if we still have space. We might have to reshuffle the items in our collections to squeeze in new ones, or we might even need to rearrange furniture to fit in another curio cabinet or display case.

Paradoxically—if we’ve run out of space—we spend hours carefully packing up our new purchases and storing them away, which actually takes even more time than acquiring the pieces in the first place.

Over time, we spend countless hours shopping for furniture, fixtures, and supplies to house or store our collections. Have you seen how many different kinds of display cabinets are on the Internet? Have you spent time going from one big box store to another looking for just the right storage tubs? I have.

Have you stored your collections one way, but then found that didn’t quite work, so you had to invest more time to start over, hunt down different shelving or containers, and redo the storage system you already created? I have, and I shudder to think of the time I’ve wasted in repacking my treasurers.

If you’re like I am and have large collections but little free space at home, you have only two options: storage or stoppage.

Continuing to collect when we’ve run out of space in our homes is, as my father would have said, putting good money after bad. If we’re honest, we admit that we wasted time and money on collections that we’re now forced to store. We found and bought things we’re not really using. If we continue to collect even after our houses are bursting at the seams, we’re now wasting good money on the items themselves and on packing materials and even mini-storage rentals.

The obvious solution is to stop collecting. We could stop wasting precious time searching the web, driving on the road, or wandering the shows and shops looking for new pieces. We could stop wasting time cataloging new purchases, squeezing them in, or storing them away.

However, if you’re a committed collector like I am, you’ll agree that giving up the fun of collecting would make you miserable, but you might also agree that collecting and merely storing our collections is problematic, irrational, and even selfish.

So there’s got to be a better way, and I think I have it. The better alternative is to properly curate our existing collections according to appropriate themes and arrange them in attractive exhibits—so all our efforts can be displayed for others to appreciate.

That’s why I want to open The Collectors of Western New York Museum and Gallery with the goal of creating a public venue where private collections like yours and mine can be displayed.

We collectors spend a lot of time and energy amassing our collections, for collecting is truly and literally a labor of love. There’s got to be a better way than giving up our hobby or storing away our collectibles.

Why don’t we make one additional effort to go the distance and showcase our talents and prized possessions with others? Of course, it will take some time to round up the pieces in our collections, transport them to the new site, and curate them the way we’ve always envisioned.

But that’s the point, isn’t it? We buy these things because we have a vision for them. We see how the individual pieces fit within our whole collections. We have a vision for how they should be displayed—if we had enough time—if we had enough space—if we had an appreciative audience.

Now we can have all that once The Collectors of Western New York opens. We committed collectors can make the additional effort that will put our amazing collections on exhibit.

I think that would be worth the extra time and effort. Don’t you agree? Wouldn’t you love to see your collections displayed as you always imagined?

Please leave a comment and share your thoughts about your collections.