White Salmon Washington Estate Sale 50% off

estate sale | 1 day sale | sale is over
Address
The address for this sale in White Salmon, WA 98672 will no longer be shown since it has already ended.
Dates
Sun
Jun 8
10am to 2pm

Terms & Conditions

DO NOT call asking for prices. We do not offer bulk pricing, all items are priced individually. We are busy researching pricing items and do not have time to answer questions. Come to the sale. Keep your oversized purses and tote/shopping bags in your car. We have shopping baskets and employees to take your things off your hands to put on the hold table with your name.
Please bring help to load large items
NO restrooms available to use onsite
Not responsible for accidents in house or on property
Most of all, BE KIND. This is someone’s life’s collection; an estate sale - not a garage sale.
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Foundstuff Estate Sales & Appraisals

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Description & Details

Many items will be 50% off Sunday, kitchenware, glassware, cookware and framed posters

30% off all original paintings in upstair loft, generator, power stations, bike, camp stoves

10% off showcase items or items of check out table 

 
 

Do you have eclectic taste for incredible one of a kind art that was commissioned around the world? We have a fabulous sale upcoming in White Salmon Washington with art and many other wonderful pieces of furniture, jewelry, camp gear and more! 
Plan your weekend to the Gorge and cross over the bridge from Hood River to the wonderful town of White Salmon. This is a once in a lifetime opportunity to own a piece or several pieces of the talented John Brandi, Mike Teutul- Wolfgang, Ken Dune, Victor Venegas, Terry Saleh or many other spectacular artists. My clients have enjoyed this art for over 30 plus years and ready to let it go for others to enjoy in their homes. If you are a collector of great art, you do not want to miss this sale! 
We will have some wonderful watches available never worn Mens Omega Watch, Tag Heuer watch and many other quality watches, beautiful Juan C Pallarols Sterling knife in Sterling sheath with case. Will have other sterlings items and jewelry brought in day of sale. 

We have some great camping items for sale for your upcoming camping trips. 
Duelfuel Champion 2500 watt inverter, coolers, Camp stoves all like new, CampChef, Magma , like new Weize lithium battery with charger, Ecoflow Delta power supply, looflighter, ocean kayak, Yamaha Bike rack, Kolpin utility baskets, tents, oversized camp chairs and so much more. 


We have available the holy Grail of trailers a 2021 Airstream with only 20,000 miles.Looks and smells brand new, now that is glamping in style! 

Like new E-bike with only 151 miles, Co-op CTY E2.2

Kenmore Chest freezer, lots of quality Calphalon cookware, Le Cresuet Orange teapot, Lodge cast iron pans including a 17 inch one, Smithey cast iron pan and lots of misc kitchen items. 

Do you love to read? We have hundreds and Hundreds  of hardback novels and paperback books for sell. 

We have a beautiful Chinese medicine cabinet, nightstands, dressers, Most breathtaking hand painted drop leaf desk and 9 drawer cabinet, gorgeous wood entry table and two beautiful display cabinets available. These items will be available to view with entry into the house with one of us. House is not open to view without assistance. 
 

Hope to see you at this once in a lifetime Art collection sale to find a painting or other treasures to take home. 

The drive to White Salmon is so beautiful and relaxing plus the town is so quaint with fun shops and food. Make it a trip with a visit over to Hood River for more adventures and fun! 

 

BIOGRAPHY OF John Brandi 


John Brandi, poet and painter, is a native of Southern California. He graduated in 1965 from California State University, Northridge, with a B.A. in art and anthropology. As a Peace Corps Volunteer (1966-68), he worked with Quechua-speaking Andean farmers in their struggle for land rights and civil liberties. While in Ecuador he began keeping elaborate journals, a practice which he still observes. He also began publishing his poetry in hand-sewn mimeograph editions as part of the "do-it-yourself" phenomenon that preceded the alternative-press movement. Returning to North America, he joined protests against the American War in Vietnam, and lived in Alaska, Mexico, and the San Francisco Bay Area, where he continued to write. In 1970, David Meltzer, a member of the San Francisco Renaissance, published Brandi's first collection of prose poems, Desde Alla. Soon after, he took up residence in a miner's shack in the Sierra Nevada foothills. On San Juan Ridge he met Gary Snyder, who introduced him to Japanese poet-wanderer Nanao Sakaki. In 1971 Brandi moved to New Mexico, built a hand-hewn cabin in a remote canyon, and founded Tooth of Time Books, which published the first books of several poets who would become internationally recognized.

During his early years in the American Southwest, Brandi traveled the high desert with Nanao Sakaki (Essay: Nanao or Never), compiled a collection of poetry titled That Back Road In, and earned a living by teaching as an itinerant poet. In 1979 he received a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship for Poetry. He has remained a resident of New Mexico, and continues to teach, abroad and at home, where he has been honored by several awards from the Witter Bynner Foundation for Poetry.

Brandi regards his parents as an early source of inspiration, citing his boyhood travels with them to the Big Sur Coast and the mountains of Yosemite. As he writes in Reflections in the Lizard's Eye: "Following each excursion I was asked to draw something I remembered from the trip, then write a couple sentences. These were bound into my first 'books' ... inspired by the notion that one traveled, observed, felt the world, then returned and transformed experiences into words and paint."

Brandi traveled the Americas from southern Chile to Alaska during the Sixties. In 1979 he made the first of many journeys to India to retrace his father's stay as a soldier in the India-Burma Theater. Visits to the Himalayas, China, Cuba, Vietnam, and the Indonesian archipelago have inspired many of his books, including A Question of Journey, a collection of prose, and Water Shining Beyond the Fields, haibun essays from Southeast Asia.

San Francisco Poet Laureate Jack Hirschman has said of Brandi: "He has been an open roader for much of his life and like his two great forbearers, Whitman and Neruda, has named the minute particulars, the details of his sojournings, infusing them with a whole gamut of feelings: compassionate, mischievous, loving and righteous. It's what's made his poetry one of the solid bodies of work that's emerged from the North American West since the '60s."

Novelist John Nichols, in his introduction to Brandi's book of essays Reflections in the Lizard's Eye, has written: "The way Brandi interprets the world is rich with the guts and gusto of old-fashioned magicians. His is a bittersweet, loving vision, as well as a hardass, heartfelt swansong to the disappearing vestiges of a more truthful way of life."

As a poet he owes much to the West Coast Beat tradition, as well as to poets as diverse as Federico Garcia Lorca and the Japanese haiku masters. As a painter, his mixed media work, often integrating words and paint, is bright with expressionist colors, while his more subtle haiga paintings draw on Asian influences.

John Brandi's publications include poetry, travel essays, modern American haiku, haibun, hand-colored broadsides, and limited-edition letter-press books. Four of his titles have been published in India. Recent books of poetry include: Facing High Water and In What Disappears. His stories about Southwest travels are collected in Reflections in the Lizard's Eye. His new and selected haiku appear in Seeding the Cosmos.

He has been a guide and lecturer for students of Ft. Lewis College in Bali and for students of San Juan College in Chiapas. He co-curated the "Jack Kerouac and the Writer's Life" exhibit in Santa Fe, 2007; lectured on the practice of haiku at the Palace of Governor's Museum, Santa Fe; at Lindenwood University, Saint Louis; and at Punjab University, India. In 2009 he gave the keynote address for the Haiku North America conference in Ottawa. In 2011 he was honored with an exhibit of his modern American haiga at the Chavez History Museum, Santa Fe. His papers are in the University of California Bancroft Library, Berkeley. A complete selection of his books and broadsides may be found at UC Berkeley Special Collections, University at Buffalo Special Collections, and at the Fray Angélico Chávez History Library, Santa Fe, NM.

John Brandi lives with his wife, poet Renée Gregorio, in El Rito, New Mexico, where he continues to write, paint, and nurture a few melons in the garden.

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