if you’ll click through to my etsy shop, ollie’s vintage, you’ll notice two things. one, the banner says “home wares and knick knacks.” two, i am no longer selling home wares and knick knacks.

ollie’s vintage is now selling vintage baby clothing! just like when i was sifting through thrift stores and estate sales for goods for my home and found goodies i wanted to pass on, i’m doing the same with children’s clothing. in my search for unique finds for ramona bean, i’m finding excellent pieces that need to be rescued and passed on to mamas (and papas!) and little ones that have an appreciation for a one-of-a-kind fashion sense.

so though my banner needs some updating (i, of course, am absolutely worthless when it comes to any sort of computer or web design) my shop is ready to go. i’m adding a couple of pieces a day as the kids’ naps and my daily to-do allow. but it sure is nice to be back on the etsy storefront. it’s a great source for beer money 😉

here are a couple of my favorite pieces. (click on them for more info or to make a purchase!) 

(psst. mention A Denver Home Companion when you check-out and get a 10% discount good through the month of june)

thanks to tessa for taking these photos, showing me how to take photos when she’s not here, and how to efficiently edit them. that help is what i needed to get my butt in gear to get this going!

 

so it looks like i did take some photos these past two weeks….

a couple explanations of these photos.

  • ramona loves band-aids. cannot get enough. i was the same way, so my mother tells me. and my niece has the same infatuation. is it all little girls?!
  • jp and i are looking for another couple to have a monthly standing euchre date. any takers?
  • fountain parks have got to be the greatest invention for little children.
  • my father is doing a one month long yoga teacher training in BC. pretty much anyone who knows my father knows that in his previous life no one ever saw this coming. yoga has changed his (and my mother’s) life and i am so so proud of him for taking this risk and this leap.
  • i’m trying juicing again. so far i’m 2 for 3 mornings. our garden is growing kale like no one’s business so i gotta get moving before that stuff bolts.

 

 

i can’t believe my dear friend tessa came to town and this is the only photo i have of her. i don’t even have one of her and us or of her and her husband or of her and her little adorable baby boy, august. well, actually i can believe it since the past week was busy busy busy. we had so much shopping and talking and eating and drinking to do! her and her two men were visiting from chicago and stayed with us for the duration. it was a good balance of being out-and-about and lounging on the couch but there was no time for blogging or for capturing these moments (though tessa did snap some photos of ramona and i for my next sling diaries theme). when tessa and i and august and ramona do our chicago-minneapolis-chicago roadtrip we will both be better about documenting it.

so. now i’m back to blogging. and i missed it. but sometimes unexpected breaks are so good for the soul and sanity. because i wouldn’t have missed that last week offline with my friends for anything.

 

just busy. really busy.

i’m looking forward to things settling down, posting more, reading your blogs, and catching up.

until then. stick with me! i’ll be back soon. and i’ll leave you a photo of ramona from today taken by the extremely talented, tessa richardson.

 

the first nice bag i ever owned was a louis vuitton noe. first designed to hold champagne bottles, something in the style and shape of the bag caught my grandmother’s eye sometime ago in france and it became her go-to purse. upon her death–when family was sorting through her things making piles of what to pass on, what to hold on to, what to donate, and what to discard–my mother found it in the donate pile. she saved it and it became mine.

i love this bag. i love thinking of my grandmother and how she must have felt first purchasing this bag. my grandmother was a classy, chic woman but she was also financially savvy and chose to live simply and smartly. she was not dripping in diamonds and she drove a toyota previa. she was a bargain hunter and bought in bulk. but she also knew the value of a well-made piece; a bag that would last for many many seasons and whose design was timeless. the purchase of this bag was no after-thought for my grandmother, a second grade teacher who took investments very seriously. this was a very big deal. a treat for her. my grandfather understood and supported this mentality. he (a professor of psychology) did the same with the jewelry he would meticulously pick out and buy for her, himself, and his family.

when my grandfather died in january, nearly eight years after his beloved, the family gathered in florida for his funeral. after the service was done and we were lunching on the porch, my mother and aunt and uncle gathered the grandchildren around. my grandparents had left behind a small inheritance as a gift for each of us eight. we were, my aunt instructed us, to do with it what we wanted and that their hope was we would find something meaningful or useful for ourselves that we could remember our grandparents by. i think for some of my cousins that included furniture for their homes. i imagine a beautiful dining room table or a new bed.

for me, for jp and i, we took some of this gift money and bought goats. this was to remember my grandfather, the goat man. it took me a while to decide what to buy to remember and honor my grandmother. our home didn’t need anything. we didn’t need anything. but then i remembered that on my “wish list” for many years has been a nice, black leather purse. it’s been sort of a joke between jp and i. i always ask for one for my birthday or for christmas and it’s always something we’re never in the position to purchase.

but now all the purses i had ever had my eye on just didn’t seem right. too trendy. too obvious. too chintzy. too plain. too big. too small. not nice enough. a little too nice. and then i found it: a small minnesota company that has been making their bags in st. paul since forever. i had never heard of j.w. hulme and a look at their website had me curious but not quite convinced. so on my next visit to mn, jp and my mother and i headed over there to take a look. i told them black. i told them satchel. they brought this baby out and it was love at first sight:

pardon my lackluster photography skills.

the fairmount satchel handbag (in a discontinued color) by j.w. hulme. it’s black, it’s slouchy, it’s beautiful. it reminds me of my grandma and i have a feeling this satchel and i are going to be friends for a very long time. hopefully, if i treat her well, i can pass her along to ramona one day.

if you’re in the market for a new bag or luggage or anything leather for carrying goods, take a look at j.w. hulme. made by hand in america w insane attention to detail and respect for craft and quality. also, their employees are incredibly nice, knowledgable, and excited about what they do. we took a tour of the factory floor and watching the process and meeting the people who had created my bag made this experience so much more special and important to the story.