Find of the Week – Donald Deskey AMODEC Chest & Vanity


AMODEC Chest & Vanity– Thomasville Furniture – Designed by Donald Deskey – 1935

One of the pioneers of modern design in America, Donald Deskey brought the design sensibilities he saw at the 1925 Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes in Paris back to the United States and helped shape a look which came be known as Streamline Modern.

Deskey designed furniture for his company, AMODEC, in the 1930’s which was produced by Thomasville Furniture. The pieces shown here are painted mahogany and date from 1932. The AMODEC line was short-lived and only produced for a couple of years. Deskey went on to design furnishings for a number of companies. One of the most sought after designers of his time, Deskey was commissioned by John D. Rockefeller to to design his Manhattan apartment.


AMODEC Chest & Vanity– Thomasville Furniture – Designed by Donald Deskey – 1932

However, Deskey’s most dramatic design accomplishment came in 1932 when he won the competition to design the interior of New York’s Radio City Music Hall. In what was a daring move, Deskey utilized an Art Deco style rather than the traditional Rococo style used for such venues at the time.


AMODEC Metal Tag– Thomasville Furniture – Designed by Donald Deskey – 1932

It was exciting to find a set from this historic designer here in the hills of West Virginia. The set is currently being offered in our gallery and on Ebay. We just want to find a good home where these 20th Century Treasures will be appreciated and loved.

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Russel Wright Sterling China Water Pitchers


Restyled Water Pitcher Pair – Ivy Vine Pattern – Sterling China – Designed by Russel Wright

I am not complaining but it seems as though we just can’t stop running into dinnerware pieces by Russel Wright. Our find this weekend was the gorgeous pair of restyled water pitchers made by Sterling China. Finding one of these beauties is exciting but locating a matching pair was a real treat!

Produced largely for restaurant, hotel and institutional use, Wright’s designs for Sterling were produced beginning in 1949 and continued through the 1950’s. The decal design was not Russel Wright’s and use of this and other applied designs led to disputes between the designer and the manufacturer.

The Ivy Vine design is also referred to as Palm Leaf in some reference books such as Ann Kerr’s Collector’s Encyclopedia of Russel Wright. I must say that I am not a great fan of Ms. Kerr’s books as they have a fair number of factual errors and questionable design attributions. As for this pattern, we just feel that Ivy Vine is the more accurate description. However, our searching has produced no definitive documentation either way.

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Big Style in Little Things


Alarm Clock – Sheffield Co. – 4 inches – circa 1967

When designing any room it easy to get caught up in the big decisions – the wall color, the furnishings, the window treatments, the flooring – but it is often the small items to really set everything off. I was thinking of this tonight as I sit in hotel room which is adequately furnished and has a (relatively) pleasing color palette but is totally devoid of any of the little things that give a space a personality of its own.

I love small things and tend to gather them. The little collection of items which have gathered on my desk at home shows these tiny treasures are an important part of my personal style.


CBS Logo Glass Dish – Maker Unknown – 3-3/4 inches by 3-3/4 inches – circa 1960’s


Venus de Milo Salt & Pepper Shakers – Made in Japan – 3-1/2 inches – circa 1965

The pieces shown in this post are some of my other finds which lend themselves to playing a big role in setting the style of a room. Some are quirky, most are useful as well as being stylish and all are great examples of the ingenuity of modern design.


Butter Warmer– Descoware of Belgium – 5-1/2 inches by 3 inches – circa 1969


Vase– ATC of Japan – 6 inches by 2-3/4 inches – circa 1965
Enamel on Copper Plate– Ernest Sohn Creations – 6 inches – circa 1962


Glass Geode Bowl – Murano Italy – 3-3/4 inches by 1-1/2 inches – circa 1965

You should be cautious as too much of any good thing is quickly over done. But a few well-placed small pieces are what dots the “i’s” and crosses the “t’s” in any fabulous interior design. The hotel room I am staying in could sure use one or two.

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Iroquois Casual Dinnerware by Russel Wright – Part 2


Placesetting with Cream & Sugar – Casual by Iroquois China – Designed by Russel Wright – 1946

Our friend Mitzi over at Vintage + Goodness = Happiness has requested that I post a photo of some of the Iroquois Casual China by Russel Wright which we talked about in the previous entry.

Shown here is the dinner plate, dessert plate, bread & butter plate, salad bowl, gumbo bowl, tea cup & saucer and the great stacking cream & sugar set. These pieces are in the sherbet pink and charcoal colors.

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Iroquois Casual Dinnerware by Russel Wright

The modern lady and I had a great find this week – a set of four place settings of Russel Wright’s Iroquois Casual in the Sherbet Pink and Charcoal colors.

The set is just wonderful but what made it even more special was the original tri-fold brochure for this classic mid-century line of china. I love finding pieces like this and just had to share this one.

Introduced in 1946, the Casual line was made of high-fired vitreous china and was very durable – suitable for use in the oven and on the stovetop as well as on the table. Russel Wright, and his wife Mary, often demonstrated how resistant to breakage this dinnerware was by upsetting a drainer full of the dishes during department store promotional presentations.


Russel and Mary Wright demonstrating Iroquois Casual China – circa 1947

The durability of these dishes is equally appreciated by collectors today. This dinnerware is not as likely to be found with chips, cracks or crazing as many other mid-century lines are prone to have. For example, Russel Wright’s American Modern dinnerware is notorious for crazing and we have found our fair share of American Modern in poor condition for this very reason – largely due to being overheated in dishwashers during the dry cycle.

But Iroquois Casual has stood the test of time and is one of the legacies from a man who was dedicated to make American home life easier – Russel Wright.

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Reflecting on Collecting


Spontaneous Collection of Items – The Modern Guy’s Desk

When I was five the older couple who lived next door, Mr. & Mrs. Barnes, gave me a rock collection. Mr. Barnes had carefully wrapped each specimen in a bit of paper towel and placed a small card inside which described the stone and the location of its origin.  Those small bits of rock and stone may as well have been nuggets of silver and gold to me and I spent many hours carefully unwrapping each one, examining it, and just as carefully storing it back away in its box.

I believe that was my first true “collection” although I never recall a time that I wasn’t assembling items of some sort into a grouping. Often those items have been very specific and similar and, at other times, have been a seemingly random selection of unconnected things that come together as a “collection” only in my mind.

I was thinking of this while cleaning my desk the other day. The items shown above have resided together there for several years now. While totally unconnected in any way this grouping has become a spontaneous collection – one gathered and assembled with no forethought or planning but which are now, at least as far as I am concerned, a single unit.

This grouping includes, a PEZ dispenser, a beat up cream pitcher from The Ruffner Hotel, a wooden Number 8 typeblock, a pewter donkey, a New York Flatiron Building souvenir, a bottle opener from the Fesenmeier Brewery, a U.S. Army pin, and stack of eight Kennedy half-dollars. Each of these items I acquired individually with no thought of where they would go and certainly without having a “need” for them. They just each appealed to me in some manner and over time have simply combined to become a small collection of otherwise meaningless items that stay on my desk. They are now one – a collection.

The modern lady and I are collectors of some very specific items as well – Blenko Glass, Heywood-Wakefield furniture, artwork and dinnerware. The best example of borderline obsessive compulsive disorder in our family is our acquisition of dinnerware as we have accumulated upwards of dozen complete or nearly complete sets.

While our basic tastes always lean towards vintage modern there are several collections in our home which do not fall into that category at all. The modern lady’s mammy doll collection and Virgin Mary figurine collection are two of those and, while additions to these collections are not what we are generally seeking on an ongoing basis, they both seem to keep growing.


Vintage Mammy Dolls – The Modern Lady’s Collection – circa early 20th Century


Vintage Virgin Mary Figurines and Icons – The Modern Lady’s Collection

Collecting has been going on since people first began hunting and gathering. The Association of Collecting Clubs lists 2866 collecting groups and from my experience that list just skims the surface. In our shop we cater to collectors and are constantly reminded of the importance of collections in everyday life. Collections are an expression of individuality and, regardless of the monetary value, add significantly to a persons sense of well-being.

Just like the assemblage on my desk which I wouldn’t part with for any amount of money.

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Special Holiday Week Hours at The Purple Moon

The Purple Moon will be open this week Wednesday through Saturday from Noon to 4 p.m. The gallery will be closed beginning Sunday, December 30th through Monday, January 7th for our annual New Year’s vacation.

This allows us the time to remove the Christmas decorations, replenish our inventory after the Holiday shopping period and get some much-needed rest.

We will be back to regular business hours beginning Tuesday, January 8th, 2008.

The modern lady and I thank you for helping us make 2007 a great year for The Purple Moon and we wish each of you a Happy New Year!

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Holiday Gift Guide – Day 29 – It’s a Wonderful Life


It’s A Wonderful Life – Directed by Frank Capra – 1946

As much as I at times try to act the Scrooge this time of year I ultimately succumb to sentimentality – and it usually corresponds to my annual viewing of It’s a Wonderful Life.

Frank Capra’s  film about George Bailey, Bedford Falls and the story of personal redemption and good overcoming evil is not just a great holiday film – it is one of the best films ever.  Although not a commercial success at the time of it’s release the film has since been recognized by the American Film Institute as one of the 100 best movies ever made and was named the most inspiring moving ever by the AFI.

Do you know how long it takes a working man to save five thousand dollars? Just remember this, Mr. Potter, that this rabble you’re talking about… they do most of the working and paying and living and dying in this community. Well, is it too much to have them work and pay and live and die in a couple of decent rooms and a bath? Anyway, my father didn’t think so. People were human beings to him. But to you, a warped, frustrated old man, they’re cattle. Well, in my book he died a much richer man than you’ll ever be.

                                                        — George Bailey to Mr. Potter  

This film is still as fresh today as it was when it was made in 1946. The performances by James Stewart and Donna Reed are flawless and Lionel Barrymore as Mr. Potter is the personification of meanness.

Your Holiday should not be complete without seeing this movie and it can be a great gift to yourself to take the 2 hours and 10 minutes, relax, and watch this American classic. Share this time and this film with someone you love and you’ll both have the gift of a Holiday memory to carry for years to come.

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Holiday Gift Guide – Day 28 – Vintage Telephones


Dawn Burnt Orange Telephone– Northern Telecom – circa 1970’s

Telephones once sat in one place, were wired there so you didn’t misplace it, and actually dialed with a rotary dial. While most telephones were primarily untilitarian in nature, design trends influenced the look. There was the standard Western Electric Model 500 units, which was in many households, great sculptural phones were available in mid-20th Century America to accent the modern decor of the time.


Ivory Ericofon– L.M. Ericsson Company – Sweden – 1959

The quintessential mid-century telephone was the Ericofon made by the L.M. Ericson Company in Sweden. This iconic phone was unique in style and in the way it functioned with the rotary dial and “hanger” on the bottom. I remember first seeing this phone in early James Bond films.


Ericofon Bottom Dialer– L.M. Ericsson Company – Sweden – 1959

Telephones are often the forgotten area of good interior design for the home. For someone striving for a true vintage mid-century modern look a vintage phone is a necessity.

Vintage phones make unique and greatly appreciated Holiday gifts which will be put to use daily. Available at vintage shops, antique malls and through online sources like Ebay you can generally pick up a great phone in working order for between $75 – $150.

Make certain the phone works and has no damage or cracks to the body. Often found with the old 4-prong plugs a simply adapter will easily convert a phone for modular jack use. 

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