early morning flight
en route to Park City for
Sundance yet again
HAIKU
early morning flight
en route to Park City for
Sundance yet again
SALMAGUNDI
Most awesome music video ever.
Audiolizing the medalists' leads.
Reduce salt? Who the hell knows.
Williamsurg: reality vs. real estate listing.
Calvin & Hobbes snow art. [Via]
Tips for the iPhone Dragon Dictation app.
Disney's Jewish American Princess.
The biggest disappointments of the '00s.
SEE ALSO
Other Blogs
Past:
Haiku
Salmagundi
RSS: Haiku
Salmagundi
FURTHER NARCISSISM
About Joshua Newman
[@joshuanewman]
Cyan Pictures
CrossFit NYC
PRIOR GENIUS
Everything Archived
Autobiography (11)
Best Of (64)
Blogging (36)
City Life (70)
Cooking (14)
Crazy Theories (42)
Culture Consumption (29)
Dating (53)
Disclosures (53)
Entrepreneurship (53)
Exploits (61)
Filmmaking (70)
Fitness (20)
Friends & Family (29)
Guest Blog (5)
Jess (20)
Judaism (10)
Odds & Ends (61)
Podcast (3)
Politics (13)
Productivity (23)
Quotes (70)
Re-run (1)
Restaurants (11)
Science (7)
Style (25)
Techmology (14)
Toys (14)
Travel (37)
Troublemaking (16)
Trumpet (16)
Writing (3)
COLOPHON
Contact Joshua
Subscribe vis RSS
This weekend, Jess and I headed out to the Brooklyn Flea, a large and quirky crafts fair and flea market in Fort Greene.
Jess is in her element at such places - she has strong taste, obsessively tracks style trends, and can somehow spot the single gem buried in a table of piled crap. She'll pick up a necklace for $20 one week, and the next we'll be in Henri Bendel, seeing the same thing on sale for $2000.
My own flea market duties, on the other hand, don't really involve item selection. Instead, I'm left with bargaining down the prices of purchases, vetoing anything ill-fitting or overly terrifying, and - most importantly - navigating.
The layout of the Brooklyn Flea, much like nearly every other flea market (and perhaps the minds of most of the vendors), is a convoluted mess. So it's my job to make sure our wandering path nonetheless takes us past all of the stalls.
This weekend, however, I slacked off on that navigation duty, following Jess rather than directing her at each turn.
Jess stopped, for example, at a large booth full of earrings, and exclaimed that this guy actually had really great stuff.
To which I replied that I knew he did. Mainly because Jess had purchased a pair of earrings from him about ten minutes earlier.
And it occurred to me then that perhaps my directing us was robbing Jess of a large percentage of the fun. Left to her own devices, any flea market would seem several times as large; given even a few minutes in between, she could apparently return to the same stalls again and again, each time excited to rifle through them as though for the first time.