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二手淘金记:65美元的餐具价值近千元
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作者在二手商店花费65美元购买了一套61件的骨瓷餐具,包括餐盘、沙拉盘、茶杯和碗等。她最初只是为了举办一场生日派对,想要增添格调,却意外发现这套餐具是已停产的牛津(Oxford)系列,在专业网站上的估价接近1000美元。文章还探讨了千禧一代对二手物品和家庭聚会的兴趣回潮,以及这种消费趋势与追求可持续、经典风格的文化转变。作者通过这次经历,不仅为派对省下大笔开销,也体验到了淘到宝藏的乐趣,并计划继续通过二手搜寻来筹备未来的活动。

🌟 **二手淘金的意外惊喜**:作者以65美元在二手店淘得一套包含11个餐盘、12个沙拉盘、12个面包盘、12个茶杯及碟子和一个蔬菜碗的61件骨瓷餐具。这次购物的初衷仅是为了在生日派对上营造优雅氛围,却意外发现这套餐具极具价值。

💰 **价值远超预期的宝藏**:经过后续查询,作者得知这套餐具来自已停产的牛津(Oxford)品牌,并在专门的古董餐具交易网站Replacements上发现,同款花色(Spring)的餐具总价值接近1000美元。其中,部分在售商品甚至是在有瑕疵的情况下打折后的价格,意味着这套餐具的实际价值可能更高,这次二手淘货堪称一次巨大的“价值发现”。

📈 **千禧一代的复古与可持续消费观**:文章指出,像作者这样的千禧一代正引领着家庭聚会和对复古餐具的重新关注。这种趋势与当下年轻人远离快时尚、拥抱二手物品、追求更可持续和经典风格的文化转变息息相关。二手商店、古董店成为获取高品质、独特家居用品的重要途径。

🍽️ **打造完美派对的经济之道**:在为派对筹备方面,作者不仅淘到了高价值的餐具,还从其他二手店和家居用品店以低廉的价格购得了酒杯、蛋糕架、餐盘等共计30件物品,总计花费仅100美元。包括餐具在内,整个派对的餐具和装饰品费用仅为168美元,远低于预期,为餐饮和装饰留出了充足预算。

I purchased this China set at a local thrift store.

I almost gave up on celebrating my birthday this year.

Then, while scrolling through Instagram, I saw a video from the Toronto influencer Isabelle Heikens, who hosts a multicourse dinner at her home each month. Heikens — who has more than 300,000 followers — prepped for her "winter citrus-themed" dinner party by making basil-infused olive oil, gutting grapefruits, whisking eggs, and setting her table with elegant plates.

In a separate video, her guests enjoyed cocktails while Heikens put the final touches on the meal. They all sat around the table devouring the food as Heikens beamed with pride.

I was sold. For my birthday in March, I decided to host a three-course dinner at home and invited my closest friends. I would be the chef, and my husband would be the sous chef.

To set the mood, I needed place settings — but I was on a budget. I ended up thrifting a 61-piece set that I later discovered was worth close to $1,000. Here's how it happened.

I was on the hunt for the perfect dinnerware

Fine china is a must to make my vision come true.

But with half a dozen guests to feed, I couldn't splurge on high-end dinnerware. I decided to visit Thrift Giant, a secondhand store in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, hoping to find affordable pieces that would work beautifully together.

Thrift Giant was overflowing with pre-loved clothing, furniture, and electronics. Dishware made up the smallest section of the store, so I wasn't expecting much. To my surprise, I hit the jackpot.

On a dusty bottom shelf, I found two bundles with 61 pieces of porcelain bone china, each stamped with "Oxford" on the bottom. Each bundle was $29.92.

The collection included 11 dinner plates, 12 salad plates, 12 bread and butter plates, 12 teacups with saucers, and a vegetable bowl with an attached underplate. The total cost at checkout was just $64.78 after tax.

The china set was worth nearly $1,000 online.

I later learned that Oxford was a division of the Lenox Corporation that produced fine china from the late 1920s to the early 1990s.

I found pieces with my exact pattern, called Spring, on Replacements, a North Carolina-based online marketplace for fine china, crystal, silverware, and collectibles, both still in production and retired.

On Replacements, each dinner plate was $24, salad plates $14, bread and butter plates $10, teacups with saucers $10, the vegetable bowl $80, and the gravy boat with an underplate $190. Overall, my thrifted set seemed to be valued at about $950.

What's more, the items I saw on Replacements were discounted by 25% because of imperfections — so it appears the set may actually be worth even more.

I'm not the only millennial into thrifting and dinner parties

Let my millennial friends and I be the first to tell you: The dinner party is making a comeback — and I'm not talking about potlucks.

Instagram and TikTok are filled with pictures and videos of everyday people and content creators — including Heikens and another influencer, Olivia McDowell, who has nearly 200,000 followers —sharing their chic culinary soirees and offering tips on hosting a flawless event.

The interest in entertaining has, in turn, revived interest in fine china, which was once reserved for the upper class but is now more accessible thanks to thrift stores, estate sales, and vintage shops. It coincides with a broader cultural shift toward nostalgia and secondhand shopping as Gen Z and millennials move away from fast fashion and overconsumption in favor of a more sustainable, timeless style.

May Eason, the founder of the Facebook group Beautiful Table Settings, which has more than 263,000 members, told the food and drink publication Eater in 2022 that the affection for vintage china is also simply about the love of sharing beautiful things.

"You're doing this for your family and your friends, so you want to make your table presentable and pretty," Eason said. "And it's fun to play with it. I think younger people are finally realizing you can change it up."

I completely agree.

I wanted everything to be flawless

While I've hosted dinners before, I had never put together an evening as curated as the ones Heikens throws.

I spent hours researching ideas on social media, screenshotting everything that caught my eye — from overflowing tablescapes filled with serving platters and colorful drinks to the perfect playlist.

At the time, my husband and I only had a couple of chairs, so we rented extras. I visited Home Goods or Anthropologie to find tablecloths and napkins.

To further enhance the evening's vibe, I also purchased stylish drinking glasses from another thrift shop and bought fabric to drape along the walls.

Some of the glassware I thrifted.

I found Poco Grande glasses, martini glasses, grappa glasses, coupe glasses, café au lait glasses, milkshake glasses, and more, all priced from $0.95 to $2.99. I also scored a cake stand, serving platters, and bowls — each under $10. I walked away with a total of 30 pieces for just $100.

Altogether, including the china set, I spent only $168 on dinnerware for my party, far less than I expected. That left plenty of room in my budget of under $800 for groceries and decorations — and even a new outfit, too.

The evening was exquisite

TK

In all, I managed to put together a lovely evening at what I consider to be a fraction of the cost.

The wine was the most expensive single item I splurged on. Everything else was thrifted, gifted, or lovingly arranged by my florist friend.

All evening, my guests commented that the setup looked straight out of an interior design magazine —something you'd expect to see in House Beautiful or Better Homes & Gardens, not in my Dallas apartment.

TK

My birthday was such a hit that I'm already planning a Halloween party. My friends are expecting nothing less than another standout night, so I'm thinking of ways to outdo myself. I definitely foresee more treasure hunting at my favorite thrift and antique spots.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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二手 骨瓷 餐具 价值发现 千禧一代 可持续消费 家庭聚会 Thrift Bone China Dinnerware Value Discovery Millennials Sustainable Consumption Dinner Party
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