This morning while thrifting I came across this set of six Morphin mighty Power Rangers by McDonald's. McDonald's was part of the movie promotion and offered six different Power Rangers. This is unusual because there are still sealed and all six are present.
I've offered them for sale in my Etsy shop. hopefully there will be somebody that can't live without a collection of Power Rangers. I gave it a lot of thought and decided I could live without this collection.
Here's a link to my Etsy shop if you can't live without the mighty Power Rangers.
Docortiques
Saturday, January 24, 2015
Friday, January 23, 2015
Old Toasters and Selling on line
This is one of the many items I am selling on Etsy. My store name is Decortiques. I sell decorative items and a few antiques, therefore my store name is Decortiques.
At Etsy I have a lot of ties, a few kitchen items and the mix of other collectibles. Here is a link to my shop https://www.etsy.com/shop/Decortiques?ref=hdr_shop_menu.
I hope to feature other items from my shop and even other shops, and items I find interesting.
Friday, May 17, 2013
Continuing car saga
In the spring of 1990 we moved back to
Ohio. At that point most of the cars we owned were just the average
run-of-the-mill transportation type cars. We had two
Oldsmobile Cierra Cutlass. We also had the following: a Chevette, a
Toyota Nova, a couple Caprice cars, and my current truck. The Toyota
Nova was actually a Chevrolet Nova built by Toyota.
My son Steve, gifted me money to buy a
collector type car. I ended up purchasing a 1976 Cadillac Eldorado
convertible. I bought it at an auction, I should've shopped more I
bought it at a good price however it did need some work. It needed
new brakes, brake lines, fuel lines, plastic inserts or bumper
fillers as they are called. I also replaced all the fluids.
The car still needs quite a bit of
work. I've replaced the top, done other extensive repairs. I replaced
the bumper fillers I have a blog concerning that ordeal. Because it
sits so much we've replaced two fuel pumps. At present it needs a
paint job, trunk liner, interior work and Lord knows what else.
I like convertibles and this car is a
lot of fun, however it has a 500 CC engine and it gets 8 to 10 miles
per gallon. So in the days of four dollar gas I have not driven it as
much as I would like. The Cadillac Eldorado's are front wheel drives,
which were unusual in the 70s. This car was to be the last of the
convertibles and Cadillac made 14,000. A lot of these cars are still
around as people thought they would be collector cars. At this point
they are not worth anymore in a nice convertible of that era. The
exceptions are a very very low mileage auto in perfect condition.
Cadillac also made about 200 Bicentennial editions which are highly
collectible.
Wednesday, May 15, 2013
Two finger keyboard dance
From 1960 to 1964 I had the privilege
of attending St. Charles Borromeo Preparatory High School. Now one
would think that a school that prepared you to attend college would
require a typing course. Back in those golden years before computers
and word processors a typewriter was essential at the college level.
Instructors supposedly would not grade down for a hand written paper
but encouraged you to have a typed report.
While I attended college there was an
entire industry devoted to typing papers for students. However they
charged by the word or page not sure which, more than likely the
page. I never could afford to pay to have my papers typed, nor did we
own a typewriter.
So now in the days of computers I wear
calluses on one or two fingers trying to navigate emails , blogs and
other computer operations which require typing. Recently I have
purchased Dragon software, which is a voice recognition program. So
far it has proved to be interesting and considering the fact that my
dictation is fair at best, the program works well. I am also learning
to speak clearer while using it and it is trying to learn my poor
dictation.
Even though the process requires
proofreading, it is not perfect, I find it easier to use than typing.
It also provides some very interesting errors. So if sometime you are
reading a blog or an email from someone and it makes no or very
little sense you might find that they used this software and did not
do a good job of proofreading.
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
Selling on line
Before I retired I sold on eBay. I sold
my dad's collection of brewania. Brewania is signs, glasses, posters,
patches, and other items related to the brewing industry. I also sold
items I picked up at yard sales, flea markets, Goodwill and my wife's
extra crafts . I sold enough items that I had a feedback of over 800.
At some point eBay decided that it did
did not need the small seller. So when it got very expensive and I
did not want to work for eBay or so it seemed, I closed my store. My
protest of exorbitant fees had very little effect on eBay and they
continue to thrive. The price range of the items I was able to sell
made it unprofitable for me to continue on eBay.
So after retired I found Etsy. They
have low insertion fees and very reasonable, actually low final value
fees. That being said traffic and sales are much lower than eBay. I
have two stores on the Etsy website. One store is named Decortiques,
the other is Thriftpickers. Decortiques sells vintage and some
handmade items. Thriftpickers sells supplies and some vantage
patterns. Originally Thriftpickers was designed to sell vintage under
$10. That did not work out well and I am not sure what I will do with
that store.
I was considering closing both stores
but since I have this new speech recognition program Dragon, I may
continue on Etsy for awhile. Not being able to type quickly made it
very difficult to list items and do the correct amount of tags. I
also I'm planning to focus on some type of specialty items for the
stores. If you are in the market for vintage items or just want to
browse, go to Etsy and search for Decortiques or Thriftpickers.
Monday, May 13, 2013
The 1956 caddy
I traded for the 1962 Pontiac Catalina
while we lived in Akron Ohio. I felt the payments on the 67 Galaxy
were too high. The Catalina was a four-door sedan, however it had a
389 engine with tri-power. The car would get up and go and was a lot
of fun at the traffic lights. It was a real sleeper.
In 1967 we moved to Atlanta, Georgia.
While in Georgia I traded for a 1963 or 64 Oldsmobile 88. In 1969 or
1970 I bought my second new car, which was a 1970 Plymouth Duster
with the slant six engine with a standard transmission. My wife did
not drive so the three on the column was not an issue. Overall the
duster was a nice car although very basic.
In 1972, a new job brought me back to
Ohio. Someone at the store I worked at gave me a 1955 Oldsmobile. It
did not run, I was going to fix it and drive it as I liked old cars.
It made a very nice yard ornament as I never had the time nor money
to repair it. Another car I could not afford which I would love to
have was a 1939 Lasalle sedan. The lady who owned it worked for
Buckeye Mart and said the car once belonged to Gov. Bricker. I did
not buy the car because I could not afford it.
In 1974 or so we moved to Jackson,
Ohio. My wife had learned to drive and we bought a second car. It was
a 1957 Plymouth four-door sedan. My wife loved the car, it had a
push button automatic transmission. Another interesting fact with the
exhaust manifold leak, giving it a unique sound. At some point the
torsion bar broke making the car another junkyard candidate. Also
while in Jackson I traded the duster for a 1965 two door Thunderbird.
I really like that car. In 1975, we bought a new Pontiac Catalina. We
sold the Thunderbird. We bought a car to replace the Plymouth because
I was traveling, we bought a 19 something Vega. I think it was a 1971
station wagon. I drove that car round trip Jackson to Athens for
about eight months. The engines in those cars were aluminum and were
crap. I sold the car to a guy who needed a good body for his Vega.
While in Jackson, I bought one of my
dream cars. I just liked the styling of the early 50's caddy's. A friend of the family had a 52 when I was younger and I always wanted a car like it. It was in 1956 Cadillac sedan. It needed a lot of cosmetic work that never got done. The car drove well and was
a lot of fun. I owned this car from about 1977 to sometime in the
80s. I drove the car from Washington Courthouse,Ohio to Sandusky,
Michigan. Eventually the car needed some engine work which I could
not afford, so I sold it to a local car lot.
The next blog will continue the car
saga.
Sunday, May 12, 2013
The History of my Cars
In 1966, I took a job with a Woolworth
company in Marietta Ohio. Since at that time I did not own a car, I
went to Marietta on the Greyhound bus. I worked at the Woolworth
store as a manager trainee and receiving manager. One of the
employees found out that I did not have a car and sold me a 57
Rambler station wagon for the princely sum of $75. Looking back, it
was really a good deal. I drove the car for a considerable amount of
time. Being young and foolish I had no fear of taking it on the
highway. I drove it from Marietta Ohio to Columbus Ohio and from
Marietta to Sandusky Ohio.
Most of the trips were to Sandusky
where my future wife resided. This was about 200 miles one way which
I made usually two times a month. The other feature that I found
useful, was a front seats folded flat. I do not remember how long I
had the car, it was less than a year as I was only in Marietta about
a year. The car gave up the ghost one weekend trip in Sandusky. Again
lacking the funds to have it repaired, it went to the junkyard. I made
the trip back to Marietta on the Greyhound bus. It took around 12
hours, it seemed like forever. I got back to Marietta in time to go to
work.
My next car with a 1951 Chevrolet
two-door. I only had it for a couple weeks. I bought it for $75,
drove it to Sandusky one weekend, where the muffler went out. When I
got back to Marietta I sold it for 50 bucks, I should have had it
repaired.
My next car was a 1967 Ford Galaxy 500.
My dad pretty much picked it out and I was happy with it. It was a
nice green, power steering, power brakes and of course the
radio.After I had it about two weeks some clown pulled out front of
me. I was okay, the car suffered a damaged front fender and hood on
the driver side. I owned the car until about 1968 or 69 when I felt I
could not afford to continue to make the payments. I was married and
67 we moved to Akron in 67 and then Atlanta, Georgia in 68. We traded
the car for lower payments on a 1962 Pontiac Catalina.
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