Brimfield Antique Show
Trying to find anything specific at a Brimfield Antique Show is like trying to find the elusive needle in a haystack. Alas, North Americaâs oldest outdoor flea market is the perfect place to get lost for hoursâor days or weeks even, if it were open that longâenchanted by object after object, each one stranger and a little bit more bizarre than the next. In a world where itâs becoming increasingly hard to find authentic vintage or antique jewelry to shop in-person, Brimfield is the perfect place to hunt for whimsical baubles, eclectic chunky gold necklaces and 150-year-old gems from the Victorian era with time and patience. Under wooden shacks, billowing tents and on top of thick plastic tables, you never know what you might find.
Located in rural Massachusetts, the market unfurls each year across miles of empty fields for six days at a time in May, July and September. Iâve been going for years, and make a point to try to return at least once a year in May, when the sun isnât too scorching. The market is free to attend (besides paying for parking) and divided into sections, aptly named everything from âQuaker Acresâ to âNew England Motelâ. You can find almost anything you ever wanted at Brimfield. But my favorite thing to look for? Maximalist costume jewelry.
Every time I go, I typically start out at the âBrimfield Auction Acresâ area, which is ample hunting ground for jewelry with great prices. There are hundreds of vendors in this section alone, and jewelry is mostly displayed in bins or scattered on tables rather than placed under glass. Finding pieces that speak to you takes time, but almost instantly, I can tell if a particular seller is going to resonate with my style.
After about an hour into my 2024 excursion, I find a tent that I love and end up buying a couple of antique books full of prints of birds and flowers, some Victorian decorated sugar eggs, two 1920s hats, and a pink Victorian era beaded bag. But no jewelry. I find myself looking at some pink depression glass a few tables over and eye a pair of massive navy blue and yellow resin earringsâthe kind you canât place a date on. They could be as early as the 1940s or as late as the early 2000s, and thatâs what I love about them. I snap a quick photo and do a reverse Google image search to see if any information comes up or if thereâs anything similar listed online. Thereâs nothingâeven better. For $15, theyâre an instant yes. Right before paying, I almost miss a pair of cherry red Christian Dior sunglasses with matching red lenses that look to be from the 1960s. I try them on; itâs too bad theyâre prescription.
Before moving on to the next field, I spot a table full of cases that caught the light, and one ring in particular that I have to have: a stunning mint green and coral hued ram head cocktail ring by American designer and New York legend Hattie Carnegie. Luckily, itâs also the perfect size. Here, I also see the perfect pair of sunglasses: oversize, red, octagonalâthe same exact ones Jennifer Lawrence wears in American Hustle in black. Theyâre mine now.
Across the street is âMahogany Ridge,â which is set up with a so-called âfashion tentâ full of clothes and accessories. One could easily spend a few hours here. I find a â60s polka dot maxi dress but no jewelry. Next, I head to the âQuaker Acresâ area where there are three different covered barn structures, mostly full of jewelry, vintage bags, and delicate trinkets. Table after table after table of cases are stocked full of vintage and antique fine jewelry. I stop to look at a triple-carved shell cameo ring from the â70sâtempting, but beyond the price point I want to pay ($650). And besides, Iâm here to find costume jewelry, anyway. Out of the corner of my eye I spy a chunky gold necklace shaped like a miniature handbag, by vintage costume jewelry brand Craft. Itâs so perfect. The same vendor also has a thick, â80s style necklace, surprisingly by Chicoâs. She tells me she doesnât sell online or anywhere else but here.
In the back of my mind, Iâve also been looking for Victorian hairwork piecesâmemorial jewelry made with real hair. Theyâve always been a fascination of mine, even before Simone Rocha and Schiaparelli tapped into the trend for recent runway collections. I gasped when I saw a seller with a collection of hair brooches, bracelets, and pendantsâitâs so rare to see them in person. I leave with two large broochesâone with black enamel and a second that swivels with dual sides. As soon as I turn around, I see a table with a dreamy green pearlescent choker, unmarked, from the 1950s likely, and a pair of Hattie Carnegie clip-on earrings that donât perfectly match the ring I got earlier, but somehow still go with them. I know itâs fate. This seller also doesnât sell online or have a shop. The magic of Brimfield is that many of these sellers donâtâthey only do markets. So when you see something you like, itâs hard to pass it up.
Nearby the barns, outside, is one of my favorite maximalist costume jewelry purveyorsâwho I always save for lastâD. Brett Benson Vintage Jewelry. Hailing from West Palm Beach, almost every piece they sell is immaculately enchanting. The pieces in the case are incredible, but itâs even more fun to go through bin after bin overflowing with unorganized baggies of doorknocker necklaces and supersized clip-on earrings, most unmarked and dating as far back as the 1920s. At the table where everything cost $20, I load up on hulking gold chain necklaces, a pearl ring containing a perfume locket, an antique brooch with hands, and white square-shaped hoops with gold details. The sellers chat with me about the recent demand for authentic American costume jewelry and how itâs getting harder and harder to keep pieces in stock, as international buyers request virtual buying appointments.
I canât resist making one final round in the barns, or leaving behind a Mary Frances pumpkin-shaped bag embellished with beads and crystals. (I love a good novelty bag.) Out of the corner of my eye, I spy a pair of face earrings in a case at the same vendorâs table. I almost donât ask about them, but when I do and I find out they cost only $7, Iâm pleasantly surprised. Just when I think Iâm done, I pass by a vendor with rows and rows of ringsâall $3âand choose a pink glass one shaped like a shell. With that, Iâve secured all the secondhand maximalist costume jewelry I needâat least until next year.
The Brimfield Antique Market returns July 9â14 and September 3â8, 2024.