Showing posts with label Vera. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vera. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

New Vintage (and more vintage Vera)!

A few new vintage listings before the weekend!

Repurposed vintage frame with new linen covered tack board!



Cream ironstone ball jug


Milk glass lace edge platter


Tiny brass frog with hidden compartment


Vintage floral printed lidded tin


Vintage brass piggy bank


And, last but not least, a vintage Vera square tablecloth! I love the bright blooming yellow flowers... It's the perfect vintage linen for a side table of cafe dining table.



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A Brief History of Vera

If you have been reading my blog, it's obvious that I have a slight interest in Vera textiles. So, what's the deal with Vera?

Here it is:

Vera Neumann started out as an artist, utilizing watercolor, oil paint, and collage to create bright blooming florals and strong geometric prints. She married in the 1930s and began her textile business in the 1940s. The New York City apartment that Vera shared with her encouraging husband and business partner, George Neumann, quickly became an art studio where her designs were silk screened onto textiles to create placemats, napkins, tablecloths, fabric and even wallpaper. One of their first orders in 1943 came from F. Schumacher & Co! The budding enterprise later presented their designs to the 5th Avenue department store B. Altman, who in turn placed a huge order and the rest is history.


The Vera brand quickly took off, and soon, American women everywhere wanted a piece of it. A household name of the 20th century, Vera's textiles captivated people (and still do!) with her strong use of color and graphic prints.


There's no doubt that she was an innovator. Tablecloths and napkins featured bright oranges and warm reds, saturated greens and blues, and each one was signed with her stylized signature and often accompanied with the infamous ladybug. Vera said that she chose the ladybug as her trademark to "bring good luck, long life, and happiness to everyone."



The linens our grandmothers used on a regular basis are now collectors items. The designs that Vera created are timeless, and to me, will always be desired. I just don't see how they could ever feel old or dated. Do you? They seem as contemporary as any other print available for purchase today.



In 1972, the Smithsonian featured Vera's influence on the American design industry in an exhibition called, "Vera: The Renaissance Woman". Then, in 1975, the Fashion Institute of Technology honored her significant impact on American design by displaying 67 of her original paintings (some dating back to 1945).

Vera Neumann died in 1993, and with a series of buyouts and changes in management, an archive of her contemporary work was left in a storage facility in Georgia. In 2005, the work was purchased to launch a new line of Vera collectibles. In fact, today you can buy the "we heart Vera" collection at Anthropologie. Not exactly the real thing, but pretty darn close.




Some fun facts about Vera linens:

*Harry and First Lady Bess Truman lived with Vera wallpaper in their home at the White House!

*The Vera company purchased left over parachute silk after World War II, which led to her widespread success with ladies silk scarves!

*Marilyn Monroe loved Vera prints, as seen in her infamous nude photo session where she only wore sheer Vera scarves (didn't Lindsay Lohan try to duplicate this?)



I have a set of Vera coasters in the shop, and one large tablecloth. Check them out HERE and HERE.
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Are you a Vera fan too???

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Tuesday, July 21, 2009

New Vera!

I found some Vera coasters! How chic are these? And, a set of 7!




Wouldn't these look great on this table?


image from Domino (RIP)

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