Wednesday, April 29, 2026

My Grandparents' Living Room


Just another close-up of one of our neighborhood rose-ringed parakeets. They may be invasive, and they're certainly loud, but they're also really beautiful, aren't they? And they do love those suet balls, even though they drop a lot of the suet on the ground. The pigeons and starlings will gather beneath the parakeets whenever they're on the feeder, waiting for food to fall.

I was pretty much a homebody yesterday. I finished my sunflower book and spent most of the day looking at slides. I didn't get through the whole pile -- I still have quite a few to go. My method is to give every slide a glance through my hand-held viewer, and whatever seems utterly worthless -- too blurry, too dark, too damaged, too boring -- goes into a pile. I'll put those in a bag and throw them in the closet, possibly on the way to being tossed permanently. (I haven't decided yet.)

One photographer in this batch took particularly bad slides. I think there must have been something wrong with his camera -- or perhaps his vision. They are laughably out of focus.

Anyway, the rest I'm going to sort into slides of similar theme or by photographer, if I can tell who that is. Then I'll go through them all again and decide what's worth scanning.

I say scanning, but what I'm actually going to try is photographing the slides. I ordered a camera extension that allows me to mount each slide on my Canon camera, and with an even source of white light, I can take a high-resolution picture of it. We'll see how well that works. The camera piece wasn't very expensive so I thought it might be a better option than buying a new scanner.


This photo (above) has nothing to do with the slides. Not too long ago, blogger Ed posted some pictures of interiors where his ancestors lived. It got me thinking, "Don't I have a picture of my grandparents' apartment somewhere?" I dug through my digital archives and found the photo I remembered -- this one, which shows the apartment where my mother's parents lived in Massachusetts shortly after their marriage in 1929.

It's not a great photo but in my experience, people didn't often take pictures of the interiors of their own homes during this era. There aren't many pictures like this, in other words!

I own two items clearly visible in the photo.


I think this beige vase was an engagement or wedding present to my grandparents. You can see it on the drop-leaf table to the left of the photo, holding what looks like a bouquet of lilacs. Now it's on the windowsill in our bedroom. It has a cryptic mark -- B17 or possibly 817 on the bottom -- but no manufacturer name, and I have tried for years to figure out who made it and whether it has any value. Google Image Search returns similar-looking vases, but none quite exactly the same. (Addendum: I found this one on eBay, a different color but the same shape and marking, said to be Zanesville pottery from Ohio. Bingo!)

My grandmother gave me this vase when I was in high school. You can also see it in the pictures of my childhood bedroom I posted several years ago. (No cracks about the flowery drapes, which my parents bought!)


I also own these bookends, which are on the same table as the vase in the photo above. My grandmother had these in her living room all her adult life, and I took them after she died in 1989. The diary behind the elephant is this one.

I'm familiar with the other furniture in the photo, which went to various relatives after my grandmother died. That lamp was in the upstairs bedroom of her house for years -- the room where my brother and I always stayed on our visits. No idea where it is now, if it even still exists.

Anyway, I'll be sorting more slides today and hopefully I'll get out for a walk!

53 comments:

  1. How cool to have items from the photo. I love the elephants. What are they made of? Did you spend a lot of time with your grandparents?

    Love,
    Janie

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    1. The elephants are bronze, I think. Or brass? They're pretty heavy.

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  2. I love the fading photograph of the old room. It is as if history is fading before our eyes, which of course it is.

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    1. I suspect it looked like it was fading even when it was a brand-new photo!

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  3. Those flowery drapes! Or what the rest of the English speaking world would call curtains! If only you could source that pattern once more and have identical curtains made for your bijou West Hampstead love nest! It would be a special way of honouring your late parents.
    P.S. I love the items from your grandparents' apartment and the fact that you still treasure them.

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    1. Funny thing is, I actually liked those drapes when I was growing up. But they look so dated now!

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  4. That diary is a fascinating thing. I am sure you tried to look her up, but I would be so curious about the rest of her life.

    1929 is 100 years ago now. It would be interesting to hear more stories about your grandpzrents.

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    1. I've tried many times to find her but the name she used in the diary must be a nickname. She's not on Google anywhere.

      I've written about my grandparents on this blog periodically. Try these posts:
      https://shadowsteve.blogspot.com/2008/07/ancestors.html
      https://shadowsteve.blogspot.com/2020/08/a-crumbly-old-newspaper.html
      https://shadowsteve.blogspot.com/2012/05/voices-from-past.html

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  5. I do envy you having your old family photographs to look back on. Sadly, my mother took all of ours with her when she left us back in the 1970s so I only have memories of them.

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    1. That's a shame! I have always loved old pictures and undoubtedly they've helped me feel connected to my ancestors.

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  6. The parakeet photo is perfection. So nice of him to pose for you. The house photo is magical. How wonderful that you have those treasures.

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    1. I think the parakeet was mostly annoyed that I was disturbing its lunch!

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  7. The parakeet is beautiful. I'm still waiting for them to reach as far as me in Berkshire!!
    I love the elephant bookend - it's so tactile. Is it as heavy as it looks?

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    1. I'm surprised you don't have them there already! Yes, the bookend is quite heavy.

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  8. And I’m curious where in Massachusetts your grandparents lived.

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    1. They lived in Auburndale and worked in Cambridge and Boston.

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  9. I think it is amazing that you have that same vase and could recognize it from the photo. It is a family heirloom! Your post got me to thinking about my own grandparent's house. I have no photos of that house either, just memories. It is amazing how photography has changed over the years. When I taught the Civil War, I spent some time teaching them about Civil War photography and the science behind it. Now we just snap photos with a portable phone!

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    1. The expense of acquiring film and then getting it developed -- or having to develop it yourself -- kept people from taking pictures of a lot of the everyday things we snap today. No one wanted to "waste" film on the inside of their apartment, for example!

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  10. Zanesville was pretty trendy at the time they got that pot, cutting edge. I like the shape, the color was maybe intended as chic. How great that you have the pieces and pictures, too.

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    1. It IS a nice shape. The color is meh, but you can't have everything. I also have a couple of nice Roseville vases that belonged to my grandmother, and they are much more interesting.

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  11. I have my grandfather's bookends. They are so boring that I can't even tell you what's on them despite the fact that I've been looking at them my entire life.
    I love that pot/vase with all of my heart. I'm so glad it's still around and that you own it. I look at that picture of your grandparents' apartment and I think of how proud they must have been to have those things to start their marriage with. I don't know. It just touches my heart.

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    1. I suspect they took the picture to send it to my great-grandmother in Florida, so she could see how her daughter was living up in the frozen north!

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    2. I just went and looked at Granddaddy's bookends. They aren't really that boring! They're pewter-looking geese. I think they're geese. Why have I never noted this?

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  12. Seed flingers & ground eaters! Endlessly entertaining - to me anyway. Ha!

    I took some photos on a trip to the Zambezi river one time (film camera - back in the stone ages), & the film hadn't been seated properly. Now THOSE were a disappointment!

    My cousin has a lot of the things from my grandparents' house & I love to see them when I visit her. We didn't really have room to do them justice.

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    1. I can top that Zambezi story. I stayed with a Berber family for a week in rural Morocco as part of my Peace Corps training, and at the end of my stay I talked the man into allowing me to photograph his family. They got dressed up and I took group portraits as well as pictures of them cooking and doing other household tasks. I promised I'd send my host copies of the pictures, but then when I got back to the training center in the city and went to unload the camera, IT WAS EMPTY! I'd never put film in it! I still don't quite understand how that happened.

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  13. That is so cool in my mind to not only have a picture of the interior but to have objects that are shown in the picture!

    When you get your slide scanning setup going and prove it out, I wouldn't mind a detailed post on it. I don't have any slides anymore that I haven't already scanned but someday if I do, I might go that route versus buying another flatbed slide scanner like the one I had for many years.

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    1. I will let you know how it goes! I'm not sure what to expect but if it works well it will be a huge money-saver for me.

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    1. The Midwest used to be a center for making pottery, apparently, along with California!

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  15. The vase is lovely, even empty. And I love the bookend.

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    1. I actually like it better empty. I don't think I've ever used it for flowers.

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  16. The vase is beautiful. I love the shape. I had those same drapes in my bedroom when we first into our house in Red Deer. Small world.

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    1. That's funny!!! What are the odds? I imagine they came from Sears or J.C. Penney.

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  17. I can tell that you loved your grandparents and they loved you! Sweet mementos. Who will get them after you?

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    1. I imagine they'll go to my nieces, if they're interested!

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  18. Ohio had a booming pottery business from the 1860s until the 1960s. Now most of the companies are closed. You have a treasure with your Zanesville Pottery piece.

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    1. The same is true with the potteries here in the UK. Like many industries, all the commercial pottery manufacturing has gone to China!

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  19. My parents went on vacations and my dad took slides, setting up the projector and screen for us kids. that pretty much all stopped when I was about 14 when the bomb hit my parents' relationship. Anyway after they had both died my sister had possession of all those slides. Neither my brother nor I wanted them, had any interest in even looking at them so when my sister died they ended up on the burn pile. I have my own box of bad slides of our pate de verre work. Take 10 to get one good one. They'll end up on the burn pile.

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    1. I remember you telling that story before. It makes me cringe! But of course they were your slides to do with as you saw fit.

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  20. It's really lovely that you have a couple of the items in the old photo, family continuity is important. People didn't used to photograph their interiors did they. I wonder what future generations will think about our obsession with the 'before and after' photos of renovations, and photos of our meals? Yes, I am guilty of both. 😄

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    1. I know, it's so funny now, the mundane things we all photograph! Being freed from the expense of film has created a landslide of images.

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  21. Pity that the slides are too lousy to sell back or trade for more with your dealer! (Though maybe that's OK -- he wasn't terribly fussy in the first place!) I'll be curious to hear about the slide photography. Loved seeing the living room photo. My parents had a table just like it. Or at least, looks like it from here. I had it in my earlier apartments after we sold the house. That vase is beautiful. I love that you have these very special things.

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    1. I thought about offering to give them back to him, but I'm not sure he'd want them if they've been picked over! I should ask.

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  22. That drop-leaf table looks very much like one my grandmother had. She always told everyone it was a "Duncan Phyfe", something she was rather proud of owning.

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    1. I've heard of Duncan Phyfe but I don't really know what it is. A company, like Ethan Allen, maybe?

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  23. Having a photo of the interior of your grandparents' home and also owning a few prized possessions of theirs make wonderful memories. I own family possessions/heirlooms simply because nobody else wanted them. I don't have interior or exterior home photos which would be nice. Having vivid memories of family homes is nice but a photo would be a treasure.

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    1. We all have so much stuff nowadays, we just can't afford to keep everything. I get that.

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  24. Just having adopted some of my parents' furniture and belongings makes me relate closely to your special pieces. It's interesting to see them in old photos and then in their new home.

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    1. It's hard to believe it's even the same piece, but it is!

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  25. Assuming the vase is being advertised somewhere near its value, that's quite a price.

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    1. Yeah, I wouldn't put too much faith in that price. Antiques are only worth what someone will be willing to pay, as the saying goes. It may well sell for less than that. (If it sells at all!)

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  26. I'm fortunate to have a fair amount of furniture and items from my grandparents and other relatives. I'm not sure what will happen to it, though, since I'm not sure any of our kids will want any of it.

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    1. I'd just make sure they know what the pieces are and where they came from. That's all you can do, ultimately. Some people care about heirlooms and some do not!

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