Pots and Cans

Pots and Cans

Monday, February 19, 2018

LIGHTING UP MY WORLD

I’m in that post-decorative slump that usually happens sometime between the Chinese New Year and Easter when your mojo’s disappeared down a rabbit hole and like Alice, all you want to do is scoff anything labelled ‘eat me’.  In my case, labeling is optional.

Yummy - banana bread

It’s too cold to paint so I’m going to use this moment to tell you the tale of how I saw the light or rather lights and managed to acquire a beautiful pair of chrome ceiling chandeliers in a rather unorthodox fashion.

Charity shop chandeliers

For months these lights hung in the window of a local charity shop which I happen to walk past every day on my way to work.  I’d often stop to admire them, conjuring up a mental picture of what they might look like hanging up in our refurbished corridor.  Sadly for me, the charity shop always closed early in the afternoons so I was never able to get a closer look.

One morning to my horror, a sign appeared in the charity shop window announcing the closure of the store to make way for a new cinema development.  My heart fell at the thought of losing sight of these beautiful lamps which by now had become part of my early morning commute.

As luck would have it, a few days later I spotted the shopkeeper in the store at the crack of dawn busily packing away all the bits and bobs left in the shop ready for their relocation.  There’s no time to lose I said to myself so I frantically knocked on the glass window and after executing an elaborate hand signalling mime dance, I convinced him to open the door.

Not surprisingly his first words were ‘we’re closed’ as it was 7.30 am but after hearing my desperate plea, he reluctantly let me in to view the chandeliers.  Covered in a thick coat of dust and cobwebs, they were every bit as lovely as I’d imagined and in very good condition considering they’d been hanging in that window for the best part of the 2 years that I’d been walking past that shop.  The deal was done on the spot and I returned later on in my lunch hour to hand over £50 cash for the pair. 

After a good clean and a bit of fiddling about (but that’s another story), the first chandelier is now lighting up our world having been saved from the scrap heap by one woman’s persistence.  

Shades thick with years of dust

Scrubbed up nice

Will it work?

Lights are on

Saved from the scrap heap

This just goes to prove - nothing ventured, nothing gained!