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Dumbo Flea Starts This Weekend!

Dumbo Flea Starts This Weekend! published on 1 Comment on Dumbo Flea Starts This Weekend!

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Brooklyn Flea is launching their newest location this Sunday in DUBB (down under the Brooklyn Bridge). The Dumbo winter market has closed shop for the hot weather and they are moving it outdoors, right on the waterfront.

The market will feature many of the same great vendors, plus some new “nicer” merchandise. “Nicer”=more expensive?

Fort Greene is still there on Saturdays until the winter holidays and Dumbo will be on Sundays.

Ms. Reclaimed Home is cutting out for the summer months and returning in September full force. I didn’t do July and August last year because the gal can’t take the heat. I’m not not doing the remaining June weekends due to scheduling conflicts (completely disorganized life). I should have some supercalifragilisticexpialidocious inventory when I return in the fall.

Living on the Cheap in Brokelyn

Living on the Cheap in Brokelyn published on 2 Comments on Living on the Cheap in Brokelyn

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Wow! I’m in love. Brokelyn is a new blog I found out about from OTBKB. It’s edited by Faye Penn of InStyle Magazine backed by a team of bargain hunters, writers and photographers. There’s a special thanks to a deceased cabbie named Susan the “angel investor”. That brought tears to my eyes for some reason.

Sometimes bargain sites can be a bit overwhelming, but Brokelyn is an easy, pleasant read. It’s broken up into several categories. There’s an article on cheap airfares. The author has scored deals four times to Ft. Lauderdale for under $40 roundtrip! Four times!

I love the comparison of the PS Food Coop to Fairway. Ya know, I’m kind of anti-coop. I tried joining twice and both times I was turned off by the nuttiness. I’d rather pay more for my food. Sorry.

Check out the posts on five $10 gifts for kids and where to find cheap yoga.

Dock alert! Free 30 foot boat on Craigslist.

I told you it’s a great site!

Our House in the Middle of Our Street

Our House in the Middle of Our Street published on 2 Comments on Our House in the Middle of Our Street

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During the late 30’s/early 40’s, the city photographed every house in every borough for tax purposes. They did this again in the mid 80’s. Prints are available for purchase from NYC. gov. Prices start at $35 for a black and white 8×10 from the 40’s.

My house didn’t look all that different than it does today, although the 1940’s row of houses almost look like dirty limestones rather than brownstones. Unfortunately, someone along the way painted my home brown, so it’s lacking some authenticity. Oh, it’s under there, but who can afford to restore the exterior? I can’t.

The front doors can easily be replaced by salvaged ones, but the stair rails will be pricey to put back. It is something we’d like to do if we have some spare dough. We definitely have to redo the stoop and it would make sense to take care of both at the same time. We may end up with something not totally original, but nicer than what’s there.

I ordered the print to incorporate into my top secret project that will be revealed soon. Ok, it’s a counter top. The print is scanned for embedding in resin along with a few other items from the house and the original will hang on the wall.

Below is a snappie I took in 2005 before we closed on the house.

I’m kinda curious about the 80’s shot now.

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Blogfest 2009. A Success!

Blogfest 2009. A Success! published on 10 Comments on Blogfest 2009. A Success!

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Flatbush Gardener’s panorama. I’m totally jealous of this shot.

After thorough planning on the part of Louise “OTBKB” Crawford, Eleanor “Creative Times” Traubman and countless others, the 2009 Blogfest went off without a hitch. The large space at Dumbo’s Powerhouse Arena seemed more intimate than last year’s Lyceum and the format flowed better, IMHO.

There were some kick ass videos presented by Adrian “Brit in Brooklyn” Kinloch and Blue Barn Pictures. The evening was dedicated to Bob “Gowanus Lounge” Guskind. Flatbush “A Year in the Park” Brenda introduced a video tribute to the blogger who died earlier this year.

“Blogs of a Feather” was introduced at last night’s event. This is a small break out session of like minded bloggers. I co-hosted the house/food/crafts section with Janah of Eat It. We had a great group that included Alana of The Roux, Ann of Open Spaces Feng Shui , Ameet of Rice of Life and Melissa of Fork This.

I was psyched that Casa Cara and Vanessa of Etsy, joined in, because I’m a big fan of both of their blogs. We hung out for a bit at the after party.

Professional organizer Amanda Wiss of Urban Clarity also joined us. She was great, but it made me a little uneasy, sort of like having a psychiatrist around when you know you’re totally nuts. I could’ve sworn Amanda was frowning upon me when I announced I didn’t bring business cards. Maybe I’m just being paranoid.

We met would be blogger, Sylvia, who is thinking of starting a DIY crafts blog specific to Brooklyn. Hope she does!

Next Brooklyn blogger meet up is on a much smaller scale. Reclaimed Home is hosting the June Blogade at Kush on June 28th. Mark your calendars!

FLICKR SET

Brooklyn Blogfest 2009

Brooklyn Blogfest 2009 published on 1 Comment on Brooklyn Blogfest 2009

Brooklyn Blogfest 2009 from Blue Barn Pictures, Inc on Vimeo.

The Brooklyn Blogfest is next week! You needn’t be a blogger and you don’t have to be from Brooklyn to attend. 2009 marks the 4th annual celebration of blogging created by Louise Crawford of Only the Blog Knows Brooklyn. This year’s event is dedicated to Gowanus Lounge founder, Robert Guskind, who passed earlier this year.

Apart from networking, eating and drinking, there will be an actual program. There’s a “Why we blog” panel, a “Birds of a feather” theme breakdown (I’m co-hosting “Food and Home” with “Eat It“), a shout out to new bloggers, a video montage of photos, raffles and more.

Brooklyn Blogfest 2009 will be held at the Powerhouse Arena in Dumbo followed by an after party at Galapagos. Doors open at 7pm. Pre-registration is suggested.

Hope to see you there!

Brooklyn Flea Starts Saturday!

Brooklyn Flea Starts Saturday! published on

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The Brooklyn Flea Dumbo pop up lives on, but the outdoor Ft. Greene market is bouncing back for it’s second season starting this Saturday. Yes, it was Sundays last year. No, supposedly, it has nothing to do with THE MAN.

I’ll fill you in on new vendors later this week, but the girl’s gotta sell her own stuff first.

Dirty Barbie” is a filthy crack ho. The first in my series of Barbie alterations. I have many Barbies and zero time. It may be my last in the series. She’s even got a hook on her back so you can hang her like a mezuzah. 25 Bucks and she’s yours for keeps.

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You’ve seen this coffee table as a work in progress before. If you’re a regular blog reader, that is. Well, four months later, I finally finished! It was a light weight piece of crap, but I spent a lot of time making it fabulous. $265

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I started the little orange table back in January also. Then it sat in my living room with the coffee table. Gold detail and poly protection and call it a day! 60 bucks.

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I’m kind of torn about selling this table. It’s just too perfect for a small Brooklyn apartment and we’ll be needing something like this IF we ever finish our renovation. Measures 35″ wide x 19.5″ depth but opens up to 61″ with the leaves. Yeah, I know, right? I’ll stick $435 on it and if it doesn’t sell, I’ll be happy to keep it. It is missing the 2 leaves though. I see that you can buy blanks for as low as $30 or get custom ones made for $500. Which do you think I’ll do?

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Construction Fun at Brooklyn Children’s Museum

Construction Fun at Brooklyn Children’s Museum published on

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Skanska is the company behind the new green renovation of the Brooklyn Children’s Museum, making it the first green museum in NYC. It’s also the company my husband happens to work for. They’re big on team building and safety and they do cool things like sponsor events at kid’s museums.

April 18th is Skanska Day at the museum. Kids (and adults) can try on construction gear, check out recycling and energy exhibits and build a marshmallow and toothpick bridge.

To back up my point about Skanska being all unicorns and rainbows, check out the “morning stretch” photo below.

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Brooklyn Blogfest: Mark Your Calendar!

Brooklyn Blogfest: Mark Your Calendar! published on

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Brooklyn Blogfest 2009
May 7th at 7 p.m.
PowerHouse Arena in Dumbo

For the most current information and to register online: go to brooklynblogfest.com

Find out why Brooklyn is the bloggiest place in America at the Fourth Annual Brooklyn Blogfest on May 7, 2009 7 p.m. at powerHouse Arena in DUMBO.

Brooklyn Blogfest 2009 is an exciting, idea-filled event for bloggers, blog readers and the blog curious where you will find: Insight. Advice. Inspiration. Resources.

Here’s your chance to meet your favorite bloggers; learn about blogging; be inspired to blog.

“Where better to take the pulse of this rapidly growing community of writers, thinkers and observers than the Brooklyn Blogfest?” ~ Sewell Chan, The New York Times

WHY WE BLOG will be the theme of a high-profile panel discussion. This year Brooklyn Blogfest introduces BLOGS-OF-A-FEATHER, special small-group sessions, where you can connect with other bloggers who share your interests.

Once again, there will a VIDEO TRIBUTE TO BROOKLYN’S PHOTO BLOGGERS and the annual SHOUT-OUT: a chance to share your blog with the world!

Whether you live to blog, blog to live or are just curious about this thing called blogging, you won’t want to miss Brooklyn Blogfest 2009: the best Blogfest yet.

To find out about sponsorship opportunities for Brooklyn Blogfest, contact Louise Crawford (e: louise_crawford@yahoo.com, c: 718-288-4290).

The Details:

Fourth Annual Brooklyn Blogfest
May 7, 2009
Doors open at 7 p.m.
powerHouse Arena
37 Main Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201
Admission: $10. ($5 for students and seniors)

Brooklyn Blogfest After-Party
Galapagos Art Space
16 Main Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201
(right across the street from powerHouse Arena)
Cash bar and refreshments

Coney Island Circa 1905

Coney Island Circa 1905 published on 2 Comments on Coney Island Circa 1905

 

 
I just swiped this video from Kinetic Carnival. It was too good to pass up for my own blog.
 
My Grandma Clara was a young girl living in Brooklyn around the turn of that century. I inherited her scrapbooks and have loads of images of the family spending time at their summer home in Cape May. This footage reminded me that I have to start scanning those photos!
 
Enjoy.

New Bed Stuy Blog

New Bed Stuy Blog published on

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A big Bed Stuy welcome for Save Bedford Stuyvesant, the new kid on the block! The blogger writes about the history and architecture of the southern tip of the neighborhood, an area folks are trying to get landmarked. Why this blog exists? “To show why it is important to safeguard and preserve the aesthetic, and cultural heritage of Bedford Stuyvesant Historic Districts.”

SBS focuses on Bedford Corners, which has actually been around for centuries and is not the figment of a realtor’s imagination. It’s my neck of the woods, so I had a good time reading about my neighbor’s homes around the corner.

I’m all for getting the landmarking….absolutely! Hypocritically, I must say that I have work to be done on the exterior of my house and I plan on doing that before there’s a huge hassle with landmarks.

Save Bed Stuy joins Bed Stuy Blog and Bed Stuy Banana as the third “strictly neighborhoody” blog.

Bed Stuy Reno Progress

Bed Stuy Reno Progress published on 8 Comments on Bed Stuy Reno Progress

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It’s been slow going on our Bed Stuy living room. Hubby has been repointing bricks and adding new joists for an eternity now. He’s supposed to be working on it about three nights per week after work, but I call him about 7pm and he’s always just leaving work, so not much is really getting done.

There have been some baby steps made since I last posted about it before the New Year. Most of the pointing is done and he’s got some new joists in. There’s still plenty of work to do around the windows. All of the wood was pretty rotted from past water damage. Once he s-l-o-w-l-y finishes this and gets it closed in, we’ll have the floor guy replace the tongue and groove and finish the floor. Everything else is a piece of cake. Really, just painting from there.

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I headed over to Eddie’s on Saturday to look for front doors to our apartment. The previous owner had exterior French doors which we covered with plastic bags since tenants moved in 3 years ago. It matches our window curtains. We’ll use those glass doors in the hallway to let some light in, but we prefer privacy when sitting around the living room in our jammies. When we have a living room, that is.

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The double mahogany doors cost $100 including the original hardware. It looks like I’ll only need to strip one coat of paint and I don’t even think it’s primed. Might be just shellac. The doors will sit in the hallway for another 3 months at least, but it made me feel like I accomplished something by getting them.

Hey, we’re on a roll, huh? Is there anyone who works slower than us??

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Coney Island Back in the Day

Coney Island Back in the Day published on 3 Comments on Coney Island Back in the Day

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Coney Island has been around longer than any of us and has gone through many incarnations. Like the cockroach, it’s a survivor. Coney has outlived Robert Moses and Fred Trump, two of the  developers who molested the down and out amusement park. But will it survive Thor?

I dunno. There’s not much left to save at this point now that Astroland is gone. Perhaps people have been saying that for years (minus the Astroland part), but it was one of my favorite destinations when I was growing up in the 1970’s.

Coney was already run down by then. It was like the (old) Times Square of amusement parks. Dirty, forgotten and desolate at times. But the crowds still came on the weekends. They were the families who couldn’t afford to go to Long Island or the mountains for the summer. The kids who weren’t sent away to camp. Those without cars or money to get them all the way out to Great Adventure, the great new amusement park that kicked Coney Island in the ass.

I have few memories of going with my parents in the 60’s when I was really young. My brother used to do a mean “laughing lady in the funhouse” impersonation to scare me. I have photos of myself on the kiddy rides. I remember the Stillwell Avenue train station was kind of festive and I’d get excited as we exited.

By junior high I was able to go myself. I cut school with a few friends one day and we rode the water flume (my favorite ride) at least 4 times in a row. We also ran into some other cutters who had the same idea that day.

What made the rides scary was the fact that they were so old and rickety. Like the Cyclone. There were other roller coasters that were just as bad. Even the spook houses. It wasn’t the monsters popping out that was spooky, it was the creaking sounds of the old wheels as they made their way through the dark. The jerking of the cars. It was all part of the scare factor.

I remember going on the pirate ship ride one night. It was a quiet evening so the guy running it gave us an extra long ride. So long, I got nauseous and almost lost it. I wondered if someone across from me got sick, if it would hit me. Luckily, I didn’t find out. I think the guy did it purposely just to torture us.

By high school, my family was living in Coney Island. We had an apartment right across from the aquarium where I could hear the sea lions chatting with each other. I could also hear the screams from The Cyclone and other rides. According to the Astroland website, The Cyclone will remain open for the 2009 season, along with The Wonder Wheel.

Across from the boardwalk back in the 80’s, there were stalls where vendors sold inexpensive vintage items. This was the best secret in the city at the time because NOBODY was coming out to Coney Island from Manhattan. Mermaid Parade and Polar Bears? What’s that? Furniture, vinyl (well, there were no CDs back then and definitely no iPods), tschotkes and best of all…clothing. I bought 1940’s wool suits for $2 and 60’s mod dresses for a buck. If you ask me, those markets were the biggest lose.

Guess Coney Island will metamorphose into something more suitable for the new cleaner, safer, characterless New York. She’s not going anywhere. But her spirit may wane.

Coney Island History Project

Memories of the M Train

Memories of the M Train published on 1 Comment on Memories of the M Train

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Marty held a mock funeral for the M line. What a schmuck. But in a lovable way. Service on the M line has been cut back to next to nothing, but it’s not gone altogether.

When I was a youngin’, I was all about the M train and it was a totally different route back then. It ran along the current B/Q line in Brooklyn, the local to the D express. I lived in Midwood on a local stop and the M was all I had.

During my senior year of high school I worked at Le Croissant Shop near Park Row and I had to catch the M every day after school. It took about 45 minutes from Avenue M to Fulton Street and it. stopped. at. every. single. stop. That same year, we moved to Coney Island, land of a thousand train lines, but I was stuck taking the M to school.

Come to think of it, the M sucked. I switched for the express at Newkirk any chance I got. So what’s the point of this post? I don’t have a point. I’m just running out of things to write about.

Related:
City Room
Gothamist

L@@k Ma, I’m Famous!

L@@k Ma, I’m Famous! published on 4 Comments on L@@k Ma, I’m Famous!

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The NY Daily News did an article yesterday on Brooklyn Flea’s Winter Pop Up Dumbo market. The online post gave mention to a few vendors, but ’twas the Brooklyn section of the print edition that had the photos I’ll be sending off to Mom.

The Dumbo market will be less flea/more vintage shop. In other words, we won’t be showing as much “junk”.

I’m pretty happy about the free publicity, but I’m still trying to figure out if I’m going senile or if the reporter made a mistake. It states that I’ve been renovating my Bed Stuy brownstone since 2002. Come on, now…. We’re not THAT pathetic! We bought the place at the end of 2005. We’ve been living in construction zones since 1994, but it wasn’t all one house.

Anyway, cool article.

The market begins this weekend and will go until the end of March. As it stands now, Reclaimed Home will be participating on January 24/25 and a few weekends after that. Check out the Flea Blog for more info on all vendors.

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