What Is This Mysterious Brass Bell With A Base And Tiny Tweezer And This Jagged Edge Flat Spoon?
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 14 มิ.ย. 2024
- What Is This Mysterious Brass Bell With A Base And Tiny Tweezer And This Jagged Edge Flat Spoon?
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The last item is a Sharpie. The markings give it away.
That’s what I thought too! But I’m so often wrong, so I didn’t want to commit. 😂😂
Yes the rare n very useful Sharpie
Me Ol MA had 1
😂😂😂
I got two today! The widow's walk & the clockworks.
No good Victorian hostess would ever use a cucumber spoon to serve a tomato slice.
Tomatoes had their own piece of silver.
The bell on the sweetener container is an alarm system to let mom know when the kiddos are sneaking into the pot.
The lid is a bell so people could instantly tell it was saccharine and not sugar cubes.
Because "diabetics"
The last item looks like the turned fancy top of a stair case "Newel Post".
The last item is obviously the ball of the stair post that George Baily always had problems with.
The last item is a newel post sits atop a banister rail
I love seeing these unusual old items and their explanation.
Just love these episodes!
That last item looks like it may have been used to fold and push (maybe) receipts of some sort into a box or holder. I recall something like it in my fathers office back in the 60's. It was an antique even then but still used
I think you're right.
I think it was used to push folding money, betting slips or other reciepts into a secure box during the 18th century......
The person that submitted the cucumber server stated, "I don't know what's going on. Please help. " I relate to this person most of the time.
The last item looks like a tamper.
Given how small it is it's either for very small sand molds (like a silver smith)or it's for kneading dough.
Can't be more specific, but it's some type of tamper.
Widow's walks were really used to observe ships. There is an iconic version in the movie Mary Poppins. Knowing who was coming into harbour was both an important piece of economic information, first to meet a short supply got the highest price and could easily be a military inelegance also.
Could the saçcrine container could have been what antique dealers call a "Marriage"piece. That's were two different items that really aren't related but they look similar enough to go together. Grandmother may have lost the lid for the box and thought "Hey the bell looks cute nobody will know."
They were sold that way.
Bottom half held saccharine tablets and the top half was a dinner bell.
I was curious so I checked around.
A bell was built into the lid so a person with diabetes would know it was saccharine and not sugar cubes and to remind the person filling it to only use saccharine.
They made the saccharine pills half the size of a sugar cube , had special tongs that couldn't spread far enough to grab a sugar cube and installed a bell in the cover to prevent diabetics from accidentally putting sugar cubes in their tea.
those things called widow'a walks were actually there for people to put out chimney fires.
The wooden item at the end of the video looks like it may be the top to a Victorian banister
The last item appears to be a door stop. I’ve made similar ones on my lathe.
There is a widow's walk in CHINA TEXAS. I was told that the original owners owned a ship the wife knew when the husband was due back in Beaumont Port or Galveston Port and would watch for the ship . They would signal back and forth and the wife would know that her husband had crew were home safe if the ship was not sighted by a certain amount of time there was concern for the ship and crew. Then maybe it became a widow walk
I don't think it's this but that last item looks a bit like a tamper used to pack sand into a mold for sand casting. They had a round end and a very blunt wedge shape on the other end. But from the photo this wedge looks too sharp for it to be that. It's also on the small side for that use (though maybe for small molds, such as ornaments or jewelry?). Or maybe some sort of tamper for a different purpose?
Door stop 😂
My mother has one of those saccharine bells in her collection.
Perhaps the bell on the cover of the saccharine dish was used to summon a maid to bring more tea.
Looks like a chair leg.
For the first one I think the bell may be to call someone to put the saccharine in your drink for you. Considering how small the tweezers are and how little saccharine you would need it would probably be a rather fiddly job so elderly/handicapped people who were reliant on a carer or rich people with servants would probably use the bell.
the scope in the coffee dispenser was used to add or take away beans to come to the proper weight
Decorative part of a bed or staircase?
Last item is for creasing canvas or other heavy duty material. You already showed this item on a different OutlookDaily, LOL.
Leather working tool?
👁👁 Happy to drop by… 8:01
Last item is not for printing. I've worked in old shops that had equipment going back 150 years. Any letterpress type spacer would not be taller than "type high"
At 1:00 I propose the cost was very high. So the bell would alert if someone was helping themselves.
Last item guesses, part of a banister, a door-stop, or maybe to stop a rocking chair from rocking?