about the stores

JUNK has two Williamsburg Brooklyn locations - 436 Union Ave & 567 Driggs Ave - the Driggs store is open 9-9, 7 days a week. The Union Ave store is open every day 11am to 8 pm. To reach The Driggs Ave store take the L to bedford & exit on the driggs ave side. For the the Union Ave take the L to Metropolitan AveCheck out our new website: Junk11211.

SOMETHING TO SELL? Call Brooklyn Bridge Estate Buyers 212-260-1851 or contact them online www.brooklynbridgebuyers.com

A standard box of 4 color tags - available from any supply house

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Antique? Vintage ? or Just Plain Junk

Antique? Vintage ? or Just Plain Junk

     The generally accepted American definition of  an antique is “ an item over 100 years old.”  That’s great as long as you use the word as a noun. As an adjective it has a much broader meaning.  According  Merriam -Webster antique  means

1) existing since or belonging to earlier times
2) being in the style or fashion  of former times
3) in or representative of the work of an earlier period


      Therefore you can buy  paint called “antique white” or a brand new shirt  labeled  “Antique Lace Trimmed Blouse”.  Antique doesn’t always mean old and sadly, buying something in an  Antique Store is no guarantee of age.  The next time you visit your favorite shop, look at their sign - odds are it says something like “ Antiques and Gifts”.  Very high end shops may guarantee the age & origin of  their wares, but that is the exception not the rule.

    This is not to imply that antique dealers are crooks - but rather that these shops, like business everywhere evolved to meet market demands. 
     There was a time when antique & second hand shops were two very different animals.  The craze for vintage blurred those lines.
      In the late ’60s, when I first became interested in old things, “new antiques” (i.e. late Victoriana ) were the rage.  Today of course all that stuff really is over 100 years old.
     Then there was the craze for the  bright ,comfy, cheerful colors & lines of the 1930’s & 40’s and  the popularity of the sleek sophisticated style  of the deco 20’s.  Today we are at the tail end of a passion for modern (the streamline space-age inspired designs of the 50’ & 60’s. )  & a resurgence of  interest in early primitives , mixed with previously overlooked,  heavy farm/industrial machine parts, reworked to serve as furniture & art.

      ”Vintage” became a buzz word ; antique stores faded and Antique/Vintage Shops sprung up to meet consumer demands; but everyone seemed to have a different opinion about  how old something had to be, before it could be called vintage.

According to the dictionary vintage, n. means

1) - season's yield of grapes or wine from a vineyard (2) wine; especially : a usually superior wine all or most of which comes from a single year

It doesn’t mean old - wine made this year has a 2010 vintage

2) period of origin or manufacture

Again it doesn’t imply any specified age - and so you have “1980’s vintage clothes “ - that is  clothes made in the 1980’s - a perfectly  legitimate use of the word vintage.

As an adjective it means

1) dating from the past : old

  Just about anything can be called vintage

    Add to this,  the ready availability of inexpensive imported reproductions. Dealers found that, if the price was right,  many people were happy to buy  new “gift” items with an old look. These items could be ordered from a wholesale catalog & were therefore easy to stock & mixed well with the more expensive true (and hard to find) antiques they already carried.

    The age of the classic small town /country antique store, with it’s crotchety old keeper, who’s love of old things was wedded to his knowledge of local history & lore ended.  The Multi-dealer mish mash mall, with it’s college student clerk replaced it.

     On the up side , all sorts of really cool old -  but not so old - things were preserved and entered the resale market.
     On the downside the general household goods second-hand stores disappeared .  Those fantastic furniture graveyards, with their mountains of old wood chairs &  dime store china morphed into neat, orderly vintage emporiums.

     I don’t know when all those second hand stores disappeared - I just know they used to be everywhere & now they’re almost all gone.  So I opened JUNK

      JUNK as a second hand store. We sell all sorts of  pre-owned stuff - Victorian trunks, 70’s tulip chairs, & good readable non-collectable books. We sell VHS tapes of blockbuster movies & cheap dead-stock cat toys. Most of the items we sell are used and  everything we sell has entered the market through resale channels. Nothing is ordered new from catalogs.   

    Our merchandise has to meet only one criteria. I have to like it - and I have rather wide ranging & often bizarre tastes. 
    
   Postscript -
      After writing a first draft of this blog, I jumped in the shower & raced up to the Walter Reade Theater to see Kris Kristofferson & a very young Gene Hackman in Cisco Pike. I was totally blown away. Watching the movie all  I could think was - if I didn’t know what  year this film was made I’d swear every prop in the flick came from my shop - but then it dawned on me - Every prop in this film has, somehow over time, wound up in my shop.
     I like to think my taste is the product of some unique inner vision, but clearly it is nothing more than a reflection of the time & place I came of age. If anyone out there wants to know what the 70’s really looked like - not the sanitized Wisconsin cheese spread version of the era - but the real 70’s -  I recommend you see this film.  It was a time when pot was cheap, love was free & yoga was a prelude to astral projection, not a means to flat abs.

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

What is this place

     What is this place? I hear that question at least once a day & it always surprises me  Junk is a second hand store & we sell used stuff.
      What exactly is a second hand store & is it the same as a  thrift store, flea market, or consignment shop? 
       All of these are resale shops (they sell items that have been sold before), but they are not all  the same thing.
       Thrift stores are  run by non-profit organizations.  For example an animal shelter may run a thrift store to help offset the cost of dog food.  The items are donated & salespeople are often volunteers.   Churches & libraries also  frequently have thrift stores to help defray their operating costs. Goodwill & The Salvation Army are examples of  thrift  stores done on a mega scale. 
        Are thrift stores charities?  Not exactly - thrift stores are run by charities - to provide money for their good works (i.e. feeding homeless people or homeless dogs) . Their primary goal is not to supply you with cheap stuff , but to raise funds for  specific causes.  In  ultra simplified terms - The Salvation Army is a charity, that runs stores,  to fund missions (think Guys & Dolls) .
        Second hand, vintage & antique stores are businesses.  They have the same costs & the same goals as any other business.  Merchandise is not donated & the stock usually reflects the personal tastes of the shop owner.
      Flea markets are venues.  Booths (spaces, tables) are rented out to individual dealers. The flea market keeps the rent & the individual dealers keep the proceeds from their sales. Flea Markets may or may not be run by non-profits (a church or a movie theater may decide to rent out unused  parking lot spaces),  but in either case only the booth rent goes to the parent organization.
        Consignment shops are also businesses. In a consignment shops the store owner sells items for other people and keeps a commission.
         These are extremely simplified & non-legal definitions. Some second hand stores accept (or even solicit) donations. Some accept consignments. Some rent out showcases in their shops. Lots of second hand stores call themselves thrifts just as lots of gas stations call the brown muck they serve “gourmet coffee”. That’s just the way it is. 
         But here, in this blog, we will be using these definitions.