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Bring Tulsa’s historic style home with vintage décor elements like oil boom light fixtures and Art Deco tiles, celebrating ...
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TULSA, Okla. — The Tulsa Fire Museum is considered one of Tulsa’s best kept secrets. The art-deco building sits in a quiet lot off 8th and Peoria.
The Tulsa Foundation for Architecture, Goff Fest and Tulsa Tours also assisted with the event. Rachel Rose Dazey, the owner of the store said Art Deco really inspired her as a child.
The event is April 19th and will feature new pieces in the Art Deco jewelry collection in collaboration with Tulsa Foundation for Architecture, Goff Fest, and Tulsa Tours.
Historically, Art Deco, which is short for arts décoratifs, started in France in the early 1900s. “But it really flourished in America in the ’20s and ’30s,” Moon explains.
Spectators will see floats with festive decorations inspired by the art deco style featured in Tulsa during the 1920s, the decade the parade was founded. Santa is even getting a brand new float.
Explore the downtown Deco District, rich with Tulsa history, via a tour with Tulsa Foundation for Architecture. You can stay in one of these paeans to art deco: the Tulsa Club built in 1927.