Don’t underestimate what secondhand items can do for your decor.
Some favorite pieces in my house are secondhand items I got from garage sales, antique stores, and family members (see “The Story of an Accent Table,” April 13, 2020).
I love when decor gets passed around.
This might be part of the reason I struggle to get rid of things. I think I might need them again one day. If I do part with them, I donate them in the hopes they will enhance someone’s home like it once did mine.
Yes, I hoard. I place value in inanimate objects. I admit it. But all of that is a different blog for a different day.
Back to garage sale finds.
Secondhand items are often inexpensive, they can be the items you’ve been searching for, and they help reduce waste.
Case in point:
John and I had been searching for an ice bucket, the kind you would find in a Palm Springs home in the 1950s. We looked high and low at a mid-century antique store in Prescott. We found two buckets on separate trips. They were about $30 each but were not in the greatest condition.
Then one day we shopped around at a community sale in my parents’ neighborhood, and there it was: the ice bucket we had envisioned for the bar room.
Having seen the two in Prescott for $30, we were ready to pay $10 for it. Our jaws about dropped to the ground when the owner said, “One dollar.”
The ice bucket had been a wedding gift and sat at the top of her closet the past 50 years, never having been used.
We told her we were having a new house built with a bar room that needed an ice bucket and about the pricier buckets we had seen in Prescott.
She then told us to leave already before she raised the price on us or changed her mind about selling it.
Today the ice bucket sits on top of our bar with a fabulous story to tell.




















