HOOK 27
ture is joined together by wooden pegs, not nails. They just made things be4er then. They
took the 3me; they took the care. It wasn't all about money. It was about how both seller
and buyer put their best foot forward and it shows in every piece that I have here."
Kiki prides herself on making connec3ons and is open to customer requests. For her, finding
the right an3que for a home is more than a job, it's a passion. "I research thoroughly before I
purchase," she says. "I believe a stunning piece of furniture will bring value to a home and when
you tell the story of that piece's history to someone, it becomes a conversa3on about people's
pasts and lives.
"I enjoy living with an3ques, bringing treasures from our history alive and able to once again be
appreciated in our homes."
This is only fi5ng in 2026, the beginning of the next quar3le of our own 21st Century.
Rabbit Hole An3ques | 109 Ward Street, Montgomery, NY | rhan3ques.com
Kiki@rhan3ques.com | 845.769.7223 | @Rabbit_Hole_An3ques (IG)
Pennsylvania Redware
painted rabbit plate
Painting — 1848 American landscape by Miner Kilbourne Kellogg.
Above right, and under: Early 1800s Louis XV gilt wood mirror and
1800s French Cherry farm table with bread slide.