This is the easy way to tell what is still available. Just click on the link below. Otherwise, look at the bottom of the post. If the item is sold it will read GONE! SOLD!
ADDRESS: The Estate Store of the Community Warehouse 3969 NE MLK Jr. Blvd. Portland, Oregon 97212
The Estate Store
Hours: Open 10am to 4pm Thursday through Monday. Closed Tuesday & Wednesday Closed Monday May 28th For Memorial Day
THE Garage Sale
Hours: Open 10am to 4pm Thursday through Monday. Closed Tuesday & Wednesday Closed Monday May 28th For Memorial Day
Telephone: 503-445-1449
Email: Ed at communitywarehouse dot org
West Side Donation Center:Open Wednesday-Saturday, from 10:00 am – 4:00 p.m. at 8380 SW Nyberg Rd. Tualatin, Oregon 97062. TUALATIN STORE NOW OPEN 10:00 am – 4:00 p.m. Friday, Saturday & Sunday!
Not in Portland but want an item? We can ship most things to most places most of the time. Shipping costs for furniture are often prohibitvely expensive! If you still think you want it, contact Ed to see if we can ship what you want where you want and how much it will cost you.
In the Portland Metro area and wondering if an item is still available in the store? Contact Ed.
These vintage salt and pepper shakers were made in Japan and they are marked with a letter ‘F’ on the base. They stand about 5 1/2 inches tall and the screw top appear to be made from real lightbulb bases (and are usually reputed to be on other, similar pieces). Some folks say that they can also be used for liquids, like vinegar or oil.
I’d be tempted to install them in an overhead light fixture and when you guests ask for the salt (or pepper) stand on a chair, reach up to the ceiling fixture, unscrew them and then sit down and hand the set over.
Highly recommended for the first dinner with your in-laws as guests. You’ll definitely make an impression and even if the relationship doesn’t work out you can guarantee that you’ll be the subject of dinner conversation for years to come.
Manning Bowman model 401 table-top sandwich cooker, design patent number 97660, issued 1935.
After the end of the second world war this model would be modified a little bit and reissued as model 412 (As seen in this ad: It grills – cooks – fries – even makes waffles!).
Ours appears to be a prewar model and only has the flat sandwich making plates. These are removable so I presume that there were probably waffle cooking plates that got lost somewhere along the way. Since this predates the widespread implementation of planned obsolescence in manufacturing it’s not surprising that it still works.
To be honest every time I see a tanker desk I think how good a mooring point they’d make, but this one isn’t too heavy. In fact it is light enough that one scrawny used stuff slinger can move it (with a hand truck) across level ground without additional help.
Moving up or down stairs could be another matter.
The desk measures 50 inches wide 24 inches deep and 29 inches tall. Although there is one small crinkle in the front right corner of the left side drawer stack it is in good shape overall. The drawers and slide out writing shelf all work well too.
Although the paint is in fine shape as is it’s rather drab by modern standards. Maybe post-atomic apocalypse bunker is your decorating scheme (that’s OK) but if not this would be a great candidate for repainting .
Think candle apple red, mandarin orange or blue lagoon. Yowza!
Mr. Chair is sitting at the Community Warehouse Estate Store West waiting for you. He is all alone, wondering if he is just too ’50s for this modern world. Mr. Chair was designed by George Mulhauser and made by the Plycraft Co. of Lawrence, Massachusetts. Although Plycraft was well known for attempting to “borrow” Eames’ stylings, Mr. Chair was a design of their own.
Mr. Chair is almost 3 feet tall, likes to recline, swivel and provide much needed relaxation time. He is in good shape for his age and reclines with only slight groans. Are you the one to bring Mr. Chair home?
Come visit Mr. Chair and more at Community Warehouse’s new west side Estate Store on Friday through Sunday 10-4.
Like mixing metaphors, mixing design elements can be unsuccessful, or in particularly bad cases result in explosive releases of “What The . . .?”
For example . . . at first glance this resembles a cornicello or lucky horn. But then there is the small matter of the blindfolded woman at the top which is where things seem to go somewhat awry.
I suspect (hope) that the designer/maker intended for it to symbolize blind luck.
This brass cornicello/blindfolded maiden is 7 3/4 inches long and weighs over one pound. Given the size and mass it is a bit big to be worn as jewelry.
This cast iron and brass candle holder holds eight thin taper candles and was designed around 1965 by Jens Quistgaard for Dansk. It stands about 6 3/4 inches tall and is roughly 4 1/2 inches square. It is in very good condition and in marked Dansk Designs Denmark.
“Please pass the crackers and I hope they aren’t stale. Now as I was saying, technology will be the salvation, or downfall of mankind.” Bertrand Russell
Tired of stale soggy crackers? Let us offer a solution to the problem. This vintage Krispy Kan features the revolutionary Blue Magic Dri-Nob set in the lid. The secret formula granules in the knob absorb and sequester moisture from inside the can, thereby extending the crunchy life of your crackers (and presumably other baked goods).
You can easily tell when it’s starting to lose its potency as the granules turn color. When they get pink (like you see in the picture) all you have to do is to remove the knob from the lid bake it in the oven (per the handy instruction on the lid). When it has returned to a dry state it will turn a light blue and it can be returned to service.
What can keep you crackers fresh in the northwest rainy season? Krispy Kan can!
It is 6 3/4 inches in diameter and stands 8 1/2 inches tall. It was awarded patent number 2548168 in 1951 and was described (almost lyrically) as a “food receptacle with desiccant.”
This is a commemorative medallion issued by a pharmaceutical company (Abbot Laboratories) which celebrates Sigmund Freud as one of the “Pathfinders in Psychiatry” series.
It is 3 inches in diameter and suitable for use as a paperweight or as a metaphor for the subconscious hangups of ones therapist.
With the passing of the rainy season and the return of sunlight we’re once again faced with a great problem: how to block the light so it doesn’t stress our unaccustomed eyes.
You could wear you sunglasses indoors or you can hang light filtering devices in your windows to break up its terrible natural brightness. Cardboard and tin foil are the traditional ‘go to’ methods of doing this, but why not step up your game a bit and use something just a tad more refined?
For example stained glass panels. They are mostly clear or textured glass so they’ll still let a lot of light through, but they have great decorative patterns too.
We have two pairs of these. The larger set is comprised of panels 26 by 14 1/2 inches and they depict a stylized dragon-fly. They are in OK shape although there are some cracks and one very small fragment of missing glass. SOLD!
The smaller set is 20 by 14 inches and shows a rose and a blue bird. They are in good shape although each panel has one cracked piece of clear flat glass. SOLD!
Summer is coming and with it the need for cold drinks and ice cubes to do the job. Just pull the lever and you’ll hear one of the quintessential sounds of modern summertime, the cracking of ice in an ice-cube tray.
We have four regular trays and one double tray, they are in great condition and are just over 11 inches long. They’re made from aluminum so we can be assured that they are BPA free too.
The single trays are $5 each and the double is $10.
The two great innovations of western culture, perhaps the only two notable ones, together at last, pastry and forks!
Individually useful, together they are a unparalleled marvel.
What’s not to like?
Better even than snail forks, or fish forks, or shellfish forks these 5 inch long forks are in the Loxley pattern by M. S. Ltd of Sheffield, England and are guaranteed to be vegan safe.
Of course, excessive indulgence in pastries could be troublesome to one’s health, but what’s the point in living without indulging now and again? And, if you’re going to indulge, why not make it a ceremonial act?
Sacred implements and ritual only known the the initiated are key elements ceremony. These forks could easily be incorporated into a pastry invocation, the secret rituals are secret of course . . .
Now I take the bus, walk or bike because I can’t afford the insurance, but Life’s Been Good.
Maserati club car badge and belt buckle. The buckle is 2 1/2 inches high and the car badge is about 4 3/4 inches tall, or perfect for attaching to your bicycle rack. If there’s any question about whose bike it is when you’re attempting to force the lock with a set of bolt cutters because you lost your keys (again) at dollar Pabst and (tofu) wing night, you can just flash your belt buckle like a diplomatic passport in a smoke and whiskey-vapor filled second world drinking establishment.
It may not save your skin, but you might have enough time to run for a bus.
The major bummer of this lamp is that there is not a light bulb in the lower section. On the other hand there are a ton of glass prism that will nicely refract natural light!
The lamp works well and stands 40 1/2 inches tall over all. The lower part (from the table to the top of the prisms) is about 22 inches tall.
This is a great old table which, if just a little care was given, could last another hundred years. It appears to be pine or a similar coniferous wood, has two drawers and two suspended flour bins. Unfortunately the original slide out cutting boards are gone, but someone made replacements from bamboo that are pretty nice. If you’d like a different look another set of cutting boards would be relatively easy to fabricate and it’d be a great chance to put your stamp on the table for future generations to admire.
It is in good condition with mostly age appropriate wear and some recent marker marks on the table surface due to exposure to children (see photo’s below).
The table measures 48 inches by 26 1/2 inches and stands 30 inches tall. The drawers work well, as do the bins.
With a lovely tinkle, tinkle upon the keys Willard would play every day, beginning at half past six for the bar patrons in a basement just off Burnside. By a quarter past two in the morning he’d be the last canine sitting at the bar and the hipsters would come in and be astounded that the dog could get a last beer but they couldn’t.
The barkeeps would try to explain that he was the piano player but everyone would just look incredulous, insulted and more petulant than usual and storm out, later to vilify the establishment in anonymous on-line reviews.
The life of a working piano dog is harder than you’d think. That reach for the F above middle C is a killer if your fingers are accustomed, through genetics and use, to be digitigrade feet. The solution is to play fast and loud, like punk rock piano and hope no one notices your lack of range.
5 inches long, 4 1/4 inches wide and mercifully silent.
There, I can see the thing’s body. It’s large, large as a bear and it glistens like wet leather. But that face, it . . . Ladies and gentlemen, it’s indescribable. I can hardly force myself to keep looking at it. The eyes are black and gleam like a serpent. The mouth is V-shaped with saliva dripping from its rimless lips that seem to quiver and pulsate. The monster or whatever it is can hardly move. It seems weighed down by . . . possibly gravity or something. The thing’s raising up. The crowd falls back now. They’ve seen plenty. This is the most extraordinary experience.
Well, we ought to see some action soon. One of the companies is deploying on the left flank. A quick thrust and it will all be over. Now wait a minute! I see something on top of the cylinder. No, it’s nothing but a shadow. Now the troops are on the edge of the Wilmuth farm. Seven thousand armed men closing in on an old metal tube. Wait, that wasn’t a shadow! It’s something moving . . . solid metal . . . kind of shieldlike affair rising up out of the cylinder . . . It’s going higher and higher. Why, it’s standing on legs . . . actually rearing up on a sort of metal framework. Now it’s reaching above the trees and the searchlights are on it. Hold on!
The battle which took place tonight at Grovers Mill has ended in one of the most startling defeats ever suffered by any army in modern times; seven thousand men armed with rifles and machine guns pitted against a single fighting machine of the invaders from Mars. One hundred and twenty known survivors. The rest strewn over the battle area from Grovers Mill to Plainsboro, crushed and trampled to death under the metal feet of the monster, or burned to cinders by its heat ray. The monster is now in control of the middle section of New Jersey and has effectively cut the state through its center. Communication lines are down from Pennsylvania to the Atlantic Ocean. Railroad tracks are torn and service from New York to Philadelphia discontinued except routing some of the trains through Allentown and Phoenixville. Highways to the north, south, and west are clogged with frantic human traffic. Police and army reserves are unable to control the mad flight. By morning the fugitives will have swelled Philadelphia, Camden, and Trenton, it is estimated, to twice their normal population. At this time martial law prevails throughout New Jersey and eastern Pennsylvania.
I look down at my blackened hands, my torn shoes, my tattered clothes, and I try to connect them with a professor who lives at Princeton, and who on the night of October 30, glimpsed through his telescope an orange splash of light on a distant planet. My wife, my colleagues, my students, my books, my observatory, my. . . my world. . . where are they? Did they ever exist? Am I Richard Pierson? What day is it? Do days exist without calendars? Does time pass when there are no human hands left to wind the clocks? . . .In writing down my daily life I tell myself shall preserve human history between the dark covers of this little book that was meant to record the movements of the stars. . . But to write I must live, and to live, I must eat . . . I find moldy bread in the kitchen, and an orange not too spoiled to swallow. I keep watch at the window. From time to time I catch sight of a Martian above the black smoke. The smoke still holds the house in its black coil. . . but at length there is a hissing sound and suddenly I see a Martian mounted on his machine, spraying the air with a jet of steam, as if to dissipate the smoke. I watch in a corner as his huge metal legs nearly brush against the house. Exhausted by terror, I fall asleep. . .it’s morning. .
Suddenly, my eyes were attracted to the immense flock of black birds that hovered directly below me. They circled to the ground, and there before my eyes, stark and silent, lay the Martians, with the hungry birds pecking and tearing brown shreds of flesh from their dead bodies. Later when their bodies were examined in the laboratories, it was found that they were killed by the putrefactive and disease bacteria against which their systems were unprepared. . . slain, after all man’s defenses had failed, by the humblest thing that God in His wisdom put upon this earth. Before the cylinder fell there was a general persuasion that through all the deep of space no life existed beyond the petty surface of our minute sphere. Now we see further. Dim and wonderful is the vision I have conjured up in my mind of life spreading slowly from this little seedbed of the solar system throughout the inanimate vastness of sidereal space. But that is a remote dream. It may be that the destruction of the Martians is only a reprieve. To them, and not to us, is the future ordained perhaps.
Strange it now seems to sit in my peaceful study at Princeton writing down this last chapter of the record begun at a deserted farm in Grovers Mill. Strange to see from my window the university spires dim and blue through an April haze. Strange to watch children playing in the streets. Strange to see young people strolling on the green, where the new spring grass heals the last black scars of a bruised earth. Strange to watch the sightseers enter the museum where the dissembled parts of a Martian machine are kept on public view. Strange when I recall the time when I first saw it, bright and clean-cut, hard, and silent, under the dawn of that last great day.
Seven inches long, 5 1/2 inches wide, 2 1/4 inches tall. In excellent condition and although originally designed as an ashtray it appears unused. Suitable for use as a candy dish, pin tray or as an invasion device on unsuspecting alien worlds.
I’ve considered devising a chess set consisting of mid-century modern candle holders, they seem so fitting for the task. One would need only six styles, in two finishes and a board to play upon and a mind that understands strategy rather than just the prosaic demands of tactics (which is why I have a perfect record of losses in the Community Warehouse chess tourney).
And night-time or solar eclipses could be damned too (at least until the end when it’s just your king with the last light against the darkens and a few of the opponent’s pieces malevolently sputtering in the chill wind).
This particular candle stick was designed by Jens Quistgaard for Dansk and was made in Denmark. It is brass and stands 9 1/4 inches tall.
I think it is a little delicate for a rook, so perhaps if one were to make a candle stick chess set it would be a fine bishop?
Rustic or homemade zither in a similarly made carrying case. In OK condition, missing some strings and could use a tuning, but it’s a zither and it’s not like you’ll find one sitting on the curb any time soon.
The carrying case measures 28 3/4 inches wide, 20 inches deep and 4 inches thick. The zither itself is 26 1/ inches long and 17 1/2 inches wide and we have the tuning wrench.
Also known as the Deb the model 7F54 bears a design patent issued in August 1934. Originally these were made in two finishes chrome or gold with ivory or black colored dials.
This one is an example of the gold finish and it works well, keeps time and is a quiet running clock. The alarm works too.
The face of the clock is about 5 inches square and has a curved or bowed glass cover (a.k.a. crystal) and the clock is held upright by a moveable arm/stand.
Even the wiring is in good condition.
Apparently this is the alarm version of the Debutante clock which might seem familiar if you’ve been reading us for a while. We had the Debutante itself back in March of 2009. It took me a little while to find it in the records due to a small typo by the post’s author, which was a minor one compared to another clock typo earlier this week (involving a missing ‘l’; oops).
Today is the day! We’re pleased to announce that we are formally opening our new west-side Estate Store in Tualatin. It’s located in the same facility as our donation center at 8380 SW Nyberg Rd. We’ve been taking donations for a few weeks but it’s time to get our lazy-bones up and working so the store will now be open Friday, Saturday and Sunday from 10 am to 4 pm (Of course the donation section is still open Wednesday through Sunday from 10 am to 4 pm as well).
The Heywood Wakefield model 710 lounge chair and ottoman you see above were pretty good incentive to get this started. It is in fair to good condition given that there are some flaws (one hole on each arm and some torn stitching in the seat).
Barring upholstery issues this chair and ottoman is pretty darn comfortable and the wood and metal bits are in good shape. The best part is that it still has the separate head rest piece. Since this is not attached to the rest of the chair it’s usually long gone.
As the store gets up and running we’ll be featuring more stuff from there here at Estatestore.org and eventually we plan to set up a separate page for it, much like the Garage Sale page (which you should take a look at!). Until then maybe we’ll see you there
Vintage Decoware cake tray and lid. It measures about 11 1/2 inches in diameter. The cake cover party is about 10 1/2 inches in diameter and just over 4 1/2 inches tall. It should hold a two or possibly three-tier 9 inch cake with extra frosting just fine. If you’re feeling lucky and/or have a steadier hand then I do you could probably even ease the lid down over a 10 inch cake.
We’ve had these silver plated presidential spoons before. They were made by William Rogers and are just under six inches long. I can’t recall which ones we had then but this time we have the first three presidents.
The other slightly worn and much loved silver plate spoon is by Old Company Plate and feature the famous fictional dog Huckleberrry Hound. It measures just over six inches long and would be good for cereal, soup, presidential table service and stuff like that there.
Like curiously strong mints these tables are small, but potentially powerful. They are only 21 1/2 inches tall, 8 inches deep and about 13 inches wide. The shelves are pierced metal plates and they are in good condition.
I can imagine places they might be useful, like at either end of the sofa you bought without measuring to see if it would fit in the room with the rest of the furniture you already own (It’s OK I’ve been there too).
You could use it for storing the spare rolls of T.P. in the bathroom of the attic that your landlord jokingly called a cozy studio apartment. The very same apartment that you were desperate enough to take before realizing that you had to shower while sitting on a milk-crate (It’s OK I’ve been there too). Looking in the bright side, at least your jokes about ‘low overhead’ were no longer just metaphorical.
Of for one of a hundred other places where big things don’t fit but a little table with a shelf would be useful.
Antique French mantle clock. It is stone, possibly slate or marble with gilded carved decoration. On the clock face it is marked Bouquit a Lyons. The The face retains the glass door and the works may also be seen through glass from the back of the clock.
It is in good shape except that the right front corner has a chip (see picture) that is about 3/4 of an inch long. There is an old retail or service label on the back and it has been engraved with Lenfant which I presume is a former owners name.
The clock works and keeps decent time but will need to be tuned in better with the fast/slow adjustment. I believe this has an eight-day movement but I’m not entirely sure as I keep forgetting to let it run down to see.
The bell which strikes the top and bottom of the hour is a wonderful little silvery toned thing too. Is very discreet and drawing-room friendly. It’s perfect to remind your guests that they must be getting along but not so loud that it will make your lover think the same thing.
It is 12 1/2 inches wide, 6 1/2 inches deep and stands 8 1/2 inches tall. $135
Somewhere beyond the sea somewhere waiting for me my lover stands on golden sands and watches the ships that go sailin’
This vintage (1970′s?) metal novelty music box plays “Beyond The Sea” while the lighthouse turns.
It is 6 1/4 inches long, 3 inches deep and the top of the lighthouse is 4 3/4 inches tall. I’m not a big fan of music playing knickknacks, but this one isn’t too bad. We’ve attached a video below so that you may judge for yourself.