We
 are getting ready to leave for France for the seventh year of our 
Chateau Getaway!  Each summer, as June approaches, I start to think 
about the flea markets, vide greniers and brocantes we will visit in 
France...I am always excited when the flea market schedule comes out and
 we get to plan our schedule for the month of June.  This summer, we are
 lucky to have a handful of some of the best markets on, including: 
Beaumont (pictured above), Montauban, Septfonds, Bruniquel, Caussade, 
Molieres and Realville!
But
 what to look for...how to choose what is something really special and 
what should be left behind for someone else to carry home?  Here are 
some of my favorite treasures to look for in France while at the flea 
markets...
Tapestry,
 tapestries and more tapestries!  The older the better...and anything 
with a tag or marking on it...even better!  This centuries old tradition
 in France was once the bread and butter for many artisans.  Now, 
practically a dying trade, we are lucky enough to visit one of the great
 tapestry weavers in Montpezat, who, for the past 60 years, has been 
sitting at her loom weaving day in and day out - and you have never seen
 a more perfect posture!
Linens!
  I will walk a mile for a box full of old linens - and again, the older
 the better!  Old cotton nightshirts, linen convent gowns, lace collars,
 indigo aprons - you name it and I want it!  I am not such a stickler 
for the perfectly cleaned and pressed linens - I would much rather buy 
the discarded pieces and take them home and watch their beauty unfold 
after soaking, washing and ironing them.  My mom, Kick, is the master 
laundress, so most of our old linens end up on her lawn for a good 
brightening from the sun and the chlorophyll in the grass!
Hardware
 - particularly old brass curtain rings!  Any size, any color, any 
design, I like to use these pieces in my home to hang old linen sheets 
up as curtains.  These small brass rings can easily be sewn on to make 
small cafe curtains - or can be tied on with small pieces of ribbon sewn
 onto the linen panel.
This
 was my purchase from an afternoon at the brocante in Cahors...a basket 
woven canteen, a set of old bone handles knives, a handful of old silver
 thimbles, a half a dozen porcelain medicinal pots, an early 20th 
century curtain panel and a piece of filet...hand tied linen fabric used
 for lace curtains.  Everything spoke to me - the color, the history and
 the age...sometimes a photograph is worth a thousand ideas....
Old
 string...linen, twine, cotton, hemp.  I have no idea why...but I love 
old string collections - especially those that come with a few handmade 
tools.
Early
 samplers. These are getting harder to find and they can be quite pricey
 - but every once in a while you will come upon a box of linens with an 
old sampler hidden at the bottom of the basket.  These small pieces of 
history show the handiwork of young French school girls.  The missing W 
always gives away the samplers age.
Millinery
 treasures...all found at the old hat factory we have been visiting for 
years.  Although the owner, Guy, passed away two summers ago, we still 
pop by to say hello to his wife and to dig through one of the old hat 
making rooms - each one filled with the trims, flowers and ribbons that 
decorated the hats nearly a century ago!
Hemp
 and linen tea towels - hands down - the first thing I pick up at the 
flea market in the morning.  One can never have too many linen tea 
towels stacked up in every room of their home...or in the closets or 
armoires.  I like the old madder striped towels - they are the essence 
of France for me and no good flea market trip is complete without 
finding at least one old tea towel!
Old
 glass buttons...by the bucketful!  I pick up as many old buttons as I 
can to make button bracelets with.  These simple bracelets, filled with a
 mixture of decorative, military and baby buttons are one of my favorite
 things to make when I return home from France.  
So,
 as you can see...my treasures, the small bits and pieces I look for, 
are really quite simple.  Nothing takes up too much room in my suitcase,
 yet everything is filled with the history of France.  What do you look 
for at the flea markets?  Is there anything you would like me to look 
for?  Leave me a message and I will keep my eye out for you...meanwhile I
 will try to blog my way through France so you can see all of our 
adventures!
A bientot!
 
I have been searching for wooden pedestal hat rack with small base, not taller than 10" It is to hold a gentlemans night cap from the 17th century that I have embroidered. Hopefully within my means. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteIt all makes my mouth water!!!
ReplyDeleteKick
I would love a linen tea towel or three. Also night shirts.
ReplyDelete