A Primitive Place
I have a Current Subscription: Renew my Subscription
I have a Current Subscription: Renew my Subscription
Couldn't load pickup availability
Unless otherwise noted, your renewal will start with the issue it ended with. Please allow 2-8 weeks for processing. If you missed the Christmas 2025 issue, you will need to order it separately, as all renewals have switched over to the Spring 2026 issue.
Would you like to mail in your order?
Please download the mail-in order form below:
PDF Mail-in Subscription Form Download
Please allow 8-10 weeks to process all new subscriptions and renewals. Please allow 1-4 weeks for delivery once shipped.
New to this issue, we introduce Collector’s Corner, a dedicated section within each home feature. In this section, we focus on one corner of the home, examining each object within it—where it came from, how it was used, and the story behind acquiring it. It offers a closer look at the layers that make a collection meaningful.
New to this issue, we introduce Collector’s Corner, a dedicated section within each home feature. In this section, we focus on one corner of the home, examining each object within it—where it came from, how it was used, and the story behind acquiring it. It offers a closer look at the layers that make a collection meaningful.
Standout features include:
White Man’s Flies and the History of the Bee Box: An exploration of early American beekeeping that traces how honeybees signaled colonial expansion, how bee hunters followed a “beeline” to feral hives, and why surviving bee boxes, with fragile hand-blown glass panes, are rare witnesses to early rural life.
A Picker’s Heart: Hayley Walsh’s Journey into Early American Antiques
This feature spotlights 33-year-old Hayley Walsh and emphasizes her collector’s discipline: studying construction details (like square-forged nails), oxidation and wear, and layered original paint—using knowledge and trusted sources to avoid paying antique prices for reproductions.
How to Build a Primitive Twig Garden Fence – A how to guide inspired by early rural fencing methods using natural materials.
Antiques Sold at Auction: What Did It Sell For? – Featuring notable examples such as a Rose of Sharon appliqué quilt, a distinctive dry sink with an “x” base, a moss green checkerboard, and a produce sorting table.
The Spring 2026 issue was released on January 29rd. If you ordered after January 12th, you will be on the second or third mailing list. A second and third mailing list will ship at a later date. Please allow 1-4 weeks for delivery once shipped.
Share
