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Thursday, February 20, 2020

Garage Sailing in Key West

This blog is now twelve years old. I have taken (literally and figuratively) thousands of photos of Key West properties over the years. I have stored them on several websites including Photobucket which was clumsy to use so I migrated Flickr which is my primary host now.

Yesterday I was searching my old Photobucket photos which go back about decade and found images of houses that have been renovated to the extent that I forogt how bad they used to look. That is why I do my continuing blog The Projects of Key West which I will be updating soon. I digress.
I came upon the photo above that I took years ago inside a cute little house on Elgin Lane. I just love the kitsch. Too wonderful for words. That's why I took the picture. It was of the one-of-a-kind lamp. I immediately recognized that lamp!
You may recognize the photo two above. It shows the living room of my new listing at 1213 Grinnell Street Key West. Look at the lamp next to the sofa. It's the same lamp that used to be at the Elgin Lane house except that it belongs to a totally different owner who bought it at a garage sale.

The owner told me that he and his wife love to go garage sailing. He has picked up some incredible one-of-a-kind items at bargain prices. He pointed out some of the pieces he bought and the amount he paid.  I was sitting on the above sofa as he described his purchases. I looked down at the sofa and told him a true story of two sofas of a similar design that I used to own.

I moved to Key West Christmas week in 1993. I had purchased the former Eaton Lodge guesthouse located at 511 Eaton Street. The building had been shut down for about two years while the property was being foreclosed upon by the Small Business Administration.  The windows and doors were boarded up to keep thieves and the homeless out.  The former owners left all of the furnishings including antique pieces of furniture acquired by their predecessors plus two white slip covered sofas of recent origin which were located  in the living room of the house once  owned William Warren, the town doctor. After we took possession we decided to keep the Eastlake pieces and all of the wood furniture but opted to put the two sofas out on the street. We knew someone would want those sofas even if we didn't.

We had barely got the second sofa placed on the sidewalk when this older man stopped and asked what we were doing and inquired if he might have the sofas. We had not had time to put the cushions on the sofas. He was delighted to learn that the sofas had cushions as well. Then he asked if we could hold the sofas until he could get a friend to help him move the sofas. I said yes. My partner and I moved the sofas back inside until the man returned with a younger man in his late thirties or early forties. I helped the younger man put these sofas in his aged Toyota. He made several trips carrying the sofas and cushions to some other location. The older man introduced himself as David Wolkowsky.

A year or so later my partner and I started to look at houses in Key West including a a newly built spec house on Admirals Lane in Truman Annex. I recall the asking price was $500,000.  The builder was David Wolkowsky. My two former sofas were located in the living room of this house. I laughed. I did not buy the house. I should have. That house is now worth around $2,000,000.

A few years later I saw the same two sofas inside a house David Wolkowsky had renovated on Washington Street in the Casa Marina East area.
I saw those same two sofas for the very last time on March 15, 2015 during an early evening Realtors Open House at a home Wolkowsky had just finished renovating on Johnson Street. This time they were located poolside near the giraffe. 

I got a phone call a couple of years ago from David. He had just finished a renovation on property on Eisenhower Drive which abutted a house I had listed on Albury Street. He called me to discuss the outrageous price I had on my listing. I told him the seller set the price, not me. He sounded genuinely angry at the price. He barked "Do you know who I am?" I said I did. He sold his house. My listing did not sell and has still not sold.
Some people recycle lamps. Some people recycle sofas. I recycle stories of Key West kitsch and characters. Go garage sailing. Buy somebody else's treasure. It's got to have a story behind it.

2 comments:

Joseph Graham said...

Great post, Gary. I love the story about the lamps. The sofas, too. And what a great reminder to keep our eyes open for these hidden treasures hiding in plain sight. How wonderful it is when that which is old becomes new again.

vinu said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

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