Editor’s Note:
 
This column is a regular feature in the Wayback Times in which my husband takes interesting people out to lunch … and sends me the bill.
 
(It's a tough job, but someone has to do it!)
 
Send us an e-mail if you have someone in mind for one of Peter Neilly's interviews over lunch.
 
Peter Neilly is Out to Lunch
Breaking bread with interesting people
 
Out to Lunch!
with Peter Neilly
Occasionally “The Warden” and I are asked how we choose the people I take Out To Lunch. Every situation is different, but one night in June while watching the Canadian Pickers show on the History Channel, Sandy shouted: “Hey, there’s George on TV.”
 
The George she was referring to is George Lawrence, who owns and operates George's Custom Paint and Nostalgic Station in Lindsay. We have known George for a number of years, having sold pieces to him and we've had work done by him.
 
Shortly after we saw him on the show, he was in our shop buying some signs and Sandy suggested I interview him for the paper. George chose The Boathouse Café at The Golden Beach Resort on Rice Lake, where he and his wife own a cottage.
 
We had a nice lunch and went back to his cottage on the water for this interview. I know it’s a tough job, but somebody has to do it.
 
Peter: Before I ask you about your appearance on the Canadian Pickers Show, I need to know how you got interested in collecting, restoring, and selling antiques and collectibles and where you learned the skills required to reach the high level of quality that your work showcases.
 
George: I guess my interest started because of my mother owning an antique store, Cameron Schoolhouse Antiques. She always did the Lindsay show and was the first dealer as you entered the show. I was always fairly good at art and went to the Ontario College of Art in the mid seventies. I learned to airbrush and, in fact, the first thing I painted on a car was a sunset scene I airbrushed on the back of a Volkswagen Beetle. People liked what I did and so I started doing vans and motorcycles. I ended up working for a body shop and eventually had my own shop in Lindsay. For the last 10 or 12 years, I have been restoring more and more old gas pumps and Coke machines and the business just grew and grew. I set up a nice showroom at the body shop, but it was impossible to keep pieces that were completed clean. I eventually sold the body shop, although I still do some work for regular customers.
 
 
 
 
Peter: I have seen many examples of your restorations and the quality is first-class.
 
George: It requires a lot of patience. It is not easy to paint on glass or porcelain. I now do lots of old signs as well as the old gas pumps and Coke machines. I have a 2,400-square- foot shop that is full and at present I have four transport trailers full of future projects. Those are the trailers they showed on the Canadian Pickers show.
 
Peter: How did you end up on the show?
 
George: They advertised for people with interesting stuff and my son responded to them. They asked for pictures of what we had and we sent them some. They asked lots of questions and then they showed up to film the episode. It took a full day of filming, but they didn’t buy a lot. They have to pay about what I pay in order to resell at a profit.
 
Peter: I guess you got some free advertising out of it?
 
George: The response was incredible. We got tons of emails and the next day I had to put a chain across the driveway to stop people from coming in. It was amazing. I think I’m also getting business as a result of that new show on the History Channel, American Restorations. It is a spin off from Pawn Stars that shows how things can be restored and the work that is involved to do it properly. They also quote prices for restorations and what a piece is worth after it is done the right way. A lot of customers who watched that show called after they realized what their soda machines or vintage signs are worth restored. I also get a great reaction from my ad in the Wayback Times.
 
Peter: Your son was also on the show with you. Is he involved in the business as well?
 
George: That’s my son Shane and he is involved. He grew up in the body shop so he restores stuff at his home in Newmarket and brings it up to me to paint. He is always on Kijiji buying and selling. Shane and his brother Corey are both firefighters. Corey collects Batman stuff. My other son Joey, who did my website, is a photographer and he has done a lot of promotion shots for several TV shows, including Pawn Stars. He got us all invited to the show when we were in Vegas. We met Austin “Chumlee” Russell and he let us hang around for a filming of one of the episodes. They are a friendly bunch on that show. There is a ton of promotional stuff that my son produced, like Chumlee shirts and mugs and photos they sell in the shop. The Old Man on the show has his portrait my son took, signed and hanging in his office. Joey has his own website – joeyl.com - that is definitely worth a visit just to view some of his photos.
 
Peter: I know from running an antique business that many people get upset when they see a piece that has been stripped and refinished. I know myself I wouldn’t want an old dresser covered in leaded paint sitting in my house, but collectors pay much more for an original finish. How do you feel about refinishing or restoring the pieces you do?
 
George: If I have a rusty old Coke sign that’s beat up it isn’t worth anything unless I do restore it, then I refinish it. But if I come across a sign that only has a few chips where the screws went in and is only weathered then I won’t touch it. It is more valuable left as is. If people go to my website, they can see examples of items I have restored.
 
Peter: Where do you find all of these old gas pumps and Coke machines and are some more rare than others?
 
George: I am so busy I hardly have time to go to shows or other places to buy stuff, but people know me and keep bringing pieces in for me to buy. I do buy some pieces off Kijiji, but you have to react very fast or things are gone. I have bought off eBay, but you have to keep in mind it can cost from $500 to $700 just to have a Coke machine or gas pump shipped. I have so much stock that I am only buying rare pieces, like old clock face gas pumps. They just have a dial that calibrates gallons and not the price. Some arcade games are rare. Anything I buy now has to be rare or very reasonably priced.
 
Peter: Thanks for spending time with me today, George. Keep up the great work. You have an amazing talent. We're really fortunate to have you located here in Ontario.
 
George’s Custom Paint and Nostalgic Station is located in Lindsay, Ontario, 705-328-0122. Visit georgescustompaint.com or email him at nostalgicstation@hotmail.com
 
 
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