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Show us your Thrift and/or yard sale finds

vintagewool

New in Town
Messages
30
Yes. $17 CAN …I think it’s called The Classic. It cost me $8 for a new battery.
I like the style of it., and the band is nicely made in genuine leather.

I wondered whether it is a tuning-fork model.

Anyway, you got a good deal.

This is a useful site:
 
Messages
13,642
Location
down south
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I've seen these enamel trays in antique shops before. They usually run around 25 or 30 bucks. I never really felt the need for one til I found this one in the thrift store for $4. It ought to liven up Thanksgiving a little, if nothing else.
 
Messages
10,647
Location
My mother's basement
^^^^^^
I got lots of thrift store saucers and salad plates, but dinner plates are mostly used restaurant ware, old melamine, and a stack of a dozen or so I call Fauxesta, because it kinda resembles Homer-Laughlin Fiesta but was only a buck apiece at the dollar store.
 
Fun estate sale yesterday with lots of cool old stuff. The prices on much of it was pretty good for the first of three days (typically they price it high the first day and lower it in stages the next two and then auction the remainder).

Picked up some native or western themed items.

- 1960s/70s Navajo (Dine) Yei rug.
- Two 1940s/50s Chimayo (Spanish) woven rugs.
- Two sets of bronze bookends with native “chief” heads. The one set with the full profile I have not seen before and each one weighs a little over 6 lbs. (the smaller set, which is fairly common, weighs 2lbs., 13 oz. each).
- A bronze native “chief” paper clip.
- A copper 20-gallon hat that appears to be hand hammered.
- A pair of Goding kid’s pee-wee cowboy boots. Probably from the 1950s.
- The heavy exotic wood bear was from a flea market

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1955mercury

One of the Regulars
Messages
195
Location
South Carolina
I wondered whether it is a tuning-fork model.

Anyway, you got a good deal.

This is a useful site:
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mybulova.com only has information on Bulovas from around 1920 to 1979. I pretty sure the above mentioned Bulova is newer than that. It's a quartz model probably made after Citizen bought out Bulova. The tuning fork Bulovas had the stem offset to the 4 o'clock position. And you're not going to find a battery for one of them for $8. They used a 1.35 volt battery that is no longer made and modified 1.5 volt batteries are now required at a cost of around $35.
 
Messages
17,642
mybulova.com only has information on Bulovas from around 1920 to 1979. I pretty sure the above mentioned Bulova is newer than that. It's a quartz model probably made after Citizen bought out Bulova. The tuning fork Bulovas had the stem offset to the 4 o'clock position. And you're not going to find a battery for one of them for $8. They used a 1.35 volt battery that is no longer made and modified 1.5 volt batteries are now required at a cost of around $35.
I have a first generation 214 from 1969-1970, & a 219 from 1983 which was my dad’s retirement watch.
 

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