Years ago, I went to an auction with my sister. I have to preface this by saying I'm afraid of going to auctions. You see, I talk with my hands (not sign language; just gesturing) and waving your hands around at an auction can get you in trouble. Plus I never understand exactly what the auctioneer is saying and worry that if I bid and think it's for 50 cents, it might actually be for 50 dollars. So while I go, it is with hands tucked under my arms or in pockets, and I have my sister bid for me.
The best auctions are estate auctions, as I am always on the lookout
for old things. I don’t collect antique furniture, china or Depression glass. I
hunt for diaries, journals, old ledgers –written glimpses into the past. At
this particular auction, I found baggies of old letters, written by a young man
stationed in Europe during WWI. In addition, there was a small book with rules
for enlisted men upon discharge. THIS is the world of antiques that interests
me.
The downside was that I only had letters
he had sent home to his family. I didn’t have the letters from Iowa that were
sent to him. Even so, I came to know this man and some of his family. For one
example, he did not particularly like the young man his sister was spending
time with. His life, and who knows how many stories, lie within the words he penned
over one hundred years ago.
At another auction the same sister bid
on and won a quilt top. When she spread it out at home and we took a closer
look, we found it had been hand stitched, not machine sewn. At that time quilting
was my sister’s thing, not mine, but then she said “I wonder who made this
quilt and why. I wonder where they lived and how they managed.”
As a writer, that was something I could
get my teeth into. Her simple statements led me to write a story I called
“The Christmas Quilt” about a quilt, made for a daughter having a child at
Christmas, and how that quilt was handed down through the generations.
Auctions are good for the creative process
in different ways. Studying the items for sale can give you a sense of life as
it was played out for a family in a particular community. (Realizing that a
rural community will possibly sell farm implements right along with the family
dishware.) It can give you a feel for the value people placed on particular
items.
And more than even the items up for
auction, the participants at these festivities can provide you with a wealth of
background and characterization. Everything from facial expressions to stances
can give away a person’s interest in an item being auctioned. If you watch,
you’ll soon discover who is a frequent participant and buyer; who knows who and
who knew the deceased owner of what is being auctioned. Even more important, if you’re the auctioneer
(or a writer looking for inside information), see if you can discover a
bidder’s “tell.”
I went to a cattle auction once with my
dad and throughout the entire affair, the auctioneers and helpers kept pointing
and saying “yep”, “yep” but I never saw anyone raise a hand or their bid
number. I particularly studied my dad, who was in the market for calves, but he
sat there with his arms crossed over his ample stomach and never said a word.
When I whispered my question, he said simply, “watch.” And then I saw it – the
slight lift of a finger; a simple wink; the touch of a hat brim. It was a small
town weekly auction, and I daresay the participants knew each other as well as
their “tells”, but it was a game everyone participated in.
Many times instead of an auction, the
remains of a family estate find their way to antique stores. Antiques by
definition are items 100 years old or more, and too often their stories are
lost through time. People live through tough times and must sell family
possessions to have money for food. The very last great-grandchild of a family
rooted in the community for hundreds of years dies, leaving no one to inherit
the curio cabinet or the jelly glasses much less to pass down the stories
behind such items.
Almost every town has an antique store
or perhaps a mall, where several vendors have booths. While I enjoy looking at
various items, I am dismayed to see things that I had as a child are now in
antique displays! According to definition, I am not yet an antique. I prefer to
consider myself a collectible, or perhaps like a fine wine – I am vintage.
Barb Baldwin
http://www.authorsden.com/barbarajbaldwin
Auctions are fun. I have a sister who goes to yard sales and has come up with antiques that people just put on sale. She in turn goes to larger sales andoffers things shehas bought. Only went to one auction with a friend. Was an interesting event. Keep writing
ReplyDeleteLocal auctions were always the best, especially farm sales. Equipment and tools enough to keep the men happy. Quilts, books, and housewares for the women. If you aren't too impulsive it was a cheap day of entertainment.
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