My Collection Is Normal - And So Is Yours
08.09.07By Deanna DahlsadDid you ever notice how your collection is normal, but another person’s collection can be, well, strange?
It’s not just you. Everybody does it. It’s apparently as much a part of human nature to collect as it is to question the sanity of another for what they collect.
I’ve had someone with me at a flea market be appalled with my $10 vintage linen purchase. “Old used dish towels? Eeeiiwww!” they said. Yet they happily — greedily — paid twice that sum for a poster of their favorite baseball team. Who got the better deal? We’d likely argue to the death over that one. *wink*
When folks stop by our house and see an assortment of items on the dining room table waiting to be shipped, they’ll pick them up one by one and inevitably ask questions about ‘who would want that junk.’
I have to explain, even if only to guess. I have to because I know that even if I don’t know why, even if I don’t squeal with delight over it, I sure do understand the glee behind collecting. No matter what it is.
“Who would want an old photo of a nurse they don’t know?”
“Maybe they are a nurse and they are proud of the history and tradition?” I reply.
“OK, why would someone want an old coloring book — one that’s already been colored in?” they say laughing.
“Being colored in isn’t really an issue for such old children’s books because just being ‘alive’ is rare,” I explain. “I know lots of sewers use the old images for embroidery designs including making modernized iron-on transfer patterns.”
I’m just guessing, of course. Not everyone tells us why they buy what they buy. But when they do, I just love it because the stories, the reasons, are fascinating.
Here are a few collections which, while I wouldn’t call strange, I’ve never thought of before. And each collector mentions why they started their collection too.
Steve Dichter, who worked at station KTLA in Los Angeles for 16 years, takes his vintage color TV’s pretty seriously. (There’s even more here.)
Anthony Pietrak is “Qrazy for Q*Bert” and it shows.
Cliff Muskiet has wanted to become a flight attendant ever since he was a small boy. Before he could achieve that dream, he began collecting stewardess uniforms — he now has more than 640 different stewardess uniforms from 292 airlines and he’s not stopping.
Erik S. Klein has a vintage computer collection of over 50 machines; most of which work well and have original documentation, software and, in some cases, original packaging.
What do you collect? Strange or not, it’s easy to show it off, share your passion for it, and meet other collectors in the Collectors’ Quest Community.
That’s why we say, Gotta Collect? Then You Gotta Connect! - Join our Collectors’ Community.







