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    Vintage Finds

    Dallas design adventurers must explore this new Oak Cliff vintage shop

    Kendall Morgan
    kendall Morgan
    Jul 6, 2016 | 9:00 am

    Antique dealers are a special breed. They don’t mind rising at the crack of dawn, they find treasure in a pile of trash, and their knowledge of design styles and eras borders on the encyclopedic.

    When two of them get together to open a boutique, it’s a very lucky day for the Dallas collector.

    Friends since a fateful bocce tournament three years ago, Shad Kvetko and partner Joe Ramirez had been selling and dealing treasures years before teaming their resources for a series of shopping events in Ramirez’s empty storefront.

    “When Shad and I met, we discovered we had similar businesses, and we decided to host a pop-up sale in February,” says Oak Cliff native Ramirez. “It was a huge success, so we started talking about opening a store. One thing led to another, and here we are.”

    Pulled together in just three weeks, Oak Cliff Vintage is housed in a 500-square-foot space just down the road from Bishop Arts, at 443 W. Davis St. in Oak Cliff. The boutique, which opened July 1, has an effortless blend of midcentury furniture, industrial desks, gorgeous glass, and funky collectibles.

    Ramirez specializes in online paintings, sculptures, and antiques, which he has dealt through his Davis Mercantile website for the past several years. Kvetko literally grew up surrounded by antiques in Arizona — his father opened his first shop two years after Kvetko was born in 1972. Finally joining the family business in 2001, Kvetko has stashed a warehouse full of treasures in Austin since the mid-2000s.

    “I’d just gone back to Phoenix for my father’s 70th birthday, so I picked up a lot of stuff when I was there, and I have a large amount of back stock,” says Kvetko, who also has a booth in Dolly Python for his weirder treasures. “Oak Cliff Vintage will be mostly 20th-century furniture, art deco, midcentury, and some Hollywood Regency. We’re not glamour dealers — we want all different kinds of budgets to buy something.”

    Prices range from $12 to $3,000, and a Danish modern bookcase set can be had for under a grand. Because Kvetko says the trend has gone from a “collector’s market to a decorator’s market,” the dusty, anything-goes antique shop of yore won’t fly here. Instead, Oak Cliff Vintage is carefully curated and delightfully displayed by Kvetko’s wife, Leigh (who also created its logo), in tableaus that allows buyers to imagine how everything could look in their own home.

    “My dad’s shop was a wonderful jumble of different eras and things — his philosophy was if you had to display it, it probably wasn’t worth shit,” laughs Kvetko. “That doesn’t work as well in the market anymore, although certain things are so popular they sell themselves.”

    Among the Western kitsch, wheel cogs, vintage film posters, and Blenko glassware adorning those midcentury desks and shelving will be Leigh's collection of graphic deadstock fabric, plus cactuses housed in vintage pots from Kvetko’s side project, Oak Cliff Cactus Corral.

    This anything-goes mix may feel unusual at first, but Kvetko says it’s a longstanding tradition for the sharp-eyed decorator.

    “There’s so many design blogs and magazines that feature that kind of thing, where you’re mixing French chairs with a Saarinen table, but that was big in the '70s. After modernism lost its capital M, people were putting styles together and doing bold interiors. It’s for the more adventurous in taste, and the good thing about decorating with vintage stuff is you’ll have something not a lot of other people have.”

    Oak Cliff Vintage is open noon to 7 pm and by appointment, Friday through Sunday.

    A slogan inspired by Kvetko's mescal-tasting parties accents a back wall.

    Oak Cliff Vintage
      
    Photo by Kendall Morgan
    A slogan inspired by Kvetko's mescal-tasting parties accents a back wall.
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    In the spotlight

    Dallas' most famous Christmas-light home to shine on new Hallmark show

    Stephanie Allmon Merry
    Dec 11, 2024 | 2:51 pm
    Burkman Holiday Home of Frisco
    Facebook/BurkmanHolidayHome
    The famous Burkman Holiday Home of Frisco is making its Hallmark TV debut.

    A family Christmas light display that's so over the top, it looks like a Hallmark movie set is about to get its close-up on the famous holiday-entertainment network: The Burkman Holiday Home of Friscowill appear on the first episode of a new series called Ready, Set, Glow!, premiering on the Hallmark+ streaming service Thursday, December 12.

    On the show, host Wes Brown will meet four families "whose Christmas decorations have been making spirits bright for generations," says the series' website. "The only thing better than these displays are the heartwarming stories behind them."

    The Burkman family - husband-and-wife Corey and Jen, adult sons Alex and Jack, and Jen's dad, Eugene Skalskyj (known as "Sanpa") - have been lighting up their Frisco home at 3809 Hazelhurst Dr. for nearly a decade. Their "extreme" display - 115,000 lights and counting - attracts thousands of visitors from North Texas and beyond each year. It also raises money for a scholarship fund, supports families in need, and donates to the nonprofit The LiyanaStrong Foundation.

    The Burkmans are no strangers to the TV spotlight. In 2021, they competed on ABC's holiday decorating show The Great Christmas Light Fight and appeared on Live with Kelly and Ryan.

    Ready, Set, Glow! isn't a competition, but an unscripted series that goes "behind the lights," Brown says. The show will stream on Hallmark's new membership-based streaming platform, Hallmark+ (access a free trial here).

    Wes Brown, Ready Set Glow, Hallmark+Wes Brown, host of the new Hallmark+ show Ready, Set, Glow!Photo courtesy of Hallmark+

    We chatted with Jen Burkman recently about the family's experience on Ready, Set, Glow!, how filming compared to The Great Christmas Light Fight, and what's new with their lights display this year.

    CultureMap: How did you get picked to be on this new Hallmark show?
    Jen Burkman: I received an email from the production company at Hallmark. They found us through our Facebook page, and by Googling large light displays. We come up as one of the top displays in the country. It’s exciting because it’s a brand new show and we are on the very first episode. We’re very honored to be selected for that.

    CM: What is the story will they tell on the show?
    JB: They will have three different things that they do in each episode. They will showcase homes with large displays that have a cause behind it, neighborhoods that go extremely far out for decorating, in towns that resemble a Hallmark Christmas town. So it is not a competition. This was something that really drew us towards it. They wanted to know more about our backstory, why we do what we do, and what it means to the community. That encompassed everything that we are about. (The Burkmans started their holiday displays when son Alex, who was autistic, developed a love of lights.)

    CM: When was filming ... did you have to keep it a secret?
    JB: The filming was in the middle of December 2023. We did have to keep it secret on social media. However, they did allow us to reach out to our neighborhood. So it’s even more special to us that we got to personally invite our neighbors to be a part of the TV show with us. The majority of the filming was just our family, but there are going to be elements of our neighborhood and our neighbors cheering us on.

    Burkman Holiday Home FriscoJen Burkman's father is known as "San-pa." Photo courtesy of Burkman family

    CM: What was the actual filming like?
    JB: We had a great time! We had the production company from Glass Entertainment with producer Matt Carter, who was amazing. He brought along about 10 people from his production company - light and sound guys, drone operators, boom operators, sound eliminators. There was so much equipment.

    We did some interviews inside our home, so you’ll get to see some of our overly decorated inside of our house, and obviously a ton of footage outside, as well. It took us about 15 hours to film, for probably 15 to 20 minutes of airtime. We had our immediate family and probably 50 people from our neighborhood. We have the most incredible neighbors who are so supportive of our display so it honestly meant the world to us that they were involved.

    CM: How did filming this show compare to your experience on The Great Christmas Light Fight?
    JB: It was totally a different experience. The Great Christmas Light Fight was an honor to be selected; over 200 people auditioned and only 24 of us were selected. So even though we didn’t win our episode, it was a dream come true to even compete on that scale. But it was a competition, so I think we felt more stressed out because we really wanted to win. We also filmed Light Fight in 2020. So all the Covid protocols were in place, we had to get tested every single day, and we couldn’t have a crowd.

    Hallmark was an absolutely different experience. We felt relaxed, and we had so much fun knowing that we weren’t competing against other families. We just got to share our story and our love for the holidays. And to be able to celebrate our neighbors and our nonprofit foundation was pretty outstanding.

    CM: Any fun behind-the-scenes stories to tell?
    JB: Within a half a day, we felt like we had known the crew our entire lives. By 11 o’clock at night, we were still doing interviews in our living room, and our family and the film crew were just slap happy. We were snort-laughing at ourselves for saying things incorrectly and practically falling asleep in our chairs. One thing that totally made us laugh, because it never happens, in the middle of filming with a huge crowd in our front yard, this rabbit came across the driveway and just sat in the display, looking at everybody, as if it was a lawn figurine. That rabbit may have its own spotlight on the show. We will see.

    Burkman Holiday Home, Christmas lightsThe display features some new arches for picture-taking this year.Facebook/Burkman Holiday Home

    CM: What's new with your holiday display this year?
    JB: We have 115,000 lights, 90% LED. So the light bill is cheaper than the August AC bill. We have a new area in the display called "Santa Land." It is all things Santa, including a Santa toy box that you can stand in for a selfie. We introduced Bluey at the display this year, and it was a total hit. We have some new arches to take pictures in and walk-through and you’ll see some old familiar friends doing some guest appearances. 2025 will be our 10th anniversary of doing displays in this house so we’re expecting great things for next year.

    CM: What's it like to be Christmas-light famous?
    JB: We are so honored to be a part of this community and to continue to have so many people come year after year. On Sunday, I had a beautiful lady show me a picture of her daughter as an infant in front of the display, and her daughter is now 5 years old. To see them take the same picture, year after year, of their little girl just truly touches my heart. We love being part of families' Christmas traditions. We love being able to support our sponsored families every year. And being able to hand scholarships out to these amazing individuals in our community is pretty heartwarming. We couldn’t do it without our neighbors, the communities of Frisco and Little Elm, and everybody who drives from all over Texas, just to come see our lights.

    ---

    The Burkmans' episode of Ready, Set, Glow! will stream on Thursday, December 12 on Hallmark+. The Burkman Holiday Home is at 3809 Hazelhurst Dr., Frisco, 75036. Open from 5:30-10 Sunday-Thursday and 5:30-11 Friday-Saturday through December 28. Follow them on their Facebook page for updates, such as special themes for photo sessions. For a list of other spectacular Dallas-area Christmas lights, go here, and for best neighborhoods, visit this list.

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