Sunday, May 14, 2017

SUPER SATURDAY


SUPER SATURDAY

I had a really great day yesterday with my beau (aka G); running errands, shopping, and driving around.

First stop was the bank, bleh, nothing to see here.

Next stop was Rummagepalooza in Belleville. I'd heard about it through my daughter, who was setting up a booth there, and wanted to check it out. I thought about getting a booth too, but the timing just wasn't right this year. (Maybe next year.) Rummagepalooza was small but mighty! I loved it. It wasn't your run-o-the-mill yard sale stuff, but a nice mix of local businesses, a food truck, individual artisans. It was great. I will definitely go back next year.

The first order of business was to find the daughter and grandson and check in with them. Ok, from the very beginning of this girl's life, she's had a flare. I'm talking, from the time she could dress herself. It started with the socks. They couldn't match. What fun is that?! And it only got...shall we say...more creative. And I know this. I KNOW she has a thing for clothes, and hats and stuff, but this kid had three racks of clothes in her booth! I was like, “Why are you getting rid of this gorgeous velvet blazer???” Her calm response to her mother's outcry, “Mom, I have so many clothes.”
 
Shaina doing her thang.
 
After we checked in with the family, it was time to explore. I like to try, keyword here is TRY, to do these types of things in an organized manner, so we headed for one end, with the plan to work out way down and back up the other side. But, well, I have a little bit of an attention-span problem. Yes, the “Look, a squirrel!” kind of problem. So, what ends up happening most of the time is a kind of Winnie-the-Pooh-and-Tigger-Too bouncing back and forth between booths, speed walking from one brightly-colored attraction to another. And, well, this makes a woman thirsty. Oh look! Coffee! My most favorite drink in the world (next to wine)!

And here I am getting ahead of myself. Back to that first booth. I laid eyes on THE most gorgeous antique wood frame. Wait a minute, that picture looks so familiar - that's a mirror, Angelic. Still! So much potential, beautiful curves, handsome corbels on either side, but I play it cool. I look at the glasses that are real glass, but look like the clear plastic tumblers from diners gone by. Pick up the old plastic Alf lunch box. Put it back down. Meander to the front where the young man is manning the table. How much for that mirror? Five bucks? I struggle desperately to simultaneously control my facial expression while not peeing myself with excitement. I act like I'm considering the purchase as I talk to G about whether or not it would fit in the car and oh-so-slowly extract a fiver from my front pocket, trying to control the sudden urge to just throw the money at the kid, grab the mirror, and run. G either has far more self-control than I or does not understand the brevity of the situation as he suggests to the table-manning-kid that we pay now, but come back for it later. I look up at G in horror, but I have sunglasses on and before he can interpret my reaction, I gather my wits in time to snap my jaw shut, smile sweetly and agree. G takes my hand and gently leads me away as I steal, what I'm certain is a last glance, at my beloved mirror.

But it doesn't take long before the mirror has taken a back seat as we come across a leather-maker's booth, red 20 workshop. And I see, once again, the leather coffee cup coozie I'd pinned on pinterest a gazillion years ago and have since coveted each time I've seen them at craft fairs and vintage markets ever since. I never buy them though, because, well, they aren't cheap. Not to say they aren't worth every penny, especially this one, hand-made with obvious care. And I can't walk away this time empty-handed. So, I spend the next several minutes deliberating on which one to get; “Hello Darkness My Old Friend” or “Coffee: Life's Blood” or "but first Coffee."
 
Sara Cooper, maker of awesome leather coffee coozies and such.

After the purchase, G demonstrates that the coozie doubles as an accessory and proceeds to snap it onto my wrist and commend me, not only on my exquisite taste, but savvy thriftiness as well. I beam and agree and model the cuff as if I'm the Wonder Woman of caffeinated beverages, deflecting dangerous coffee beans. And IS that coffee I smell? Indeed it is, several booths away, but it doesn't matter, it's as if the aroma is a magic carpet and we are floating to it effortlessly, nose first.

G has not worked up the mighty thirst I have, so he's off to shop for old rusty tools at an uncovered u-shaped set of tables across the lot and leaves me standing in front of the coffee booth breathing in the rejuvenating perfume. That is, until the dude behind the table ever-so-politely interrupts my reverie with, “Can I help you?” I nod affirmatively on instinct and hear occasional words as I struggle to come out of the coffee-induced fog; cold brew, local, roaster, train depot. Wait? Train depot? What does that have to do with coffee? I start to pay attention to what the dear man is saying. The roaster is Balance Coffee & Tea and is housed in a renovated early 20th century train depot in Belleville. Needless to say, not only do I buy a cup of their cold brew joe, but a bag of coffee beans as well. I snap my new coffee coozie onto the cup and head over to show it off to G.

Marsh and friends of Balance Coffee & Tea in Belleville
G readily takes a sip of the coffee, proclaims it to be satisfactory and proceeds to pick up another rusty tool. I try to be interested in what it is he's asked me and I fail to guess correctly what the tool is and he's proceeded to explain it to me, but my eyes are wandering off past him, over his shoulder, at the antique tins this rusty tool guy has. “That's neat honey. Did you see those?” and I head for the tins. He doesn't follow, but that's ok, he's a seasoned shopper-with-Angelic and knows that by the time I get to the tins, I will have seen something else and moved on before he reluctantly sets down whatever it is he's examining for potential usefulness and catches up with me. And it's true, because, look! Over there! That old metal tool box is my favorite color!

Don't get me wrong, G and I love to antique together and actually spend the most part of our time shopping TOGETHER, but we also both like to wander off alone, so that we can find something fabulous to bring the other one back to see.

I still have several dollars burning a hole in my pocket, so I circle back to check on my daughter, who is working on her chalk art in the space in front of her booth. It's coming along beautifully – very colorful – much like my her!

Behind her booth and down a little ways is an artist, that I'm sure is very talented, but I was not inclined to venture into his booth or spend much time there – you see, he takes creepy old dolls and recreates even creepier dolls. I apologized to the guy as I swung wide to avoid making eye contact with the small village of dolls that were all staring at me, watching my every step, their eyes stabbing me in the back as I quick-stepped away.

We meandered around some more, but didn't see anything else we had to have, so while G and the grandson bantered, I bought a cup of home-brewed kombucha from Harmony Tribe Organics, sampled some more local roasted cold brewed coffee (blueprint coffee) and bought a snack of raw, vegan coconut macaroons from Earthen Foods, another Ripple of Existence artisan. We ate the macaroons in the car later and they were delicious!

The rest of the day was spent driving around the area exploring, shopping for a turbo plunger for the bathroom, checking my own flea market booth in Lebanon, and hitting the local IGA for groceries before heading home. After we got home, G started dinner on the grill while I cleaned the kitchen and made roasted asparagus. Our post-dinner activities were much less exciting - G cleaned out the tub drain with our newly acquired turbo plunger and cleaned the tub, while I put laundry away.

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