Attic Classic again the place to be, despite rain

 SHARON — “We have scotch and rainwater,” Patrick Dore said, tending bar at the early buyers’ preview of the Great Attic Classic Tag Sale & Silent Auction at the Sharon Historical Society on Friday evening, July 1. “I can pour you scotch, but you have to stand outside and collect your own rainwater.”

The Fourth of July weekend began with dark clouds, on-and-off showers and even a tornado warning. But despite the raindrops, early buyers were not deterred from shopping for a few of their favorite things, laid out on long tables under the waterproof party tents. The banquet of bric-a-brac included: champagne coupes, china plates, silver-plated platters, kitchen clocks, model car kits, a small collection of Prince Charles and Princess Diana collectibles and all the Heywood Hardy-style horse leap and fox hunt paintings anyone could ever need.

Catered by Sharon Day Care, the early preview party gave ticket buyers a chance to peruse the sale goods, with drink in hand, before the sale opened to the public Saturday and Sunday. Prepared to shop in any weather, the definitive early buyer outfit this year was a colorfully patterned skirt paired with pearls, a smartly cuffed rain coat and a pair of Wellington boots, as demonstrated by Deborah Moore, Helen Degener, Gigi Noyes and many others. 

“I got mine at Saperstein’s!” Degener said of her flashy floral galoshes. 

“The weather has been horrific, but people are here, they would not miss this sale for anything.” Sharon Historical Society Vice President Maureen “Mo” Dore said, standing between a grandfather clock and a wardrobe that would not be out of place in the pages of a C.S. Lewis Narnia tale. 

“The Great Attic Classic is the tag sale to attend in the Northwest Corner,” Dore said. “It raises important funds for the Sharon Historical Society, including our operating costs, or educational programs, lectures, our collection, building and grounds maintenance.”

“We only hold it every two years, so it gives the community time to look forward to it, and it gives us time to collect treasures,” Board of Trustees member Jodi Smith said. She and Dore led the volunteer efforts on the sale this year. 

“There’s a real range of things, from our pop-up art gallery to our beautiful linens and pillows, furniture and antiques, and old farm equipment,” Dore said.

“Lots of objets d’art! We price everything to move. Someone could throw a dinner party just based on what they bought tonight, and furnish a house too,” she continued. 

“We also have a silent auction, where we highlight some of our very special items, and between you and me, the bidding can get fierce.” 

Items up for auction included a Metropolitan Opera print by Marc Chagall, a woodblock carving of Weatherstone previously owned by John Cotton Smith, 23rd governor of Connecticut, and a pair of George Washington andirons, all of which sold.

Kathy Weigel looked at the Washingtons pensively. “But do you think I can pass them off as Alexander Hamilton?”

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