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| | Strategist writer Erin Schwartz. Photo-Illustration: The Strategist; Photos: Retailers | | Welcome to How I Pick My Picks â a kind-of-regular newsletter series where we check in with the Strategist staff on the stuff theyâre using day-to-day, the products theyâre testing for stories, and the things their friends and family wonât stop asking them about. Consider it a peek into the always-whirring brain of a Strategist writer. Today, we talk to home-décor, gardening, and clothing-care writer Erin Schwartz. |
Iâm a home-décor writer at the Strategist, so Iâm always tweaking things in my apartment. I donât like to spend a ton of money on these projects â in part because Iâm a renter and want to be able to pack everything up and move it someday, and in part because the cost of living in New York has gotten insane. If I want cool furniture, I need to get creative with what I already have or can find for cheap. |
My current home-DIY project is a mirror. Months ago, I found a Craigslist post for âPORTHOLE with many uses, wooden, sturdy, beautiful,â listed for $7 with a few grainy photos of a roughly four-foot square of honey-colored plywood with a large circle cut out of the center. I had to buy it. (The seller, it turns out, was moving to Florida; his husband had decorated their Hellâs Kitchen apartment in a nautical theme years ago, lots of blues and grays and two custom-cut wooden portholes.) |
Iâm using four metal brackets to sandwich a piece of mirror between the porthole and the wall â the porthole becomes a way to fake a circular mirror, a similar theory to a popular Gustaf Westman mirror that nests a rectangular mirror inside a custom-cut wiggly wooden frame. Plus, doing things with my hands â both home DIYs and tending to my two-dozen-ish houseplants â is a good break from working with text on screens all day. Itâs like crop rotation of the mind; if something I do often depletes one resource, I look for a hobby with different requirements to balance it out. (And the Craigslist adventures are worth it alone.) |
Whatâs the product that friends and family always ask for your advice on? |
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The one thing I recommend to everyone is getting a soft tailorâs tape measure. Theyâre $3 on Amazon, but you can also find them at any craft store or dollar store. It will unlock a world of great-fitting clothing to buy online and dramatically reduce the number of things you have to return because they fit weird. Most vintage sellers list measurements, but if not, itâs normal etiquette to send the seller a message asking for specific dimensions. (As a short king, I often ask for the sleeve length, shoulder width, and total length.) |
| GDMINLO Soft Tape Measure, $3 at amazon » |
Do you have any strongly held opinions that changed after testing? |
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Iâve become sort of obsessed with what I call âsolved products,â categories in which thereâs already an item on the market thatâs affordable, reliable, and would only get worse with tweaks or upgrades. (The Lodge cast-iron pan is a classic solved product; ditto Felco garden pruners.) I used to think every category had its solution, even if it hadnât been invented yet. But when working on our article on bar carts, I realized that itâs more fun when thatâs not the case. I talked to a ton of drinks and design people about bar carts, and each of them had a different answer, some which werenât even furniture; gin distiller Morgan McLachlan uses the top of her piano. I think we will never solve for bar carts, and thatâs okay. Beautiful, even. |
| FELCO Classic Manual Hand Pruner, $59 at amazon » |
Whatâs the least amount of money you should spend on, for example, a dining chair? |
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If youâre buying new, Iâd say you can get a pretty solid dining chair for $60 â thatâs the price of the Article Svelti, my best-in-class pick. If youâre buying vintage or secondhand, $20. Or free! You can find great free furniture on the street or on Craigslist. Just look for something sturdy and trust your intuition. |
| Svelti Aloe Dining Chair, $59 at article » |
What are you currently testing and researching? |
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Iâve been deep in a quilt hole for the past week â I love all the different things a quilt can be made of and used for. While trying to ID some patchwork-quilt patterns, I found this great resource from Michigan State University called the Quilt Index, which has been online since 2003. |
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Whatâs the last thing you bought? |
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I bought a few things at the Baserange archive sale, which had some incredible deals; I mentioned it to deals editor Sam Daly because Iâll never gate-keep a good sale. I got a knit polo and one of the brandâs lettuce-edged long-sleeve tees with a yawning hole just south of your right nipple. The shirt wants to ride up, which is why, I imagine, it was on sale. But since I got top surgery six months ago, I am going through the canon event of wearing a ton of artsy nipple-baring tops, so itâs perfect for me. |
| Baserange Puma Yungco Long-Sleeve, $100 at Garmentory » |
Whatâs the most expensive product you own? |
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My sofa and coffee table. Theyâre secondhand Gae Aulenti for Knoll that I got from Aran Simi, a.k.a. The Fetish Priest, a vintage seller who is incredible at historicizing his stock and is just a really nice person. I got a good deal in exchange for being able to pick it up ASAP â it was about $2,100 for both the three-seater sofa and the coffee table. It was worth it; both the couch and table are well made and durable, with a heavy metal frame. Iâm still kind of mystified that I found it at a price I could afford. Thinking about anything happening to my couch and table is the only reason I have renterâs insurance. |
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If you had to spend $1,000 at Home Depot, what would you buy? |
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What are some open tabs on your computer right now? Whatâs on your list but you canât bring yourself to buy it just yet? |
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I keep my shopping list on Airtable to avoid tab clutter (hereâs a link). Some things I wish I could justify buying right now: a latex polo shirt from British company Libidex in the âtranslucent naturalâ color (I picked up its button-down shirt last year, but it didnât fit right, so I resold it on Depop; Iâm hoping the polo will fit better), an undyed wool rug from Hook & Loom, and a photo-printed fire pillowcase from the brand Serapis. |
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