The Joy of Collecting – Lady Head Vases

    
If you see a single lady head vase you might think, oh that’s cute. But once they are put together into a collection they look wonderful! And, what fun it can be to find them. One here. One there. One at an estate sale, a yard sale, or your friendly aunt gave you hers. Or you go in an antique mall, search space by space and you find three of them! Oh how the ladies at home will love their new friends!

The terms “head vase,” or “lady head vase,” refer to a style of vase popularized during the forties and fifties. Originally, head vases were produced by florist companies to hold small bouquets of flowers.  

Early American head vase manufacturers include Betty Lou Nichols, Ceramic Arts Studio, and Dorothy Copley. Betty Lou Nichols opened her first ceramics studio in 1945. Nichols’ highly desirable vases often are ladies with intricately curled hair and fancy fabric ruffles along with pouting lips and three dimensional eyelashes.

Betty Lou Nichols head vase

 
Head vase subjects range from Disney characters to exotic foreign females to the Virgin Mary. Many of the most collectible head vases are of famous figures like Lucille Ball and Jackie Kennedy.

Lucille Ball


Jackie Kennedy

After WWII they were produced in Japan by the likes of Enesco, Lefton, Napco, and Ucagco. These imports were generally much cheaper to make and of a lesser quality but they are still very cute today.

If you want to add to your knowledge there are some nice books on the subject.

By the seventies head vase manufacturing ceased so now the only way to add to your collection is to go out and search for them. One at a time. Here and there.  The Midtown MM Mall is a good place to start building your collection. Come on in. I walked around the other day and saw quite a few lady head vases that you can add to your collection.  


Carol Fenn 1-2017

New Year’s Eve – It’s Not Just About Making Noise!

In a few days it will be New Year’s Eve.  When I was a kid in ’50s and ’60s California the tradition on New Year’s Eve was to go outside and honk the horn on your car. All over the neighborhood, high and low, you’d hear the car horns blaring.  No guns, no fireworks.  Just car horns honking!  I distinctly remember trotting out in my bare feet and honking the horn on my mom’s 1960 Ford Thunderbird. 

As I got older and attended parties on the last day in December there were cute metal noisemakers, decorated with clowns or pretty girls. Twisting and twirling, they rang in the new year. 

I always thought this cacophony was simply celebrating a new year coming. Not so fast Spunky! There’s a lot more to the noise making than that.  

In cultures all over the world raucous noisemaking at midnight is said to scare away any malevolent spirits that might have evil designs on a household in the year to come. Traditional noisemakers run the gamut of pot lids, pans and wooden spoons, horns, bells and whistles. 


In olden Thailand, primitive guns were fired to frighten off demons. 

In China, firecrackers routed the forces of darkness. 

In the early American colonies, the sounds of musket shots rang through the air. 

Today, Italians let their church bells peal, while the Swiss beat drums.  

It’s not only noise that will keep the evil spirits at bay. In Japan many open the front door then the back door to let the evil spirits in then quickly usher them out.  Many will be happy to know that there are certain foods that can help the new year be perhaps better than the last. Eating any ring shaped treat (such as a donut) symbolizes “coming full circle” and leads to good fortune.  


Eating 12 green grapes at midnight will give you 12 months of happiness. Rice promises prosperity. Apples dipped in honey will bring good health, and dollops of whipped cream, dropped on the floor (and not cleaned up immediately) symbolize the richness of the year to come.

So on New Year’s Eve, donut in hand, make enough noise to keep bad spirits at bay, and don’t step in the whipped cream! Do these things and I’m sure you’ll enjoy a happy, safe and prosperous New Year.


 Oh, and don’t forget the champagne!   


Happy New Year!

Carol Fenn, December 2016

~ Christmas Windows in Black and White ~

 

Whether your winters were spent in balmy California or snowy New York, if you grew up in the ” black and white days” as my daughters used to kiddingly call the 1950’s and 1960’s of my childhood, I’m sure you have fond memories of “Christmas Windows.” If you’re too young to remember this, well, I’ve got a few to show you. Enjoy!


Who doesn’t remember getting bundled up in your best winter coat and going downtown to see these magical displays. Most of them filled with Santa, reindeer and toys. Oh, the toys! Winter scenes with Santa, robots, space toys, dolls, and fluffy stuffed dogs and teddy bears.  


Children and adults would clamor to the windows. The children wishing. The adults wondering … “how am I going to afford that toy” LOL


Occasionally there was a window with never moving children waiting for Old St. Nick.  I wonder if he ever came down that chimney 🙂 


In studying Christmas windows I found that in the early mid century some car dealerships dressed up their windows with an Oldsmobile or a Chevy. It might be a bit difficult for Santa to get an automobile down the chimney but, hey. Magic!


Nowadays, it’s hard to find any Christmas windows here in Arizona. However, from what I understand, part of the fun of going to New York City this time of year, is to see these wondrous displays, which are still going strong there.


Here in Tucson, if you want to get in the mood for Christmas you should come in the Midtown Mall. We might not have Christmas windows, but there are wonderful Christmas vignettes around every corner and throughout the building. Merry Christmas!

Before and After

People always say things have to fall apart before they can fall together. Tucson, Arizona has had for years a small collection of antique malls. Recently one of the more famous antique malls closed, leaving many dealers without a place to sell their treasures and several employees looking for work.

So two dealers, who you will definitely meet in an upcoming post, decided to act on their dreams and open a space of their own! Going from dealer to owner is a huge leap but they leaped and landed on this absolutely amazing space.

From there everything started to fall into place. Having been dealers themselves they knew exactly what they wanted out of an antique mall, they also knew the dealers who they wanted to fill up the space and the employees to invite to run it.

You could say little by little the dream became a reality, but going from zero to grand opening in less than four months takes monumental bounds. But when you have gathered a group of people who love and are passionate about what they do the impossible ends up being completely possible!

We’ve only been open two weeks (and we will be sharing our Grand Opening very soon on the blog) but each and every day we are amazed with the steady climb we are on. We aren’t done, the store isn’t perfect, changes have already been made and there is no doubt more changes will come our way. That is what makes this journey so exciting though!