It is no secret that I love vintage Art Deco lamps. And over the 2017 Holiday season with time off from work Chris and I hit the local antique and thrift stores. We did have some luck in finding a ātreasureā at a bargain price.
Ā Greenovation on East Main Street, Rochester, NY. Image from Facebook.
Our first stop was Greenovation on East Main Street in Rochester, NY. Located in the former Vietnam Veterans Thrift Store, Greenovation is a combination thrift / antique store. While Chris and I have not have the same consistent luck at Greenovation as we didĀ with the former occupants,Ā we still get an excellent find now and then. This time Chris spotted a great Art Deco / Machine Age table lamp in need of some TLC. I have to admit that when Chris showed me this lamp, I was not enthusiastic about at all. The chrome looked pitted and stained and the black cast iron base was rusting.
Ā Chris taking the lamp to get rewired at Top of the Lamp in Victor, NY.
There were cobwebs on the underside of the base and in the light socket. We knew if we bought the lamp it would need rewiring, the rubber power cord was crumbling and the plug had melted. Now the moment of truth, how much? Because it was the Thanksgiving weekend Greenovation was having a āblack Fridayā sale and everything was 75% off. The lamp had a price of $30.00, but with the discount it came to $7.50! No matter what I thought of the lamp originally, at that price I wouldnāt have left the store without it.
After getting the lamp home, Chris started to clean it up. To his surprise, what we thought was pitting and rust was just dirt and tar stains from heavy smoking. The lamp started to come back to life. A little Turtle Wax on the base helped to bring back some of the original crackle paint finish. Now time for rewiring. In the nearby town of Victor, New York is The Top of the Lamp, not only a great place for lamps and lampshades, but also a great lamp repair shop.
Because the lamp is large, we had a three-way socket installed. I have no way of knowing if this was true of the original socket, but I assume it did. With the lamp repaired now it needed a shade that would be period appropriate.
Ā Moderne lamp socket detail.
Ā Created in the mid-1900ās the Illuminating Engineering Society (I.E.S.) studied the relation between illumination and good eye sight. The I.E.S. designed lamps in the 1930ās that gave glare free light for reading as well as providing general room illumination. To do this a glass diffuser is the solution that I.E.S. came up with. These diffusers softened the glare of the light downward, while sending light up toward the ceiling to illuminate the room indirectly.
Ā December 20, 1935 I.E.S. advertisement, Toronto Globe. Image from Proquest Historical Newspapers.
Ā So now we neededĀ to find a milk glass (called opal in the 1930ās) diffuser. Chris lucked out and found one for $5.00 at a small antique store near Clinton, New Jersey.
Ā Waffle pattern milk glass diffuser. Image from laurelleaffarm.com
But never use these diffusers for shades. Iāve seen them used for shades in period films, all I can say about that is . . . WRONG!!!!
Ā The Aviator (Martin Scorsese, US 2004) Starring Leonardo DiCaprio. Set decoration by Francesca Lo Schiavo who wasnāt aware that diffusers need lampshades. Image from the DVD.
Finding a period 1930ās lampshade is almost like seeing a unicorn or big foot. On the whole they just havenāt survived. Dark Drum shades were popular in the 1930ās, usually with contrasting stripes. Today it is easier and cheaper to get a solid color shade than have one custom-made with stripes. So a simple black drum shade was our choice, since it would only send the light up and down, not out.
Ā The lamp with the solid black drum shade.
This photo shows the diffuser in relation to the lamp shade.
This shows how the diffuser throws the light up toward the ceiling and down to the table, while the shade blocks any light from going out from the sides.
Ā So if you have an Art Deco lamp in need of a shade,Ā remember diffusers are not shades. Try to be sensitive to the lampās time period. And simple is always better.
Ā Anthony & Chris (The Freakinā, āTiquen Guys)
The Right Shade for theĀ Lamp