Reclaimed Post Box
Quite the same Wikipedia. Reclaimed and Repurposed Barn Becomes a Nature Center. Sheriah Altobar - Tuesday, February 14, 2012. Enter Word Verification in box below. From Montana timber frame to metal materials, Big Timberworks is your supplier of quality materials. Shop for reclaimed lumber, box beams, and more here!
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I’ve never really met a tassel I didn’t love, you? Tassels have been used for centuries as a status symbol, a luxurious accessory to show off wealth and grand style. Today I’m sharing a short history of tassels and how to decorate with tassels.
Archeologists have found tassels in the tombs of Egyptian pharaohs in Egypt and Mesopotamia. There, thousands of years ago, tassels were thought to ward off evil spirits. In Europe, tassels showed status for the nobility, high church officials and the military.
The art of tassels and decorative passementerie, which translates as “to turn by hand”, was begun in the ateliers of the Passementerie Guilds in 16th century France. It took seven full years of being an apprentice to a become a “Passementerie” craftsman. The training was long and hard, and often quite tedious, before an apprentice was allowed to weave and tie elaborate and costly trim and tassels for the wealthy nobility of the era.
Louis XV of France was a great fan of Tassels {Passementerie}, using them everywhere for decoration and style. Tassels signified status during his reign, and they were not just for adding flair and style to clothing, tassels were also used as decorations at palaces and chateaus. In thePetit Appartement de la Reinethe private rooms of the French queens Maria Theresa of Spain, Marie Leszczyska, and later Marie-Antoinette, tassels were used everywhere. The photo below shows an elaborate cornice hung from the ceiling in the bathroom.
Artisans elevated working with braids and trim, silk threads and beads to an art form. The tassel was an apprentice’s final exam, of sorts, and his master’s calling card to obtain commissions to create work for royalty, the clergy and the military. One single tassel made with silk wool or linen, with metallic buillon threads could take a hundred hours to make, and could cost the equivalent of thousands of today’s dollars to commission.
Tassels from this period adorned pillows, draperies, carriages and thrones, interiors were literally sprinkled with tassels of all sizes and shapes. Clothing often had a variety {and a dazzling amount!} of tassels, and special tassels marked rank in both religious clothing and military uniforms.
After the French Revolution, the tassel trade was largely lost, with few exceptional passementerie ateliers still in existence today. But in Belloy-en-France, there is still an “old-school style” fabulous passementerie manufacturer.
Les Passementeries de Ille de France is one of the last workshops still operating in France. It was started by Georges Doudoux in 1926, and it’s flourished ever since. If you are ever in France, their showroom is in Paris, and worth a visit.
Les Passementeries de l’île de France.
The showroom is on
11 rue Trousseau
75011 PARIS
You can use tassels in so many ways!
Here at home, I hang them from our armoires, of course. But there are so many other ways to use a tassel in your decor!
HERE A FEW INSPIRED IDEAS FOR USING YOUR TASSELS:
- Drape tassels as part of a stylized grouping of antiques on a commode in the living room.
- Tie them to a silver tea pot or an antique silver biscuit jar.
- Hang one on a tall lamp from the “turn on and off” knob.
- Use a double curtain tie back as a place marker in an antique book on a stand.
- Display antique French keys on a tassel on my French desk in the office.
- Tie them to beautiful scissors.
I love tassels, and by the way each collection of our vintage tassels made exclusively for us at FrenchGardenHouse flies off the shelves, so do you.
I’m excited to share our latest collection of tassels, each embellished in a little studio with antique buttons, metallic laces, vintage and antique ribbons and jewelry pieces, too. While they are probably not worthy of kings and queens, they are wonderful decorative accents!
Many of them have antique French skeleton keys attached, with a worn gilt finish. They are perfect to display with grand style on a stack of antique books, on an antique French letter on your desk, or on your coffee table. {you can make up a story about where the key was used, and what secret doors it unlocked!}
PLEASE SHARE ANY UNUSUAL WAYS YOU USE YOUR ANTIQUE & VINTAGE TASSELS
IN YOUR HOME WITH ALL OF US.
A BIENTOT
Vintage Postal Box
Shop for the best in French Antiques, furniture with the patina of age, vintage accessories to delight you and your family & friends, and French Country utilitarian pieces. Treasures that make your home fresh, beautiful, inspirational and uniquely yours. Visit our shop FrenchGardenHouse.com
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Reclaimed Recycled Barn Wood is our passion. We are a collaboration of Central Coast locals with an interest in rescuing wood from a possible end in a landfill. We work primarily with authentic barn and building materials deconstructed carefully to enable the maximum available reuse potential from each site. We have a commercial yard in San Luis Obispo, California to stock, process, and display our collection of vintage reclaimed recycled barn wood for custom projects on the Central Coast. Nothing goes to the dump!
Interested in purchasing our materials? Would you like us to build a handcrafted masterpiece? We would love to meet you!
Environmentally friendly: When you use reclaimed lumber, you decrease the demand for newly sourced lumber, which helps curb deforestation. If harvested responsibly, reclaimed wood is a renewable resource that reduces landfill waste as well as the use of environmental hazards to manufacture new products.
Most reclaimed lumber comes from timbers and decking rescued from old barns, factories and warehouses, although some companies use wood from less traditional structures such as boxcars, coal mines and wine barrels. Reclaimed or antique lumber is used primarily for decoration and home building, for example for siding, architectural details, cabinetry, furniture and flooring.
Reclaimed Post Box Prices
Barns are one of the most common sources for reclaimed wood in the United States. Those constructed through the early 19th century were typically built using whatever trees were growing on or near the builder’s property. They often contain a mix of oak, chestnut, poplar, hickory and pine timber. Beam sizes were limited to what could be moved by man and horse. The wood was often hand-hewn with an axe and/or adze. Early settlers likely recognized American oak from their experience with its European species. Red, white, black, scarlet, willow, post, and pin oak varieties have all been used in North American barns.[