Showing posts with label vintage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vintage. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

THE DUBLIN FLEA - THIS SUNDAY 25TH AUG - 11-5 - BE THERE!!


Dear Readers,

Hello! Now, I know its only Tuesday. But Tuesday is nearly over, so Wednesday is coming. And what does any self respecting person do mid week only make their weekend plans! We've blogged before (here and here) about The Flea - a wonderful mash up of craft, vintage and general bargains, to be found once a month in The Co-Op Newmarket. The Flea is on THIS SUNDAY 11am - 5pm and we recommend you hit it up because CraftyStudents will have a stall again! 

This time will be a little different, as my Mum (Glynis) and her great friend Maria (two craft and vintage mad ladies) will be running the stall. They've been really busy sourcing some UNBELIEVABLE vintage bargains for you guys and whipping up some 1970s inspired bunting. We've scooped a preview, check out the photos below! 

Stuff always goes fast at the Flea so get down early. Alternatively comment below or drop me an email at natalievoorheis@gmail.com if you want to reserve something early and we'll see what we can do for you. 









You might need to wrestle this 1970s FISHY detail Pimms set out of our hands. WE LOVE IT SO MUCH. How will we ever say goodbye. :-( sigh! 

We are loving The Flea's promo poster for this month (below).


Catch you all there!
xx

Natalie

Monday, June 3, 2013

1930s Travelling Trunk for Sale

Update: Now Sold.


Hi Friends!

Anyone in Dublin fancy a 1930s travelling trunk. It is absolutely gorgeous and could be used as a coffee table or at the end of a bed for clothes ect. Tin, brass and leather fittings. Genuine vintage. Travelled on the Corinthia Ship between Montreal, Liverpool and Dublin between 1956 and 1968, has the vintage travel labels still attached. good cream interior with usual ware. Am looking to shift it stat so can give you a good price, ONLY 60 QUID! HxWxD is 16x29.5x20 inches. Please send this link to anyone you think might be interested! Email me on natalievoorheis@gmail.com if interested and you can come have a look or I can send you more detailed photos.


Natalie





Sunday, February 10, 2013

Tea Cosy!

The ritual of tea-making is such an important part of everyday life. It is a balm for all problems, from exhaustion to bad news. Offering a cup of tea is a gesture of friendship, and the best way to welcome a visitor.



Increasingly, however, making tea only entails dunking a teabag into a mug of hot water. We believe it's high time the teapot was dusted off and returned it to its former iconic status- dressed up in proper ceremonial robes, in the form of a lovely handmade cosy.



This was my first foray into crocheting, and it turned out to be much easier than I had expected. I would definitely recommend this pattern to anyone looking for a simple beginners project. It is made entirely using double crochet stitch. The pink and yellow colours make it look a bit like a Battenburg cake- ideal for afternoon tea...




Here's a link to the pattern- you may need to alter it slightly to fit your own teapot!


I'll leave you with some words of wisdom from Billy Connolly:

“Never trust a man who, when left alone in a room with a tea cozy, doesn't try it on. ”




Clare x

Monday, November 21, 2011

The Art of Decoupage: A Crafty Students Easy Guide

Hi All!

I've been working on some hand crafts for the upcoming stall.

I'm nearly finished two chairs which my brother and I have 'made new' by decoupaging them. One is covered in old Beano comics and the other in American and Canadian 1930s period stamps.

They're looking brilliant and in the spirit of this crafty blog I've decided to share my technique with you all!

Below are some photos of my work in progress with the stamp design chair and my finished Beano chair. Enjoy!


  • Start with your item - whatever it may be and make sure it is clean and dry. You could apply this technique to literally anything - boxes, furniture, frames ect ect.
  • Choose the paper you want to design with. Think of things that are image heavy such as maps, magazine cuttings, stamps, sheet music or whatever else takes your fancy. Cut these up into little squares.
  • Get an old jam jar that has a lid and put three parts PVA glue and one part water into it and give it a good shake.
  • Paste an area of the surface you want to Decoupage with this mixture using a paint brush. Apply your squares of paper, leaving no gaps, and then paste another layer of your mixture over the paper. So your images are sandwiched between a layer of the PVA mixture ontop and below. Make sure you don't have too much mixture on your brush at anyone time as this will result in a soggy mess. You want to work thinly and evenly.
  • Allow this to dry and then get a clear gloss varnish and apply this evenly all over your item. This seals the paper. You may need to do a couple of coats of this to get a nice even finish.


The stamp chair is obviously a work in progress, we'll be posting photos on completion so keep an eye out!

Feel free to comment below if you need any help or advice with this technique - I'll get back to you as soon as I can. And if you end up with some proud results let us know and we'll post them.

Both chairs above will be available for purchase at The Dubline Flea this Sunday 27th and you can check out some other items and get info about the stall here.


Happy Crafting!

Nat
xx



Sunday, November 20, 2011

The Dublin Flea Sunday 27th November


Hi All!

Crafty Students are delighted to announce that we have a stall at the next Dublin Flea Market.

Come on down!! Your incentive is free cupcakes! As featured here.

We'll have lots of vintage and retro bits and pieces such as:

Vintage luggage of all shapes and sizes
Handbags for the ladies (Some great vintage brands such as Mappin and Webb!)
Man bags
Old Radio
Mantelpiece Clock (30s)
Typewriters
Tea sets (various designs, periods and colours)
Frosted lemonade set
Leather ties - 60s and 70s
Briefcases
Smoking cases
Crockery
Champagne bowls
Records
Cake plates
Tea cloths and other table linen
Cricket Jumpers

Ect, ect, ect!

There will also be some handmade www.craftystudents.blogspot.com goodies like decoupage chairs, Christmas cards, bunting, and lots more!

We hope you can make it!

We'll be posting this week with some previews of the stock and crafty projects we've been working on.

Love,

Nat
xxx





Wednesday, November 3, 2010

The University Times Features Crafty Students

Crafty Students has been featured in UT Culture, the culture supplement of The University Times, winner of last years Student Media (Smedia) newspaper of the year award. Many thanks to The University Times and to Beth O'Rafferty who wrote the article.








Thursday, October 21, 2010

More Flea Market Photos and Graphics

Below are a selection of extra photos not included in our main Flea Market post and some of the promotional graphics I did as business cards and price tags. :-)

Natalie



Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Getting Rich Fast, Crafty Students Style!



Hello all!

Here at Crafty Students we have been extremely busy recently with our latest project, holding a stall at the Dublin Flea Market (http://www.dublinflea.ie/). The following is an article I wrote for The University Observer about the experienceYou can read the original at http://www.universityobserver.ie

/2010/10/19/o-two-attempts-getting-rich-fast/Thanks to Bridget, Paul and Killian in the Observer office for all their encouragement and for giving me the column space in their culture supplement, otwo which is always a great read every fortnight, check it out here! http://issuu.com/universityobserver/docs/otwooct19. Many thanks are also due to Anita Murphy of http://anitamurphyphotography.blogspot.com/ who came along on the day of the Flea and took some fantastic shots and kindly mastered them to vintage perfection. We are indepted to Anita. 

Natalie


Getting Rich Fast!

Money. Glorious cash, light of my life! Provider of overpriced coffee, unending credit, lavish nights out, new phone, new haircut, new laptop, new car, seasonal wardrobe, sun holidays, concert tickets and whatever else my heart desires. Oh wait, that’s right, I’m a student.

Right so, scrap all of that and replace with cracked screen Nokia, Tesco value rum and an age-old bicycle with flat tyre, no breaks and mind of its own. I was brought up on the famous seanfhocail: “Is fearr an tsláinte ná na táinte,” meaning health is better than wealth. I had never thought to question my resolute adherence to this phrase until the year I began UCD when my belief in its practicalities began to wane.

Due to the pressure of mountainous student bills, I’ve tried my hand at numerous jobs over the years. I’ve worked as a waitress, telephone operator, sales assistant, babysitter, house-sitter, dog-walker, food promotions girl, legal secretary, dance teacher, choreographer, corporate dancer, unqualified hairdresser for my nearest and dearest and more.

All and all it’s been completely rubbish and at €8.65 an hour, just not worth it. I’ve had my fill tidying tables and always under the watchful eye of some demanding manager or other. There is, however, no getting away from the pressing matter of money, cash is king and I’m a stuck in the role of courtier.


Whilst having a grumble about the above in The University Observer office recently, the o-two editor saw an opportunity to create some havoc and challenged me to an o-two Attempts. Get rich fast, or die trying.

Teaming up with my best friend BrĂ­d Doherty, we took our first steps down the road of becoming self-made women. Settling on a business model took little effort as it grew from the roots of a blog, which we jointly run.

We both sew and knit and the blog follows our attempts in the world of the handmade. We decided to translate this into a stall at the Dublin Flea Market, which hosts a huge event on the last Sunday of every month in Newmarket Square, where over sixty stall holders sell their retro wares. Our stall, we decided, would compose of handmade items and a selection of retro and vintage goods, all of a kitsch style and under the brand: Crafty Students.


Trekking around Dublin, we eventually sourced such items as a as a baby blue and cream record player from the ’60s, a number of beautiful vintage typewriters in a variety of styles and colours all in full working order and with their original carry cases. Not to mention a variety of oh-so-kitsch tea sets from the ’50s, ’60s and ’70s, a vintage, original Bush radios, a Soviet globe, some authentic cricket jumpers (which could not have been more preptastic!) and boxes of records and slates.

Getting our sewing machines, knitting needles and crafty brains out, we made floral hairslides and hairbands, preppy rosettes for blazers and bags, numerous lengths of decorative bunting in different styles and colours from sailor stripes to granny floral, hats and fascinators, knitted woolly scarves each decorated differently, make-up bags and pencil cases.

Spurred on, we even used decoupage to cover the entirety of a chair in vintage Beano comic strips and made housewife style aprons out of a pair of vintage curtains we had picked up.



The run up to the Flea was a time of extreme nerves for us both. With so much time, effort and money invested, the only option was for the day to be a success, but with no previous experience, we had no idea what the outcome would be. We began to promote wildly, on Facebook, our blog and through business cards but with a niggling fear that all those virtual “I’m attending”, promises on Facebook wouldn’t translate to reality.


On the day, our stock spilled over the edges of the table and engulfed the floor around us. To our relief, we were swamped with custom as hagglers argued over who had seen which tea set first and literally grabbed various typewriters, claiming them as their own.

Neither of us ate all day, not that we didn’t try to tuck into two massive falafel kebabs, but so constant was the flow of people that we were unable to take more than one or two bites. Reflecting that my favourite seanfhocail seemed to be taking ironic delight in my situation by furnishing the two of us with terrible flus, we fought on.

At one point, a frenzied bargain hunter seemed to be fussing over our stock more than anyone and I asked her if I could help. She subsequently revealed that she was a scout looking to source quality vintage stall holders for a new flea market she was setting up and pressed us to consider joining her.

The Monday after the flea, I marched into the Arts CafĂ©, now able to afford their over-priced coffee and saw a guy walking in the opposite direction proudly sporting one of our preppy cricket jumpers. Crafty Students had arrived. Roll on the good times!