What do you keep when cleaning out a family attic? Discover the 6 meaningful treasures I found in my parents’ attic and how to honor inherited history.
There are few projects I’ve put off longer than cleaning out my parents’ attic at our coastal Maine home. It wasn’t that I had never been up there before. Over the years, especially after renovating the house and through the pandemic, the attic had quietly become a holding place for Christmas decorations, family keepsakes, furniture, photographs, and the boxes we promised we’d sort through “someday.”
This summer, I finally decided it was time, not necessarily to part with everything, but simply to understand what was there. A few pieces will be donated, others will find new life in our home, and some reminded me that the things we inherit aren’t always the most valuable; they’re often the most meaningful. As I worked my way through trunks and long-forgotten boxes, I rediscovered a handful of pieces that really made me smile. Hidden among the Christmas decorations, family photographs, and furniture we had tucked away “for now” were treasures that reminded me just how much history can quietly accumulate in an old attic.


In My Mother’s Maine Home
Step inside our inherited coastal Maine home where antiques, thrifted treasures, and family memories come together. Explore the full series for room-by-room decorating ideas, restoration updates, and the story behind this special place.
6 Meaningful Finds From My Parents’ Attic
Once I had a little breathing room up there, a few pieces started to stand out from the boxes, trunks, and Christmas bins. Some were things I remembered, others were tucked away so quietly I had almost forgotten they were there, but each one carried a little piece of family history worth looking at again.

The Antique Rope Bed I Hope to Sleep In Again
Of everything I rediscovered in the attic, this antique rope bed is the true hero of the story. It was used for years in our family homes, and as a child, I absolutely adored it. It sat incredibly high off the ground and completely consumed our small rooms in the best way possible. To this day, I still remember it as the most comfortable bed I’ve ever slept in.

As my parents got older, climbing into such a tall bed became impractical, and making it was a chore, so they disassembled it and tucked it away up here about 20 years ago. My dad always told me it wasn’t in working condition anymore since the original ropes were long gone. But looking at it now, I’m filled with hope. I’ve been doing some research and discovered you can actually buy restringing kits, and I fully intend to get this beauty back in working order. Stay tuned, because if all goes according to plan, I’ll be sharing the entire restoration process right here on the blog.

The history of these beds is absolutely fascinating, too. Back in the 1800s, they were often the most expensive item in a household. In fact, early firefighters actually carried “bed keys” so they could quickly disassemble and save the rope beds first during a house fire! It’s also where the old phrase “sleep tight” comes from, a reminder to keep your bed’s ropes tight and secure.


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The Quilt and Blanket I Remember From Childhood
Tucked inside one of the many trunks my mother had carefully packed away were a few pieces I hadn’t thought about in years. The first was a handmade quilt stitched by my grandmother, pieced together from scraps of fabric that likely would have otherwise gone to waste. Whether it’s an official Depression-era pattern or simply a quilt made from necessity and love, I know exactly where it came from, and somehow, that feels more important than its history.

Alongside it was a cream wool blanket with soft pink stripes, the kind of practical piece that once appeared on beds and in summer cottages throughout New England. I vaguely remembered both from my childhood, but seeing them again after all these years brought back memories I hadn’t thought about in decades.

The quilt has already found a new purpose. Using the oversized vintage textile hanger I picked up while antiquing in Quebec this summer, I’ve hung it where it can be seen and appreciated rather than tucked away in a trunk. The blanket will likely find its way back into one of our guest rooms, reminding me that sometimes the pieces worth keeping aren’t the most valuable; they’re simply the ones that still feel like home.

The Bougie Little Fur Collar Hidden in the Attic
Tucked alongside the quilts and blankets was something I never expected to find: a beautifully preserved raccoon fur collar that I believe also belonged to my grandmother. I don’t remember my mother ever wearing it, but seeing it immediately transported me to another era. I could picture my grandmother in Maine winters of the 1920s and ’30s, fastening it around her shoulders before heading out the door, adding a little warmth and a touch of elegance to an ordinary day.

Ironically, I’ve started noticing these vintage fur collars reappearing in antique shops, consignment stores, and even while antiquing through Quebec this summer. Once considered old-fashioned, they now feel like tiny pieces of wearable history.

For now, I think I’ll tuck it away in my mother’s hat box alongside her fur hat and keep it safe for another season. Maybe one winter I’ll drape it over a wool coat and give it another outing. Until then, I’m happy simply knowing that hidden inside an old trunk was a reminder that the women who came before us had their own sense of style, too.


As I unpacked these pieces, I couldn’t help but wonder:
Why had my mother packed away her mother’s treasures instead of using them? Perhaps she was saving them for another season of life that never quite arrived. It’s a gentle reminder that the things we cherish most aren’t always meant to stay hidden in trunks and attics.
The Primitive Wool Winder That Deserves Another Life
Tucked among the attic treasures was a piece I recognized immediately, an antique wooden wool winder that had long been one of my mother’s favorite things. With its simple peg construction and hand-turned mechanism, this primitive tool was once used to wind hand-spun yarn into skeins before knitting or weaving projects began. Today, they’re often collected for their sculptural beauty and rustic charm, but it’s easy to forget that they were originally everyday tools designed to make work a little easier.

What made me smile was wondering how this piece had ended up in the attic at all. Like me, my mother was always moving things around, styling a room one way and then another, so perhaps it was only meant to be tucked away temporarily. But then again, maybe it was me who tucked it away during the renovation years ago.…

I haven’t decided exactly where it will land next, but I can already picture it wrapped with a bit of yarn and displayed in one of the guest bedrooms upstairs. Sometimes the smallest treasures are the ones that quietly ask for another turn in the spotlight.
The Brass Horn Collection I Didn’t Know She Had
I thought I knew exactly what was tucked away in our family’s Christmas boxes. Over the years, I’ve decorated with several of my mother’s vintage brass horns, draping them across the mantel, nestling them into holiday displays, and tying them with festive ribbons. They’ve become one of my favorite unexpected Christmas decorating traditions.

But as I worked my way through the attic this time, I discovered there were far more than I realized.
Some appear to be vintage decorative hunting or herald horns, complete with their original braided red cords, while others resemble antique brass trumpets, often referred to as hunt bugles or French horns. Whether they were collected individually over the years or purchased as sets, each one carries the rich patina that only comes with age and use.

For now, I’ve left them hanging together in the attic, where they look like a collection all their own. But come Christmastime, I know exactly where many of them will end up. After all, some of the best holiday traditions begin by unpacking the boxes we think we already know by heart, only to discover a few more treasures waiting inside.


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My Mother’s Antique Dough Box
Of all the pieces tucked away in the attic, this antique wooden dough box may have surprised me the most. Traditionally used in the 19th century for mixing and rising bread dough, these primitive boxes were built with practicality in mind, featuring slanted sides and sturdy handles for carrying. Somewhere along the way, though, this one became part of my mother’s decorating repertoire.

I can still remember her tipping it on its side and filling it with greens, pinecones, and seasonal touches during the holidays. It wasn’t just a storage piece; it became a centerpiece of whatever season she was celebrating.
I’d completely forgotten about it until now, but rediscovering it felt like finding an old friend. Maybe I’ll fill it with quilts at the foot of a bed, use it to hold blankets in a guest room, or decorate it just as my mother once did. The best antiques are the ones that evolve with us, finding new purposes while still carrying the stories of the hands that loved them first.

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It’s Okay If It Doesn’t Mean Something to Everyone
One of the questions I’m asked most often is how I decide what to keep and what to let go of. The truth is, I don’t keep everything. Some of what came down from the attic will be donated, some will become roadside freebies, and some will simply move on to someone who can use and enjoy it.
But every now and then, a piece stops me.
Not because it’s valuable or fashionable, but because it carries a memory. I can picture my grandmother fastening that raccoon collar before heading out on a snowy Maine evening. I remember climbing into the antique rope bed as a child and thinking it was the coziest place in the world. I can still see my mother decorating with the dough box at Christmas or moving her favorite wool winder from room to room because she loved the way it looked.
These pieces won’t mean the same thing to everyone, and they don’t have to.

The quilts are worn. The brass horns are tarnished. The rope bed needs restoring. But home has never been built from perfect things. It’s built from the objects, stories, and traditions that remind us who we are and the people who loved us before we even knew to pay attention.
So keep the things that make you smile. Pass along the things that don’t. Display the heirloom quilt. Use the good dishes. Gift a treasure to another family member who will appreciate it. And don’t be afraid to let go of the guilt that says you have to keep it all, or none of it.
Sometimes, the right answer is simply keeping the pieces that still feel like home.

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The Attic’s Next Chapter
Once the boxes were sorted, the Christmas decorations organized, and the heirlooms tucked safely back into place, we finally stepped back and looked around. For the first time in years, I could actually see the attic. The organized shelves, open floor space, and exposed beams revealed something I hadn’t noticed in a very long time: possibility.

What had always felt like a dark storage space suddenly revealed itself as something else entirely: a large, open room above the garage with exposed beams, sloped ceilings, and far more potential than either of us remembered. When my parents built this retirement home, they intentionally left the space unfinished, figuring that if a future owner wanted to complete it, they could make it their own.
Standing there among the organized shelves and newly cleared floor, Steve and I looked at each other and said the same thing: “Why haven’t we done this sooner?” So, after years of talking about it, we’ve decided to get quotes to finally finish this space.
The plan is to keep everything in keeping with the rest of this old Maine home: soft pine floors underfoot, plaster-look walls, exposed beams overhead, insulation to make it comfortable year-round, and trim painted in either our beloved Nantucket Gray or one of the historic blues found throughout the house.
And, of course, I already know one piece that deserves a place of honor. I can picture the antique rope bed tucked beneath the eaves, quilts folded nearby, a television for cozy evenings, and all the little heirlooms that nearly disappeared into storage finding their way back into everyday life.

I have absolutely no idea how we’ll get furniture up those tricky stairs, and I’m sure there will be a few surprises along the way. But that’s part of the fun. I thought cleaning out the attic would simply help me understand what to keep and what to let go of. Instead, it gave us something we never expected: a whole new chapter in this old family home.

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Maybe This Is What Summer Looks Like Now
This summer has already looked a little different from what I imagined. From styling my mother’s red, white, and blue heirloom dishes for America’s 250th birthday to finally tackling the attic here at our coastal Maine home, I’ve found myself surrounded by the pieces that tell our family’s story.

Some will be donated. Some will be repaired. Some will find new life in our guest rooms and holiday displays. And a few may simply stay tucked away until I know exactly where they belong.
But if cleaning out the attic taught me anything, it’s that these old things aren’t just clutter waiting to be sorted. They’re reminders of the people who came before us, the homes they created, and the traditions they quietly passed down without ever realizing it.

I’d love to know, have you uncovered any unexpected treasures while cleaning out a parent’s attic, basement, or closet? Did you inherit something you never thought you’d use, only to find yourself loving it years later? Leave a comment below and tell me about it. I have a feeling I’m not the only one rediscovering family stories hidden inside old trunks and dusty boxes this summer.

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Join the Vintage Circle — Familiar Finds, Styled Your Way™
Love vintage treasures, thrifted gems, and a home that tells your story? Leave a comment, share this post with a kindred spirit, or head to my Start Here page to explore more. Want fresh prompts and timeless ideas? Subscribe to join our Seasonal Vintage Decor Styling Challenge for weekly inspiration and behind-the-scenes peeks.
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