Years ago, I collected things that sat on shelves. I guess because everyone around me was collecting something and it was fun to look for one of a kind owls, elephants, salt and pepper shakers, cat and cow figurines. As time went on and I carried these dust magnets from apartment to apartment, I begin to question the purpose of this collecting madness. I soon lost interest. However, friends and relatives found me so easy to buy things for because they knew I'd love another ceramic owl or that fabulous beaded elephant they found in the Thailand airport. You know, they would see something that I collected and buy me more. In time, my sister who loves these things was the recipient of most of my treasures.
Of course, that was only half of it. My volkswagon delighted in carrying around other forms of junk. I was the "keeper of the flames" for anyone whose grandmother died. Yes, I'll take those old lace doilies. Oh please don't throw those tablecloths away. Absolutely, I'd love that tea kettle, I don't care if the handle is broken. You see, I accumulated whatever came into my line of vision. If I saw something on the side of the road, I'd stuff it in the back seat of my VW or put it in the tiny trunk (they were in front, remember?) I gave everything a second life.
Too many years and too many moves later, I have tired of collections. I don't even like to see other folks collections of doo-dads. I hardly ever brake for garage sales anymore. When folks call and tell me they have a bunch of stuff that Aunt Louise left them. I say no, take it to Catholic Charities. My accumulations were turning into clutter.
However, there are a few things I love. I am passionate about old books. The older the better and I don't care what shape they are in. Once I have an old book, I go crazy carefully turning the pages, smelling that old book scent, finding tiny old script. Reading is my passion. Also, any kind of old postcards, letterheads, and yes, of course, old photographs are a visual delight. I enjoy saving things that have a hands on history. I have every letter anyone has written me. Handwriting to me is an art form. I am also crazy about art supplies and prefer to use old easels and old palettes once used by others. I love to find old cameras, even ones that no longer work. These may occupy space and even sound like a collection; however let me assure you they are my passions!
Are you a collector? Do you accumulate way too many things? Have you discovered the creative passions within yourself? Salud.


Comments: 97
Great article, enjoyed your unique style of writing.
Your Fan
Charles D
I like have a collection of old things that were in my family. My father had a ceramic mug from the Chicago World's Fair, his purple heart, my grandmother's hand butter churn, a cast iron bank, my grandmother's anniversary clock, my father's marble collection, etc. I really cherish these pieces of family history.
My wonderful mother through them out when she cleaned out my closet. I had put them in a shoe box thinking they would be safe - well some lucky garbage guy (who probably hates Hockey) picked up my shoe box and has my collection of cards and cashed them in, quit his job and now living in Hawaii thanks to my mom.
Now when I look at hockey cards, I see my mom in the card dressed up in the hockey equipment saying "Put me in a shoe box, I may worth lots of money one day". Then I always reply back by saying "Thanks mom, what a great idea but this time stay out of my closet".
keep laughing
The Funny Guy
Linda, Ohhh girl I'm drowning so bad that we actually bought another house to store our excess junk and guess what - oh you know the answer...
Funny Guy, well, you never fail to make me laugh - I'm always happy to see your comments because I'm sittin here laughin and trying to keep my keyboard clear of wine! I lost all my baseball cards but I think someone had sticky fingers - like a brother in law.
Tonia, we have lots in common - I do love old letters and handwritings. I can't part with anything hand written ever.
James, your collections sound beautiful and full of purpose and not cluttery at all!
I'll comment more later!!! Thank yall! Salud.
I truly feel that if one sees my library they have also have a glance into my soul!
Another, wonderful piece...thank dear Miz M.
Whoa! You were the The Collector, La Collectrice y La Coleccionista. Nothing under the sun escaped your purview and consideration for retention!
With the passing of many moons and moves perhaps you came to realize that everything has a "bottom", and every bottom needs a place to sit. Since the walls that hold ourselves and things that sit about enclose a finite area, do we come to realize that selective collection finds the best inanimate roomates?
I love this article because it drives to the heart of the human condition; man/woman leaving at peace with accumulated stuff.
I'm hardly one to talk with yards and driveways stuffed with old cars and trucks and parts that will find some use some day!
Thank you!
Cheers,
Colonel Possum
Madame Mozeeee one of my oldest and most positve buddies on Gather - thank you and I can only imagine what a great library you have!
Terry! you're sweet - how about one of those on your head???
Now back up there to Madame Donna C...my first commentor, I've decided to write a few long hand notes to my old buddies - it is like an exercise almost and my hand will probably have muscle spasm for a few days! My handwriting as you can imagine is big and flowery; almost illegible...
thanks for dropping by Donna!
Ravi, I would love to read those letters! I can imagine that they'd be very much fun to read these days!
Ginger, good place for those things!!
Jeannie, Your garage sounds like mine - it's jammed to the gills and I loved absolutely loved your comment - it sounds like an article within itself - ain't it great to have all those things at your fingertips!
Charles, thanks for dropping by - you sounds as if you have some pretty good stuff there!
Sue, I'm awe-struck by the fact that your grannie left so many letters and she was that old when she died - I'll get back to you about all this - you know I love that kind of stuff...we'll have to do a letter thing soon!!! I think you have a book there Miz Sue! Seriously. \
Miz Jadan, I am so glad you have letters that your mother wrote to you - yes, that is a treasure. Maybe your friend could scan those old letters and give you a copy.
I think I caught all of yall! Thanks so much for the wonderful comments - they are my favorites!!! Salud.
Over the years, "stuff" has found its way into our abode. Life's magnet. One's soul searching for home. Comfort.
Like you, I have cleansed some of the "stuff" but the "hands-on" letters have found their way into my cookbooks. My mom used to do this; possibly still does. Whenever I receive a card, letter or note, I tuck it into anyone of my cookbooks. Invariably, I will end up "reading" a recipe and find a long-ago hand-written heart tug as a dessert.
Cook books are my love. I just finished reading another child's cookbook"Fanny at Chez Panisse" by Alice Waters. Of course, now I think I HAVE to have it!! :)
Lots of love, light, and blessings~Mama T
David, I know what you mean and I think it's called accumulating! Salud.
Books will always be a part of my life. My family room walls are lined with bookshelves, and nearly every surface has a favorite book or two sitting out to be thumbed through. I love coffee table country decorating books for this. One wall of books is historical research & guide books, and the other is self-help books, and the fiction books my husband reads.
My office is full of books too - with a bookcase that holds the research books I use the most. And another full of historical fiction and chick books I have read. If you look carefully in my bookcases, I probably have something on every subject - making a complete library. The kitchen of course - cookbooks in nooks and crannies.
Old books! I have a collection of library bound Mark Twain books that belonged to my father. They were given to my grandfather when he was doing janitorial during the depression for a wealthy family, I guess, then my Dad got them. These have copyrights from the 1890's to 1916, so are a real treasure. They even show a little family history, as my brothers, my cousin, and I borrowed them when we needed to read them for school, and of course we each signed them in case we lost them. There used to be a complete collection, but by the time my Dad gave them permanently to me a few were missing. But still a treat!
I love the fact that you have books lining your house. I wish I had more wall space here because for some reason there are windows or doorways everywhere in a tiny 1200 foot space...I like how you've organized your books as well!
Now, those Mark Twain books - Miz Cecile, I am sooooo jealous as I do love Mark Twain and he's someone who always has inspired me - and I have always wanted a complete set of his works, no matter what condition. I know I'll have to try ebay or whatever but someday I would love to have all his books. What a treasure is right - and I'm sure that they inspire you and your wonderful writings as well...
Da Hub thinks he's been to your ghosttown. Is it on the other side of Owens Lake? Thanks for coming by, Miz Cecile! Salud.
I can relate to the pack rat nature.I too accumulate junk. Someday I'll grow up and discard all but the most meaningful.
I'm glad that you saved and shared your collection of Valentine's cards. They, like you, are special and unique. Qualities that sometimes go missing these days.
How are you doing this morning? I did like to collect old Life and Time magazines from the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s. I especially like the B&W Life covers. Of course they are still around!
Cheers,
Colonel Possum
I collect blue glass, and these items sit on my kitchen windowsill (I submitted a photo on Gather a while back). I collect snowglobes. I have a large collection of Dept. 56 ceramic houses, and Byers Choice carollers, but those only come out at Christmastime. My home is decorated with lighthouse-themed items, but they are hung on walls or neatly on shelves as part of the decor.
Oh, and dolls. But I only have three, because I only collect really, really nice ones, and I can't afford more.
I think the key is to be discriminating. I've been collecting the snowglobes for maybe 25 years, and I only have around 12. Each one has a meaning, or a story. The first one I bought on vacation in No. Conway, New Hampshire. When my son worked in the House of Reps in DC, I got a Washington Monument snow globe. When my daughter went to London, she bought me one. My husband gave me a Cinderella one on our first anniversary. I know where each and every one is from.
I don't consider my books to be a collection, though I have hundreds. These are necessities. Same with photographs.
Thanks.
John, I can only imagine what interesting things you have because you're such an interesting person - I know what you mean, I hope my good "junk" goes to someone who appreciates it!
Nancy, sounds like you have some neat collections.
Colonel, aren't those photos the very best - I have several of those as well as National Geographic...Thanks all for your comments! Salud.
I'm another "keeper" and I collect so many things it's ridiculous but I love them all. I collect frogs, old books, glass paperweights, glass orbs, old tins, crocks and crock jugs, old rolling pins, boxes, watches, pens, butterflies and beads. I haven't added much to these collections recently as I have no space left. A friend I hadn't seen in years came over and looked around and said "wow, you have a lot of stuff".
I'm sure at some point I'll want to de-clutter. Maybe if I move. For now, I'm still enjoying it.
I love old tins and as I was telling Debbie - have some candy tins from the 20's and 30's and one from King Edward's reign which was very short! I don't go out of my way anymore to find things and it's helping me to appreciate what I do have...I'll never de-clutter because I can't really get rid of too many things - I think a bigger house may help! Salud.
Another real family treasure that this conversation reminded me of is the scrapbook of the aunt I am named after. She was a teenager, living in a tuberculosis ward during the depression, and when she died my grandmother just took everything that she had scrapbook, letters, cards, make-up, jewelery, even an empty Hershey bar wrapper, and put in a trunk. A cousin brought them to 15 years ago, and it was like getting to know my Dad's favorite sister who died long before I was born.
You must really enjoy going through it all huh...Cecile, I went to the website but didn't see a map - tell me where the location is or where the map is because I think he did say it had a tram and I read on your site about the tram...must be same place...we have pictures of it - but we're talking about 20 years ago...great website by the way! SAlud.
Vijay, it's always a pleasure to see you and I just read your piece Empty Sunshine. Very nice as is all your work. Salud.
For me it was Southwestern decor, blue glass, books, anything (and I mean anything) from the old folks in the family, penguins, music I liked and unusual home decor.
Now, I'm much more spartan in my decorating, I only have books I've read(and like) and my music is on my laptop.
someday you'll find yourself in the northeast and i will give you the personal tour of the museum that is our house. the best part? its a museum in which you can touch anything you want!
I just have to tell you that I had the pleasure this morning of viewing some of your art. What an eye you have!!!
I think that I can see beauty in things that others don't see it in right away. You have inspired me to think about taking photos.
Thanks for Sharing!
The sad truth is that even the things we no longer collect are still taking up space in the attic. I guess you could say I'm as much a pack rat as a collector. Two sides of the same coin, I suppose.
I have a collection of antique radios from the 30s and 40s. Restore them as delicately to what I interpret as their best state. Meaning that some are perfect with nothing done, not working and set on the shelf. Others to their last useable state as if they just left the kitchen counter in 1949. Some get the works to off the assembly line truth. A few get a coat of ugly paint, go on eBay, Goodwill or in extremes - the dumpster!
I collect radios.
Mona, didn't mean to slight you up there - I am sure that your place would delight me truly because oft times folks houses echo their personalities - and cluttered or not, their treasures are worth seeing because they are all part of the person...some of my accumulations are hands on - like my hats, sunglasses and toys...hee hee...however, I can't handle thick thumbs picking up certain delicate items - I know I know anyway, Mona, I will make it a point to find myself up there someday to view things - now tell me what Witch ball is??? sounds interesting! I wish I could say my cats never break anything but it's the only way my deaf cat knows how to communicate -he jumps up and knocks things down - we pick them up and feed him...even though he's going to be fed at his precise hour, he wants to be fed when he says it's time...so our stuff isn't safe from cats like yours is...Ok, I must close this comment so as to go over and say hello to:
Miz Barbara...I'm sure all your collections are neat - post some pictures please and why did you choose Eiffel towers? I haven't done ebay yet...Thanks for commenting Miz Barbara!
Scott, your place sounds very pristine now compared to the days of Southwestern look...it must seem very peaceful to you not to have clutter around...however, books can get out of hand...Ok let me go feed the cats...I'll be back later...Thanks everyone for your very interesting comments! Salud.
I can relate to the pack rat nature.I too accumulate junk. Someday I'll grow up and discard all but the most meaningful.
I'm glad that you saved and shared your collection of Valentine's cards. They, like you, are special and unique. Qualities that sometimes go missing these days.
Chris, my humble apologies!!!! You surely did! Salud.
I never thought of these as my passions, but you are right Mariana, they are. I still keep every personal letter I get, holiday cards, photos, both in albums and on my computer. I don't have a glass and china animal collection, but I do have some trinkets from two trips I took to Canyon Country and the National Parks of the U.S.
I have several friends who have told me they save my letters, one who told me I would be famous one day and he saved them so he could show people he knew me in my "Salad Days". :) We lost touch a number of years ago. I am not (yet) famous, so I wonder if he is still hanging on to them or just threw them out.
Chris, you're sweet to come back - thanks - well, it was such a good comment and I felt bad about forgetting! SAlud.
I can't help but think of my (almost) 89 year old grandmother when this topic comes up. Her house is full of STUFF. She definitely lives by the "I might use it someday" philosophy. The truth of the matter is that she won't use any of it anymore...suffice to say she is in the eve of her life and we (the family) will have a lot of junk and a lot of treasures to sort through.
There are the (somewhat) rational things she keeps for sentimental reasons:
In the basement on the pantry shelves sits the grape jam that Grandpa made in 1991. Grandpa's bike still sits in the basement unused since before his death in 1995. There's a basket full of Christmas cards that she's planning to go through (that likely won't ever happen).
Those things may have sentimental value but what about the bags full of plastic silverware sitting collecting dust? And don't throw out a paper grocery bag that has handles on it, she seems to think they are a rarity and need to be saved at all cost. At Christmas I asked if I could take some old canning jars from the basement to use in making some gifts, she wanted to see the ones I picked out first though in case any of them had sentimental value (no, none of them are antiques or anything like that).
And then there's the issue of food! My husband won't eat anything out of her house without checking the expiration date first. She lives alone (up until this week when she came home from the hospital on the condition that she has 24 hour care now) but there is more food in her house for 1 woman (who can't cook or prepare food anymore) than there is in mine for my husband and I. The fridge is full. If you open the freezer door you better duck because something will likely fall out and hit you in the head. The deep freeze is stuffed to the gills. There's food in the coat closet - originally with the intent that she could access it. There's food on the pantry shelves in the basement (she hasn't been to the basement in years and never will again). When I was in college I would go "shopping" in the basement.
Grandma's hoarding drives me crazy now but I know we'll always laugh when we remember her when she's gone. We won't get started on the issue of recipes being stashed all over the house...
I have a garage that is packed to the gills - we bought another house and stuffed it with garage stuff...turntable, JBL L100 speakers, loads of albums, loads of books, every kind of table - believe me, we didn't have to buy a thing for the other house - but the lady who built and lived in the house since 1936, kept everything so we had a house full of antique furniture - Ok then one of my neighbors up there has an art gallery and goes around to thrift stores and is friends with the owner of the dump - yes, honey, I am steadily accumulating things but I have learned to artsy fartsy them and use many for art projects - my plan is to make a giant concrete mold and put all my crap in there and seal it up for eternity...I'm not selfish but some folks (not me) are insulted if they don't get really super good stuff...that's why I was the keeper of the flames for sooooo long....
Now, I don't have little perculator lights! Well, I might - let me go dig! Thanks for your great comment Rob!!!
M.K. This comment would make a great article, just as Rob's would...I loved it...and I think I've always been an old lady at heart...Bless your grannie as I know that it's probably because she lived through the depression and that is something that sticks with you...regarding the jars, that's cute!!
Well, you know she won't be around someday so let her enjoy the way things are just as you're doing...you won't regret it and she'll feel comforted having sentimental things around...Thanks for the comment, M.K. Salud!
there's your history/antiques lesson for today!
Miz Beryl, so nice to see you! You're funny!!! I know exactly what you mean and even though I'm saying I don't collect anything - things of one kind steadily accumulate and I don't think it will stop and I'm sure that my friends will rent a U-haul to pull behind the Hearse carrying me! Thanks for dropping by Miz Beryl! Salud.
Comic stereoview cards
Misc. decoratives
Vintage ephemera, magazines, advertising cards, etc.
Whatever grabs my attention at antique stores and fairs!
This is a great topic, MAriana. I'm sorry I missed it earlier!
I am still the estate and thrift sale queen of the area. I scout out the good stuff and squirrel it away in the garage....I knwo that someday, someone is going to be looking for it and I will be the keeper of the momento!!!
So we start again, tho' I'm not as cluttered as before, just knowing that not everything is permanant.