Est. 2026 · Curated Vintage Home Goods
Timeless finds for collectors who want spaces with history, not inventory. Each item is chosen for its character, story, and enduring beauty.
Sourced from estate sales, antique markets, and places that don't advertise.
The Collection
Brass fixtures, ceramic bases, period glass shades. The kind of light that makes a room feel inhabited, not just lit.
Ornate, gilt, carved. Mirrors that have watched over fireplaces and entryways for decades. Now they watch over yours.
Ironstone, speckleware, hand-thrown pitchers. Things meant to be used, not displayed. Though you can display them too.
Cabinets, dressers, small tables. Solid wood, real joinery, built to outlast the room it lives in.
How We Source
We don't buy from wholesalers. We don't dropship. Every piece in the Curated81 collection was found by hand — at estate sales before the doors open, at antique markets at dawn, from sellers who know exactly what they have and why it's worth saving.
That means our inventory is always rotating, never unlimited, and always one-of-a-kind. When something sells, it's gone. Which is exactly the point.
"The fastest way to make a room feel like it was never actually lived in is to fill it with things that have never lived at all."
We started Curated81 because we're tired of beautiful rooms that feel staged. New things have no stories. Mass-produced things have no character. When you buy something vintage, you're buying the accumulated history of an object — the hands that made it, the rooms it occupied, the people who chose it before you.
A brass lamp that lit a reading nook in a 1960s brownstone. A ceramic bowl that held oranges on a farm kitchen table. A mirror that reflected three generations of morning routines. Those objects carry something that can't be manufactured.
— The Curated81 Philosophy
Curated81 is for people who believe that
No algorithm selected these items. No warehouse stored them. Just one person's eye, moving through the world, finding things worth keeping — and passing them on.
81. The house number of the first owner. A reminder that every home has a story worth continuing.