Came across this unusual floor covering while checking out a thrift store in Monte Vista, Colorado. These are all LP's, with the exception of some 45's applied to the steps leading up to the deck. I am not sure what type of finish was applied over them.
I don't collect LP's, but imagine this might be disturbing to those who do...
WARNING - Potentially disturbing images...
- Frisco The Beagle
- Victor I
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- Victor Monarch Special
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Re: WARNING - Potentially disturbing images...
Their landlord is gonna be just thrilled!
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- Victor IV
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Re: WARNING - Potentially disturbing images...
I know a record store where the owner covered the floor with loose LP records of artists he did not like, so the customers would have to step on them. He stopped doing that when some customers gave him a hard time because they had to step on music they would otherwise have bought from him.
- drh
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Re: WARNING - Potentially disturbing images...
Well, I see one Columbia six-eye; people do go on about those, although I don't know how much that would apply to this one, evidently a soundtrack issue of "The Red Shoes." On the other hand, I see an outtake from some Time-Life set or other; those often contain good reissue material, but as collector's items their value is generally nada. The blue-label London is a Mantovani record, and next to them is a KTel record--ditto. I also see at least one Columbia Special Products issue; those, I think, as a rule are not much in demand, either. I'm going to make the heroic assumption these records were probably either "dregs" or else like the Brazilian Columbia acoustic I have framed as a decoration over my stereo set: pretty labels but grooves in dubious or worse condition making them good for display only. Certainly thrift store LPs can be pretty scratched up by bad handling after spending much time in the bins, and I'd expect these are records that had sat there without selling for a while.