Est. Every Estate Sale Since Forever

SOMEBODY
LOVEDTHIS FIRST.

Hand-embroidered tablecloths, chipped enamelware, dog-eared poetry — objects with a past, finding a future in your kitchen window.

No sign-up needed to browse — just look around

Hand-Embroidered LinensChipped EnamelwareDog-Eared PoetryEstate SilverKnitted ThrowsPressed Flower FramesBrass CandlesticksLace CurtainsHand-Thrown PotteryWorn QuiltsHand-Embroidered LinensChipped EnamelwareDog-Eared PoetryEstate SilverKnitted ThrowsPressed Flower FramesBrass CandlesticksLace CurtainsHand-Thrown PotteryWorn Quilts

Collection №1

The Sunday Morning Table

7 pieces left from this estateView All →

For the table that gathers people. Linen, enamel, ceramic — things that improve with use.

Cream hand-embroidered linen tablecloth with botanical border stitching
Gently Loved

Embroidered Linen Tablecloth

$38

Margaret, Ohio

"used for Sunday dinners only"

Blue and white chipped enamelware mug with rustic patina on wooden surface
Well-Worn

Chipped Blue Enamelware Mug

$12

June, Vermont

"the chip is part of its character"

Vintage ceramic teapot in sage green glaze with small chip on lid
Near Mint

Sage Ceramic Teapot

$45

Clara, Maine

"smells faintly of chamomile still"

Hand-crocheted cotton dishcloths in cream and sage stacked on a kitchen shelf
Handmade

Crocheted Cotton Dishcloths (Set of 4)

$22

Edith, Wisconsin

"knitted through two winters"

Morning light filtering through a lace curtain onto a wooden kitchen table with a copper kettle and scattered wildflowers
On Thrift

Things that
outlast
the trend.

A kettle that's been on every stove. Light through every window. Objects that carry memory.

Collection №2

The Letter-Writing Desk

4 pieces left from this estateView All →

Slow correspondence made material. Books with marginalia, pens with history, frames holding pressed things.

Stack of vintage poetry books with worn cloth spines in amber and burgundy
Well-Read

Dog-Eared Poetry Collection (8 vols.)

$29

Harriet, Portland

"margins full of someone else's thoughts"

Vintage brass letter opener and fountain pen set on aged leather desk pad
Patina

Brass Letter Opener + Fountain Pen

$34

Thomas, Edinburgh

"belonged to a schoolteacher"

Pressed botanical specimens in a vintage wooden frame with aged glass
Handmade

Pressed Wildflower Frame

$55

Iris, Asheville

"gathered from a meadow in June"

Warm afternoon light on a wooden writing desk with an open journal, ink bottle, and dried flowers

"Writing letters by hand is the slowest, most sincere thing I do."

— seller note, Portland OR

Collection №3

The Garden Shed

Last 6 from a Sonoma estateView All →

Terracotta, thrown clay, worn leather, hand-spun wool. Things that belong outside and in.

Vintage terracotta seed pots in varying sizes with age-worn patina
Weathered

Terracotta Seed Pots (Set of 6)

$28

Ruth, Sonoma

"held tomatoes for twelve seasons"

Hand-knitted cream wool blanket draped over a wooden garden chair
Handmade

Hand-Knitted Wool Throw

$68

Nora, Vermont

"knitted through two winters"

Pair of worn leather gardening gloves with soil marks on a potting bench
Working Wear

Worn Leather Garden Gloves

$18

George, Kent

"from a kitchen garden in Kent"

Antique brass watering can with elegant curved spout and aged patina
Patina

Antique Brass Watering Can

$85

Alice, Edinburgh

"watered the same rose bed for 30 years"

Vintage botanical illustration prints in matching wooden frames with pressed wildflowers
Near Mint

Botanical Print Set (3 framed)

$42

Martha, Bath

"cut from a 1920s gardening almanac"

Hand-thrown stoneware plant pot in speckled gray glaze with drainage hole
Handmade

Hand-Thrown Stoneware Pot

$36

Phoebe, Asheville

"fired in a wood kiln in the mountains"

For Sellers

List in Three Steps.

No storefront setup. No product taxonomy. Just photos, a sentence, and a price.

01

Three photographs.

One of the whole object. One of any wear or damage. One of it where it lives — on a shelf, by a window, in the light.

Natural light preferred. No filters.

02

One sentence of story.

Where did it come from? Who used it? What was it for? One sentence is enough. Two is better.

"Used at Sunday dinners for twelve years."

03

Name your price.

You decide what it's worth. We suggest: what would you pay for it at a good estate sale? Start there.

Prices shown in violet. Buyers trust handwritten.

List a Piece

Account created only when you're ready to publish.

From the Community

Passed On, Passed Down.

I bought a set of embroidered pillowcases from a woman in Ohio. She included a handwritten note about her grandmother. I cried a little.
Zoe Nakamura, a young woman with dark hair smiling warmly outdoors

Zoe Nakamura

Buyer — first apartment in Brooklyn

I had my grandmother's tablecloths in a box for four years. Listed them here in twenty minutes. They went to a woman furnishing her first home. That felt right.
Margaret Ellison, an older woman with warm eyes and silver hair

Margaret Ellison

Seller — clearing her mother's attic in Vermont

Every piece I've bought here has a sentence attached to it. That sentence is worth more than the object. Almost.
Luca Ferreira, a young man with curly hair and a thoughtful expression

Luca Ferreira

Buyer — Portland, OR

For Sellers

Have something
worth passing on?

Three photos. One sentence. A price. That's the whole listing. No storefront, no spreadsheet, no sign-up wall before you start.

Account created only at first publish. No obligation.

No listing fees

We take 8% only when you sell.

No sign-up wall

Browse and list before any account.

No categories

One sentence tells us everything.