Date: Fri 29-May-1998
Date: Fri 29-May-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: DAVIDS
Quick Words:
Brimfield
Full Text:
Brimfield
w/cuts, no cutlines
BRIMFIELD, MASS -- It was time for the year's first of three annual treks to
what has, over the course of the last three decades, surely become America's
most popular outdoors antiques event - Brimfield Week.
So as usual during the days leading up to "The Brim," the Weather Channel
becomes a perennial favorite on the television. This year, however, with the
Weather Channel being unable to provide absolutely pertinent information
(probably because I kept falling asleep just before the map of the
northeastern portion of the country was shown), it was decided that....
... a climb to the mountaintop, also known as the Mecca of the Weather Gods,
was in order. After a tireless journey through the seemingly endless torrents
of rain, followed by countless hours of meditating (all the while dodging
lightning bolts and other assorted meteorological hazards associated with the
area), the weather information regarding Brimfield Week was finally bestowed
upon myself and others headed for the promised land. "It will rain for 12
straight days and nights and then the ark-like vehicles laden with at least
one antique of every kind will come to rest in the area know as Brimfield. The
unfugacious rains will at last give way to bright and sunny May skies so that
the show may begin as scheduled. Go forth, be merry and fruitful."
As we gleefully began our descent from the mountain there was one last clap of
boisterous thunder and somewhere in it's roar, one of my many Brimfield-bound
compatriots deciphered a message. "Be sure to bring extra shoes for the mud
will surely linger."
Then I awoke, but as in my dream, it was to be.
Brimfield's fertile soils bloomed like May flowers under clear sunny skies
with miles of booths filled to the brim with vast quantities of antiques,
collectibles and just plain old junk. Unforetold hoards of buyers stalked
through the muddy paths striking up deals for every imaginable type of the
aforementioned wares.
We saw this and deemed it good.
The mud, for the most part, dried up early in the week making the show a much
safer place for the bustling crowd watching everything except for where their
feet are being placed.
While Brimfield seemed to be bustling with its usual fervor, we felt it to be
busier than ever. The thought was echoed by scores of dealers and shoppers.
Shows that had openings, such as Heart-O-The-Mart, May's, and the mega-event
at the original field were subjected to crushing crowds. At May's, the crowd
once again swarmed to proportions so large that Route 20 was closed to
traffic. Around the gate, it more closely resembled a mosh-pit at a punk rock
concert than an opening at an antiques show.
Nearly everyone we spoke with reported strong sales, and we certainly were
witness to a large quantity of merchandise being hauled off the fields. Good
to very good merchandise seemed plentiful, but pricey. Mediocre material was
vast and, for the most part, it seemed pricey, too. The junk (including
ludicrous amounts of reproductions that now dominate the roadside) was
overwhelming, although we can't comment on its price structure because we
didn't pause long enough to look at any of it.
We didn't hear of any great sleepers emerging from the depths of Brimfield.
Conversations instead focused on whether the good to very good things sold
reasonably. There were also the stories of the item that was "just missed,"
although once again talk focused strictly on condition and price.
Theft has also become an increasingly large problem at Brimfield, especially
at the shows that do not allow dealers to set up before the show opens. One of
the more interesting problems we heard of occurred last year and was reported
by show manager Richard May. May commented that bogus dealer-passes for his
show appeared on the street within an hour of his opening the gates to
exhibitors. "They scanned them and printed counterfeits with a computer and
were selling them for as much as $100," he said. This year, May had special
counterfeit-proof passes made with special foil backs and print.
The weather gods deserve a big thanks. Let's hope they are equally as nice to
us in July as Brimfield Week commences once again right after the Fourth.