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When Lisa Klein
moved into her Chicago bungalow in 1998, she immediately felt comfortable
in the North Park neighborhood. Home to two universities and located
near the northernmost end of one of Chicago's El lines, North Park
consists of brick bungalows, Foursquares and some older apartments.
Originally a predominantly Jewish neighborhood, the area is still
home to a yeshiva, but as older residents have moved or died, a
wider mix has settled in to create a
culturally diverse neighborhood.
Just a block
from Lisa's house, a fork in the Chicago River acts as a buffer
between this corner of Chicago and the rest of the city. The river
means there are few through streets; it also provides habitats for
many animals not often found in major cities, like rabbits, raccoons,
opossums, deer and geese. It truly is a neighborhood with something
for everyone. For Lisa, that meant a classic 1925 brick bungalow.

Everything
was in good original condition from the front door to the back:
oak trim, hardwood floors, a mirror-backed Murphy Bed, stained-glass
windows and the art-glass light fixtures. She especially liked that
the bathroom and kitchen had never been upgraded.
Realizing her
existing furniture didn't quite suit the new home, she started looking
around. Wanting furnishings that reflected the home's age and charm,
Klein turned to her favorite places -- antique malls, thrift stores,
flea markets and garage sales -- to fill her home. Around the same
time, a friend of a friend was consolidating a bed-and-breakfast,
and some of the furniture found its way to Klein -- including an
Arts and Crafts rocker.
"The first
thing I bought was a carpet, in horrible shape, for $35 at a resale
shop. I didn't know anything about it, I just knew I liked it and
was drawn to it," Lisa says. The rug turned out to be the first
of four Wilton rugs from the 1920s and 1930s now gracing her home.
Originally in the living room, that first rug is now in her home
office.
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Lisa soon
found a 1910 sofa with the original mohair fabric at an antiques
shop that specializes in 20th-century pieces. Next came a
1920s French burled-walnut veneer armoire to hide her electronics.
Once she realized it was from the same era her house was built,
she knew what she had to do: find other furnishings from that
period. One of Lisa's hopes is to have no furnishings, other
than electronics, made after World War II.
"Second-hand
shopping has always been a passion of mine," Lisa says.
"I started when I was about 16. And I've cultivated my
eye to find the hidden treasure -- and my treasure isn't necessarily
anybody else's treasure. I did start slanting heavily to Arts
and Crafts furnishings once I realized how good they looked
in my house and how available they were." That was as
recently as 1999.
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"I
think it was when I bought a machine-loomed Wilton rug and
a Hoosier cabinet at a local auction that it really got in
my blood. I liked how the rug accented the stained glass windows
and brought the dark wood in my house and the furniture all
together. I really got addicted to finding more stuff."

One of
her favorite finds was in a small shop about 100 miles from
her home. "I found an old, mahogany-stained Arts and
Crafts sideboard that looked perfect. They said it was originally
from Chicago, so we thought it might fit. I'd seen it there
a couple of times on my scouting adventures, and when it was
on sale, I decided to buy it. It fit perfectly under the stained-glass
windows in my dining room." Only after she bought it
did Lisa worry about how she'd get it all the way back to
Chicago.
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Lisa "garbage
picked" a couple of things from her former neighbors, including
a huge, wood-framed mirror for her hall, and a perfect-condition
blue rattan chair that she put in her bathroom. Of course, all her
finds aren't free, some are just cheap.
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"There
was this Hoosier base at a flea market, marked about $140,
and the dealer asked what I wanted to spend. 'Five dollars,'
I joked. We haggled, and I ended up paying $50. The guy thought
I was a dealer, and when I saw him at the same flea market
a year later, he remembered me."
It was
at an estate sale that Klein found her dream stove: a 1934
Magic Chef American Stove Company range. "I had a stove
guy who works exclusively on vintage stoves look it over,
and he only had to replace some of the gaskets and put in
a new thermostat. He said the oven and broiler were in impeccable
condition -- like they weren't even used." The cost of
the range with repairs was about the same as buying a new
stove would have been.
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Perhaps her
biggest splurge is one of her more recent ones. And it wouldn't
have happened if Lisa weren't in the habit of stopping at just about
every antiques place she passes -- when she has the time, anyway.
She found a Pullman-style hide-a-bed made by the Globe company,
complete with original leather cushions. It may have been her biggest
splurge, but she still didn't pay much. "None of my purchases
have been over $800," she says.

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"You
can't go out expecting to find something. Part of the adventure
is just going and having the adrenaline rush of maybe finding
something, and seeing all the possibilities and mentally figuring
out what it is you like," she advises.
While
some antiquers insist on being the first person through the
gates, Klein prefers waiting for the bargains. "If you
want the best selection, go early the first day or wait in
line for an estate sale, but if you want a good price, go
to the second day of a two-day flea market when it's threatening
to rain because the dealers want to pack up and go home. And
never pay the asking price. If the dealer won't lower the
price, get them to throw in a little something extra for free."
She says the biggest mistake many shoppers make is thinking
they have no control over what the price will be.
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Lisa also suggests
frequenting the same shops so dealers get to know you. They're more
likely to cut better deals for their best customers.
"When you're
buying stuff, really look at all the sides and all the parts so
you know it doesn't have a broken leg or big scar," she says.
"If it does, you use that to your advantage to strike a good
deal. You just have to be sure what you buy is solid. Look for repaired
joints. It's fine to buy that as long as you know what you're getting
into."

"The best
part of buying older furnishings is that they're almost one of a
kind, and they go so well with older homes," Lisa offers. "Each
piece has something unique about it. Even if you've seen two, four,
10 or 12 of the same thing, each piece has a life of its own. Collecting
stuff like this is really an exercise in self-expression. You're
not buying something off the rack, you're pulling together various
aspects of your personality and combining them into a home."
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Lisa's
decor isn't strictly Arts and Crafts -- it's an eclectic mix
reflecting her artistic background as a graphic designer. Look
around and you'll see baby shoes dangling in a corner, a wall
of crosses, a Hmong wall hanging and lots of Buddha heads. |
"I like
a lot of knickknacky things so wherever I look, I see lots of eye
candy. Being a creative person, I need a lot of visual stimulation
and inspiration for my work."
Lisa's penchant
is for collecting old things, so you won't find reproductions in
her home. "I like that my furniture has the same history that
the house has. It has character and flaws, and blends in better.
And good-quality reproductions are going to be more expensive than
the time-worn pieces I buy." Nor does she have, or want, $30,000
bookshelves.
| "I
don't have museum-quality stuff, I have stuff my dogs and I
can live with. I don't have to worry that someone's going to
scuff something or scratch something. It's a home, not a museum." |
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There is one
drawback to Lisa's home-furnishing hobby: She's running out of space.
"Now that my house is starting to fill up, I'm going more for
smaller things like pottery and linens." Though in the next
breath, she adds, "But I just might have to finish my attic
to make room for more stuff."
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