#16: Plunder
After scaling six miles of vertical Utah crag on Saturday, you can bet your bippy that I was ready to kick off my hiking boots, lace up my Keds, and begin the hunt. Little did I know what treasures...
View Article#20: Skystone
I have an utter love and fascination for Native American turquoise jewelry, particularly for cluster-work pieces, a style that originated with the Zuni tribe but later perpetuated elsewhere as all...
View Article#23: Buckskin
My heart’s going bumpity-bump for buckskins, which is a tell-tale sign that despite our being in the face of January 2009 and the coldest of what’s left of winter, I’m already thinking about spring....
View Article#36: Giddy
I recently came across the most excellent textile in a most unlikely place: just about the cutest little bench you ever did see, and I had to have it, of course. Giddy up! (Featured here with a classic...
View Article#45: Good Things Happen
They say Good Thing Happen to Good People. Am I a Good Person? Well I might just be! On Friday morning– unseasonably warm and sunny and glorious before the snowstorm of the season two days later sucked...
View Article#82: From the Bookshelf
Thanks to an impeccable present from my sweetheart, my small (but powerful!) collection of antique storybooks about Native Americans has grown just big enough to warrant boasting. Read ‘em and weep!...
View Article#144: Roses are Red
Part city slicker, part cowgirl. 1930′s cowgirl shirt embroidered with red roses and made from gabardine.* I found it in the sleepy attic of an antique shop in Ithaca, NY. *Read that! Just like dear...
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