You can also list items free on the cool easy. They have tons of areas to post. its free & easy.
The addresss is:
http://www.cooleasypost.com
its just launching, but has LOTS of things to offer.
Mar. 30 2009 12:31 AM
Score: 0/0
Curby
from New York
CurbsideBooty.com gives you the heads up on where free, usable stuff is being dumped on the streets, sidewalks and curbs of New York City so that you can get lucky, recycle and help keep our city clean! Email us info on where you've seen stuff being chucked out or if you have the inside scoop on when its going to happen and we will post the address here on the Curbside Booty blog! Use our classified section for listing your own curb alerts or announcements about stuff you want to get rid off in the New York area.
Jun. 19 2008 02:13 PM
Score: 0/0
thomas wold
from berkeley, ca
Thanks for having me on your show Brian! My goal with the Ready Made column is to express an inspirational approach to DIY and to consider found items as a way to think up new and personal designs. Check out the column though all.... .....Sorry about my voice Ashley, I'm so untrained for radio!
Best, Thomas
May. 14 2008 02:39 PM
Score: 0/0
Steven Zelin
from NYC
Hi there,
I am a native New Yorker and I have a song "Free Furniture Day," which is about finding furniture on the street on garbage day in New York City. You can listen to it at www.cdbaby.com/zelin click on "free furniture day"
May. 14 2008 12:28 PM
Score: 0/0
Ellen Page
from Lynbrook, NY
My husband found an old ice cream barrel, which now houses fallen privet hedges from our garden. Love it. My daughter and her husband have a piano a neighbor was trashing. The neighbor also moved it into their apartment. My daughter has a chaise lounge, which she found at a curb in Lower Manhattan, which a samaritan cab driver moved into her Manhattan apartment.Scavaging is part of our DNA.
May. 14 2008 12:00 PM
Score: 0/0
Paula Beckenstein
from Chappaqua NY
Here in Chappaqua and neighboring villages we have "tag sales" all Spring, Summer, and Fall in which people basically give away their unwanted goods for token amounts of money. You can get quality household items, furniture, toys, flat ware, clothing of all types, vintage jewelry, accesories,CD's, videos, etc. Many families regularly attend and find wonderful things. We meet neighbors there all the time. Our Temple also has a shop in town (The Oportunity Shop) where we can buy goods that we all donate, whether out grown baby equipment, clothing or toys, for a nominal fee.
May. 14 2008 11:58 AM
Score: 0/0
debra
from staten island
I didnt have time to comment during the show, but please remeber the BEDBUG epidemic in NY and that this found furniture can harbor these bugs that are SO HARD to get rid of.. I have furnished entire apartments by pulling stuff off the street, but now that Im a visiting nurse and realize the scope of the bedbug problem, I wouldnt dare..
May. 14 2008 11:56 AM
Score: 0/0
James
from New York
EVERY product sold should include in it's price a refundable amount to cover the cost of returning it to a bio-degradable state, i.e. an environmentally 'neutral' state. This is the ONLY way that we can get everyone to recycle & reduce their environmental impact.
May. 14 2008 11:44 AM
Score: 0/0
Joan
from Manhattan
I'm not opposed to buying something retail if I absolutely fall in love with it, but I am also hopelessly addicted to the Craigslist furniture ads and actually prefer to find pieces there. In addition to the feeling of well-being that comes with not contributing to waste, the process of having to sift through ads, make appointments, and pick up furniture ensures that I really love the things that I'm getting and that I'm not just making an impulse buy based on convenience.
May. 14 2008 11:44 AM
Score: 0/0
graham
from brooklyn
My friends and I actually found a purple baby grand piano on the street that now resides in my home... no bed bugs in that.
May. 14 2008 11:43 AM
Score: 0/0
chestinee
from Midtown
Gleaning is a tradition in France - a harvest tradition - people clearing leftover grapes, etc.
May. 14 2008 11:43 AM
Score: 0/0
Bo
from Brooklyn - Prospect Heights
My entire apartment, two bedrooms, kitchen, dining room, living room, one bath and an office is furnished with found furnishings or discards. Occasionally we've picked up a piece or two from flea markets or stoop sales, but there is nothing in our apartment that was purchased new...other than art, and even some of the art has been found. I only wish I could post a photo. Most people are slack-jaw when they find out.
May. 14 2008 11:42 AM
Score: 0/0
Mike
from Brooklyn
hey Ruth K,
I think you are very right to be concerned with bed bugs, I used to get all my furniture off craigslist and out of the trash. Recently my friend got bed bugs from a craigslist find! almost everyone I know in brooklyn has bed bugs except my house, I read that if bedbugs were disease carrying we would have an epidemic in NYC. Luckily my house doesn't have bed bugs, but I think it is a very real fear.
May. 14 2008 11:40 AM
Score: 0/0
Mim
from Park Slope
Besides using Craigs List to sell or buy stuff cheaply, there are two ways to use it to exchange free stuff. First, there is a Craigs List category called 'Free Stuff.' The instant you hit submit to post your item, the phone will start ringing. Also, there is a convention to head your item with the words 'Curb alert.' Then you put your stuff out, and someone will come by and take it. People use this to pass on moving boxes all the time. I've seen 'curb alert' entries for items someone has just seen on the street.
May. 14 2008 11:40 AM
Score: 0/0
Justin
from Brooklyn
My parents in New Rochelle and my relatives in the suburbs in Philly have been taking everything from furniture, tools, clothes, books, music and more from garbage and thrift shop.
May. 14 2008 11:39 AM
Score: 0/0
RX
from Staten Island
Brian - Please ask Thomas to address the BUG question. What can be done to be sure there are no bugs of any kind? I once got a table that I'm sure caused a roach problem.
May. 14 2008 11:39 AM
Score: 0/0
Ruth K
from Rego Park Queens
I've long been a recycler/thriftstore patron. Of late, I've been concerned about bedbugs, hiding in furniture, clothes, etc. Any reactions, comments, suggestions? Thanks
May. 14 2008 11:38 AM
Score: 0/0
Ashley
from NYC
This Thomas guy has a very annoying voice--kind of whiney and condescending.
May. 14 2008 11:36 AM
Score: 0/0
Gaines Hubbell
from Knoxville, TN
I've got a great dumpster dive sofa right now, but as a kid in Evanston, IL, I was raised in a dumpster-dive stroller with dumpster-dive toys.
May. 14 2008 11:35 AM
Score: 0/0
Seth
from Astoria
I moved to NYC in October 2002 with 4 friends, making 5 of us in a 3 bedroom. We all pooled our stuff, so I had a twin box/mattress from my roommate, but no frame. On the Night we moved in, we were walking back from dropping off the U Haul, 6 houses down from mine, I find the simple little metal rails, with wheels, for a twin bed. I cleaned it up and used it for years. 2 different appartments, until I gave it to a friend who still has it.
May. 14 2008 11:35 AM
Score: 0/0
dara b.
from Brooklyn
I found a beautiful "Hollywood regency" grand piano inspired cabinet. On Mercer and Bleecker. It was painted white, but inside it was a beautiful, rich polished wood.
Under all of that white paint was a beautiful, unique piece! I cannot believe someone threw it out!
May. 14 2008 11:35 AM
Score: 0/0
Mike
from Brooklyn
Isn't it there a kind of obvious contradiction in the fact that this sort of thing can only happen in an affluent, consumer society? If people weren't frequently buying new things and throwing out less-new things, they're be no free quality goods on the curb, right?
May. 14 2008 11:34 AM
Score: 0/0
John Frey
from New York
I once picked up an bird leg antique table that later I found out was from 1934. I still have it, although I do not know if its valuable of not.
May. 14 2008 11:34 AM
Score: 0/0
andy
from manhattan
i recently found an aged but beautiful yamaha xylophone in a pile of refuse in front of a church. finding it was music to my soul! soon to the world's!
:D
May. 14 2008 11:33 AM
Score: 0/0
dyan
from dwntn
When I lived in Germany in the 80s, this was a common practice. Once a quarter each "garbage district" would put out their "junk." We would monitor when the "wealthy" neighborhoods had their "junking day" and furnished our apartments. It was great since I arrived with a backpack and when I left I had many things to sell and give away -- most of which were picked-up during a "junking day" adventure. Dining Room tables, chairs, sofa, sofa table, chairs, patio furniture, etc.
May. 14 2008 11:32 AM
Score: 0/0
Profiterole
from NYC
I agree with Daniel #2. My former roommate picked up a nice looking couch a couple of years ago that was infested with bedbugs. It was a nightmare. It took us a few weeks to be able to sleep peacefully. Never again!
May. 14 2008 10:39 AM
Score: 0/0
Daniel Freedman
from UWS
What about bed bugs? Isn't that real concern...one that should make people thInk twice twice about helping themselves to curbside furniture? Maybe the furniture is being thrown out for a good reason -- it's infested! Why take the chance?
May. 14 2008 10:00 AM
Score: 0/0
j
from nyc
i find stuff ALL the time. seriously, and good stuff too [yeah, i found a FLOS lamp, worked, globe a little cracked, so what? my mom loves it] i've also found marble/tiles/glass, great chairs, plant pots, chrome wire kitchen shelving, nice lamps, and so on. I recover, paint and remake pieces into great furniture. Even a plain piece of wood can be made into a nice painted tabletop [love the blackboard paint].
i find great stuff consistently, offer it to my friends, and if they cannot use it>> MAJOR-TIP-ALERT
>>i take my good find to a thrift shop, e.g. Housing Works, donate it, and get a donation receipt for which i CAN use for a deduction on my taxes towards the mortgage. [any non-profit shop will do; computers can goto Persholas.org or housing works which also takes televisions, working printers,etc.]
just make sure it's not crap, i.e., something you would use if you wanted to keep it for yourself. good for kharma.
May. 14 2008 04:07 AM
Score: 0/0
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Comments [28]
You can also list items free on the cool easy.
They have tons of areas to post.
its free & easy.
The addresss is:
http://www.cooleasypost.com
its just launching, but has LOTS of things to offer.
CurbsideBooty.com gives you the heads up on where free, usable stuff is being dumped on the streets, sidewalks and curbs of New York City so that you can get lucky, recycle and help keep our city clean! Email us info on where you've seen stuff being chucked out or if you have the inside scoop on when its going to happen and we will post the address here on the Curbside Booty blog! Use our classified section for listing your own curb alerts or announcements about stuff you want to get rid off in the New York area.
Thanks for having me on your show Brian!
My goal with the Ready Made column is to express an inspirational approach to DIY and to consider found items as a way to think up new and personal designs. Check out the column though all.... .....Sorry about my voice Ashley, I'm so untrained for radio!
Best,
Thomas
Hi there,
I am a native New Yorker and I have a song "Free Furniture Day," which is about finding furniture on the street on garbage day in New York City. You can listen to it at www.cdbaby.com/zelin click on "free furniture day"
My husband found an old ice cream barrel,
which now houses fallen privet hedges from our garden. Love it. My daughter and her
husband have a piano a neighbor was trashing. The neighbor also moved it
into their apartment. My daughter has
a chaise lounge, which she found at a curb
in Lower Manhattan, which a samaritan
cab driver moved into her Manhattan apartment.Scavaging is part of our DNA.
Here in Chappaqua and neighboring villages we have "tag sales" all Spring, Summer, and Fall in which people basically give away their unwanted goods for token amounts of money. You can get quality household items, furniture, toys, flat ware, clothing of all types, vintage jewelry, accesories,CD's, videos, etc. Many families regularly attend and find wonderful things. We meet neighbors there all the time.
Our Temple also has a shop in town (The Oportunity Shop) where we can buy goods that we all donate, whether out grown baby equipment, clothing or toys, for a nominal fee.
I didnt have time to comment during the show, but please remeber the BEDBUG epidemic in NY and that this found furniture can harbor these bugs that are SO HARD to get rid of.. I have furnished entire apartments by pulling stuff off the street, but now that Im a visiting nurse and realize the scope of the bedbug problem, I wouldnt dare..
EVERY product sold should include in it's price a refundable amount to cover the cost of returning it to a bio-degradable state, i.e. an environmentally 'neutral' state. This is the ONLY way that we can get everyone to recycle & reduce their environmental impact.
I'm not opposed to buying something retail if I absolutely fall in love with it, but I am also hopelessly addicted to the Craigslist furniture ads and actually prefer to find pieces there. In addition to the feeling of well-being that comes with not contributing to waste, the process of having to sift through ads, make appointments, and pick up furniture ensures that I really love the things that I'm getting and that I'm not just making an impulse buy based on convenience.
My friends and I actually found a purple baby grand piano on the street that now resides in my home... no bed bugs in that.
Gleaning is a tradition in France - a harvest tradition - people clearing leftover grapes, etc.
My entire apartment, two bedrooms, kitchen, dining room, living room, one bath and an office is furnished with found furnishings or discards. Occasionally we've picked up a piece or two from flea markets or stoop sales, but there is nothing in our apartment that was purchased new...other than art, and even some of the art has been found. I only wish I could post a photo. Most people are slack-jaw when they find out.
hey Ruth K,
I think you are very right to be concerned with bed bugs, I used to get all my furniture off craigslist and out of the trash. Recently my friend got bed bugs from a craigslist find! almost everyone I know in brooklyn has bed bugs except my house, I read that if bedbugs were disease carrying we would have an epidemic in NYC. Luckily my house doesn't have bed bugs, but I think it is a very real fear.
Besides using Craigs List to sell or buy stuff cheaply, there are two ways to use it to exchange free stuff. First, there is a Craigs List category called 'Free Stuff.' The instant you hit submit to post your item, the phone will start ringing. Also, there is a convention to head your item with the words 'Curb alert.' Then you put your stuff out, and someone will come by and take it. People use this to pass on moving boxes all the time. I've seen 'curb alert' entries for items someone has just seen on the street.
My parents in New Rochelle and my relatives in the suburbs in Philly have been taking everything from furniture, tools, clothes, books, music and more from garbage and thrift shop.
Brian -
Please ask Thomas to address the BUG question. What can be done to be sure there are no bugs of any kind? I once got a table that I'm sure caused a roach problem.
I've long been a recycler/thriftstore patron.
Of late, I've been concerned about bedbugs,
hiding in furniture, clothes, etc. Any reactions, comments, suggestions? Thanks
This Thomas guy has a very annoying voice--kind of whiney and condescending.
I've got a great dumpster dive sofa right now, but as a kid in Evanston, IL, I was raised in a dumpster-dive stroller with dumpster-dive toys.
I moved to NYC in October 2002 with 4 friends, making 5 of us in a 3 bedroom. We all pooled our stuff, so I had a twin box/mattress from my roommate, but no frame. On the Night we moved in, we were walking back from dropping off the U Haul, 6 houses down from mine, I find the simple little metal rails, with wheels, for a twin bed. I cleaned it up and used it for years. 2 different appartments, until I gave it to a friend who still has it.
I found a beautiful "Hollywood regency" grand piano inspired cabinet. On Mercer and Bleecker. It was painted white, but inside it was a beautiful, rich polished wood.
Under all of that white paint was a beautiful, unique piece! I cannot believe someone threw it out!
Isn't it there a kind of obvious contradiction in the fact that this sort of thing can only happen in an affluent, consumer society? If people weren't frequently buying new things and throwing out less-new things, they're be no free quality goods on the curb, right?
I once picked up an bird leg antique table that later I found out was from 1934. I still have it, although I do not know if its valuable of not.
i recently found an aged but beautiful yamaha xylophone in a pile of refuse in front of a church. finding it was music to my soul! soon to the world's!
:D
When I lived in Germany in the 80s, this was a common practice. Once a quarter each "garbage district" would put out their "junk." We would monitor when the "wealthy" neighborhoods had their "junking day" and furnished our apartments. It was great since I arrived with a backpack and when I left I had many things to sell and give away -- most of which were picked-up during a "junking day" adventure.
Dining Room tables, chairs, sofa, sofa table, chairs, patio furniture, etc.
I agree with Daniel #2. My former roommate picked up a nice looking couch a couple of years ago that was infested with bedbugs. It was a nightmare. It took us a few weeks to be able to sleep peacefully. Never again!
What about bed bugs? Isn't that real concern...one that should make people thInk twice twice about helping themselves to curbside furniture? Maybe the furniture is being thrown out for a good reason -- it's infested! Why take the chance?
i find stuff ALL the time. seriously, and good stuff too [yeah, i found a FLOS lamp, worked, globe a little cracked, so what? my mom loves it] i've also found marble/tiles/glass, great chairs, plant pots, chrome wire kitchen shelving, nice lamps, and so on. I recover, paint and remake pieces into great furniture. Even a plain piece of wood can be made into a nice painted tabletop [love the blackboard paint].
i find great stuff consistently, offer it to my friends, and if they cannot use it>>
MAJOR-TIP-ALERT
>>i take my good find to a thrift shop, e.g. Housing Works, donate it, and get a donation receipt for which i CAN use for a deduction on my taxes towards the mortgage. [any non-profit shop will do; computers can goto Persholas.org or housing works which also takes televisions, working printers,etc.]
just make sure it's not crap, i.e., something you would use if you wanted to keep it for yourself. good for kharma.
Leave a Comment
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