Did you enjoy last week’s post about the funky treasures to be found in a French antique cum junk market? I’m sure you understand it wasn’t the first market I explored in my wandering life. I remember fondly the fabulous Vernissage in Yerevan, Armenia where I lived for six years (in Yerevan, not in the market with a price tag pinned to my chest), and I thought you might find it fun to see what treasures you can find there, so here goes:
The Vernissage is much more than an ordinary flea market. You can find new things and old things both, junk and real art, fakes and antiques and treasures of all kinds. Among the old items you’ll find out-of-date electronics; spare parts from or for equipment or instruments your great-grandfather might have used; sepia photographs of ancient ancestors dead and forgotten; archaic medical and dental instruments resembling dangerous torture devices; vintage Soviet coins and memorabilia; and leftover lab chemicals as you can see on the photo below.
Leftover lab chemicals.Photo by 10b traveling / CC BY-NC-ND*
New merchandise includes arts and craft items, souvenirs, socks and sweaters, puppies with bows on their heads, glasses and dishes. The ones below are all blue because, you guessed it, they’re underneath a blue umbrella.
Delicate teacups, gold-decorated teapots, fancy glassware.*
Little old ladies wander around in slippers selling pastries or beautifully crocheted thingies your great-grandmother used to put over the back and arms of chairs. Antimacassers, they were called (what a word!). Sadly we have no use for those in our contemporary houses.
And here are some more finds:
Hairdryers, mixers and thingamabobs.*
And something underfoot:
Carpets. Old ones, new ones, good ones, not so good ones.*
And for the mechanically inclined this artsy collection:
Ball bearings *Need some art for your walls or shelves?
Paintings, carvings, sculptures, lots of stuff. *And let’s not forget the jewelry! So many stalls! So many lovely, odd and artsy adornments! I developed an addiction for the colorful pendants made of natural stone and set in silver. I could never walk past the many displays without admiring Mother Nature’s designs. Here’s what I ended up with:
Pendants and more pendants.*And of course who can walk past these handbags and not buy one? Or two or three . . . They’re handmade using pieces of old carpeting (or maybe new at times as well). This is my collection. I must admit, I seldom use them, but they look nice as a wall decoration in the hallway!
Carpet handbags*
This is, of course, only a small sampling of the marvels of the Vernissage. I have more funky stuff in another post called Flea Market Fun. Have a look!
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So where else in the world have you found a great market? And what types of merchandise was/is for sale there? Something gorgeous or fun or weird or scary? What is the most unusual item you’ve ever bought in a market? Or has something interesting happened to you in a market? Make my day and tell me!