Homes & Antiques

TREASURE TROVE

A seaside villa that’s a canvas for a ourishing antiques business

- FEATURE AMY MAYNARD PHOTOGRAPH­S RICHARD GADSBY

Emma and David Mann’s house in Hastings has both the feel of a quirky museum and that of a welcoming home. Visitors ! nd it hard to decide between wandering the rooms gazing at the objects covering every surface or accepting the o"er of a cup of tea and se# ling down by there.

It was during a spur- of-the-moment visit to trawl the town’s plentiful junk shops over a decade ago that the couple noticed the area’s beautiful housing stock. A few months later they had swapped their small home in west London for a vast four-bedroom Victorian villa by the sea.

‘ We love the proportion­s of the house,’ says David, and Emma adds that it was the 12$ ceilings and large rooms that really sold it. ‘ We are so lucky that lots of the original features are still here – the sash windows, ornate cornicing, ceiling roses and marble ! replaces.’

The couple met in London’s Shepherd’s Bush over 20 years ago, when they lived in neighbouri­ng % ats, and a mutual interest in interiors led

to the perfect partnershi­p. ‘ It’s fortuitous that our passion for antiques indirectly brought us to this house,’ says Emma.

In April 2015, when a black weatherboa­rded toilet block on the seafront came up for auction, the couple seized the chance to turn their love of collecting antiques into a business. The result is Flushed, a wi! ily named vintage store- cum- cafe not far from the house. The loos were ripped out and replaced with an eclectic mix of vintage art, fabric, books, bric- a-brac and furniture. Customers can also enjoy a cup of coffee and a slice of cake while they browse.

Since then, the house has become a revolving store room, with pieces coming and going. It does beg the question, though, don’t they end up ge! ing a! ached to things they’ve bought for the shop? The answer is yes. ‘ We buy stu " to sell in Flushed and store it at home. Emma puts a price tag on it and, if I like the piece, I take it o" again!’ says David.

Living with a constantly shi # ing selection of paintings, religious and naval artefacts and antique furniture has become the norm for the couple’s two children, Harvey (18) and Milly (16). Their parents’ penchant for collectabl­es has been woven into the fabric of their lives for as long as they can remember. ‘ Whereas most children would come back from a holiday in France with their colouring books in their li! le rucksacks, we made our two carry small antiques,’ laughs Emma. ‘And when Harvey was a baby, David made him a mobile from a carved gilt phoenix and Sanderson fabric remnants.’ These days, he has graduated to a 19th- century Breton oak wardrobe.

‘ My dad and I used to read naval $ction, like the Hornblower series by CS Forester, and I love the sea, so I have lots of nautical memorabili­a. Among my favourites is a collection of early 19th- century engravings of captains that are lining the hall and starting to creep into the bedroom.’

The religious artefacts that are do! ed around the house were gathered many years earlier when they converted a redundant Grade I-listed church in Kent. Emma’s most treasured possession­s are the ones that have been with the couple since the early days of their relationsh­ip. ‘ David recently tried to take an ornamental brass box from the house to sell at the shop but I wouldn’t let him, because we bought it on a beach in India years ago and every time I look at it I think of that holiday,’ she says.

Now that they have the business, Emma and David have the perfect excuse to spend even more time at auction houses, fairs and "ea markets and they love nothing more than spending hours browsing. ‘ Even before we had the shop, we loved going to the fairs. It’s such a fascinatin­g day out, even if you don’t end up buying anything. There is always so much to see,’ says David. ‘ We both love the feeling of understate­d grandeur that antiques exude.’

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 ??  ?? The house is an Italianate villa, built in 1879. It was reputedly the home of the notorious taxidermis­t George Bristow (1863– 1947) who was behind the Hastings Rarities affair.
The house is an Italianate villa, built in 1879. It was reputedly the home of the notorious taxidermis­t George Bristow (1863– 1947) who was behind the Hastings Rarities affair.
 ??  ?? LEFT The kilim pouffes and cushions in the sitting room are from the souks in Marrakesh. The gilt overmantel mirror is from Tinker & Toad, Heathfield. FACING PAGE CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT The clock and candelabra on the mantelpiec­e are from Clignancou­rt flea market, Paris. The couple found the fire bucket at Courthouse Street Yard in Hastings; vintage prints of seaside scenes collected from charity shops, flea markets and auctions line the hall walls; David’s early 19th-century prints of naval post-captains and admirals found in junk shops and reframed in mismatched antique frames; the bedroom mantelpiec­e is home to clocks and candelabra amassed over the years from French dépôts-vente.
LEFT The kilim pouffes and cushions in the sitting room are from the souks in Marrakesh. The gilt overmantel mirror is from Tinker & Toad, Heathfield. FACING PAGE CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT The clock and candelabra on the mantelpiec­e are from Clignancou­rt flea market, Paris. The couple found the fire bucket at Courthouse Street Yard in Hastings; vintage prints of seaside scenes collected from charity shops, flea markets and auctions line the hall walls; David’s early 19th-century prints of naval post-captains and admirals found in junk shops and reframed in mismatched antique frames; the bedroom mantelpiec­e is home to clocks and candelabra amassed over the years from French dépôts-vente.
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 ??  ?? ABOVE Carved wooden columns from Cochin flea market, India stand sentry in the hallway. The hall table was handmade by David from half a Henri II-style French table with the top from a marble washstand. RIGHT The cherry wood Henri II dining table came from a dépôt-vente in Boulogne, and the candelabra and chandelier are from Amiens flea market. BELOW Antique glasses and beer steins from Amiens flea market.
ABOVE Carved wooden columns from Cochin flea market, India stand sentry in the hallway. The hall table was handmade by David from half a Henri II-style French table with the top from a marble washstand. RIGHT The cherry wood Henri II dining table came from a dépôt-vente in Boulogne, and the candelabra and chandelier are from Amiens flea market. BELOW Antique glasses and beer steins from Amiens flea market.
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 ??  ?? The glass shop display cabinet is a wonderful way to store glassware and ceramics. It came from Eras of Style in Hurst Green. Propped on the floor, the oil of daffodils is from Franklin’s Antiques & Interiors, Portslade.
The glass shop display cabinet is a wonderful way to store glassware and ceramics. It came from Eras of Style in Hurst Green. Propped on the floor, the oil of daffodils is from Franklin’s Antiques & Interiors, Portslade.
 ??  ?? David converted the bedroom mirror from an armoire door. A St Ives railway poster, from an antiques shop in Cornwall, hangs above a chintz- covered chair the couple inherited from David’s mother. The display of clocks and candelabra on the mantelpiec­e has been collected over the years from French flea markets and dépôts-vente.
David converted the bedroom mirror from an armoire door. A St Ives railway poster, from an antiques shop in Cornwall, hangs above a chintz- covered chair the couple inherited from David’s mother. The display of clocks and candelabra on the mantelpiec­e has been collected over the years from French flea markets and dépôts-vente.
 ??  ?? ABOVE The Medici print above the bed came from Antiques on Sea, St Leonards, and the sailing print is by Montague Dawson. The bedside table is Kashmiri, from Roberts Rummage, Hastings and David made the lamp base from an old table leg.
ABOVE The Medici print above the bed came from Antiques on Sea, St Leonards, and the sailing print is by Montague Dawson. The bedside table is Kashmiri, from Roberts Rummage, Hastings and David made the lamp base from an old table leg.
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 ??  ?? ABOVE The Victorian chest of drawers is from RG Scott Furniture Mart in Margate. The print of Nelson was found in an antiques shop in Leominster and the Sea Scout hat is David’s, from when he was a child. BELOW The Indian folding table on the upstairs landing came from Hastings Antiques Centre in St Leonards-on-Sea. A beautiful kantha throw from Ardingly antiques fair covers an old armchair; the woodwork in the book-lined loo, with its school house lamp from Hoof Brocante in Brookland, is painted a cheerful green.
ABOVE The Victorian chest of drawers is from RG Scott Furniture Mart in Margate. The print of Nelson was found in an antiques shop in Leominster and the Sea Scout hat is David’s, from when he was a child. BELOW The Indian folding table on the upstairs landing came from Hastings Antiques Centre in St Leonards-on-Sea. A beautiful kantha throw from Ardingly antiques fair covers an old armchair; the woodwork in the book-lined loo, with its school house lamp from Hoof Brocante in Brookland, is painted a cheerful green.
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