Antique Tools & Work Related
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Price :
$200.00
$200 or best offer.
Functioning 26" blade paper cutter.Will deliver in Tulsa area but receiver must have way to unload. Delivery outside of area negotiable.
$200 or best offer.
Functioning 26" blade paper cutter.Will deliver in Tulsa area but receiver must have way to unload. Delivery outside of area negotiable. « Less
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Antique Tools & Work Related
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Connie Williams |
414 W. Vandalia St. |
Broken Arrow |
Oklahoma-74012 |
USA |
Email : ttownpoolplayers@gmail.com |
Phone : 9182513652 |
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Price :
$30.00
It's an old Oak Wooden Gold Miners Scale used to prospect Gold circa 1850. Complete with 10 weights.
C. Delkers was the prospector, he carved his name on the box. Lets More »
It's an old Oak Wooden Gold Miners Scale used to prospect Gold circa 1850. Complete with 10 weights.
C. Delkers was the prospector, he carved his name on the box. Lets hope he found alot of Gold. « Less
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Antique Tools & Work Related
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Chrestensen Worcs |
Newark |
Delaware-19711 |
USA |
Email : glcjmc@verizon.net |
Phone : 302 738 0402 |
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Price :
$100.00
This is a peddle powered antique sharpening stone. Excellent working condition with grinding wheel in good shape.
This is a peddle powered antique sharpening stone. Excellent working condition with grinding wheel in good shape. « Less
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Antique Tools & Work Related
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ITEM IS NO LONGER AVAILABLE |
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Darren Arnett |
7108 E. 112th St. |
Kansas City |
Missouri-64134 |
USA |
Email : darren_arnett@yahoo.com |
Phone : 8162848714 |
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Price :
$500.00
AWESOME 2 MAN CROSSCUT SAW WITH HANDLES
BEAUTIFUL USED CONDITION
DON'T MISS OUT ON THIS ONE!!!
*FREE SHIPPING* AFTER PAYMENT RECEIVED
Crosscut saws have More »
AWESOME 2 MAN CROSSCUT SAW WITH HANDLES
BEAUTIFUL USED CONDITION
DON'T MISS OUT ON THIS ONE!!!
*FREE SHIPPING* AFTER PAYMENT RECEIVED
Crosscut saws have been in use around the world since historic times, with the design of the saws (the cutting surfaces, the bow and shape of the saw, and the handles) changing over time to accommodate differences in the types of trees being cut, changes in metallurgy technology, and the application of experience. Records exist of crosscut saws in use during the ROMAN EMPIRE although not widely. They came into wide usage in Europe in the middle of the 15th century. Early saws had a plain tooth pattern until the M tooth pattern was developed in 15th century south Germany. Prior to about 1880 crosscut saws were primarily used for bucking, with axes used to fell trees. Starting in Pennsylvania about 1880, loggers began using the saws for felling trees as well. Despite the modern chainsaw, they are still in wide use around the world, not only in competition matches against chainsaws but also in regular, real-life usage since they afford certain advantages over gasoline-powered saws.
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Antique Tools & Work Related
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ITEM IS NO LONGER AVAILABLE |
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Price :
$48.00
Found in a Nantucket Sail Loft
This device, a sailmaker’s palm, is used by yachtsmen, dinghy sailors, etc. to make repairs on sails, and sometimes to whip or bind More »
Found in a Nantucket Sail Loft
This device, a sailmaker’s palm, is used by yachtsmen, dinghy sailors, etc. to make repairs on sails, and sometimes to whip or bind the ends of ropes or sheets as they are more properly known to the initiated.
The small device consists of a loop of leather with a hole for the thumb to go through. The widest part of the leather sits across the palm of the hand and incorporates a dimpled metal plate to accommodate the blunt end of a needle like a thimble.
Sailmaker's needles are necessarily tough and big enough to take the heavy thread - these days synthetic to resist the destructive effects of weather and sea - and the plate, held in place across the palm, is used to force the needle and thread through the tough material of the sail.
There are two types: A seaming palm and a roping palm. The main difference is that the roping palm is heavier and has deeper recessed dimples and a tougher leather backing.
This palm is for the right hand and has an inside circumference of 11 inches. It was found in a Nantucket sail loft. It is undated. « Less
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JP Richardson Antiques |
Three Lancaster Avenue |
Chelmsford |
Massachusetts-01824 |
USA |
Email : nikkirichardson@comcast.net |
Phone : 978-256-1651 |
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Price :
$300.00
Late 19th Century finely carved German black forest Barometer measuring 9" across and 11" high. The face reads in German and is in very good working condition with More »
Late 19th Century finely carved German black forest Barometer measuring 9" across and 11" high. The face reads in German and is in very good working condition with the hand changing with the weather. The intricately carved woodwork of leaves and Grapes is also in excellent condition with no damage and retains it's original finish. « Less
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Craftsman Antiques |
12 Morris Farm Road (just off Rt. 15) |
Lafayette |
New Jersey-07848 |
USA |
Email : craftant@ptd.net |
Phone : 862-812-0574 |
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Price :
$275.00
Mid 18th Century Large American Tin Candle Molds, the larger one: there are 30 molds for candles, H:10 1/4" W:6 3/4" and 9.5" including handle, D:9". More »
Mid 18th Century Large American Tin Candle Molds, the larger one: there are 30 molds for candles, H:10 1/4" W:6 3/4" and 9.5" including handle, D:9". Candles were used to lighted most American homes, public buildings, and streets until gas (1820s) and kerosene lamps (1850s) replaced them. Women in each family made many kinds of candles, from the common, made from tallow, to the expensive, made from beeswax. They also used a variety of other materials, such as bear grease, deer suet, bayberry, spermaceti, and well-rendered mutton fat. Every autumn, they filled leather or tin boxes with enough candles to last through the winter. To make candles, women first prepared wicks from rough hemp, milkweed, or cotton spun in large quantity. Then they under-took the lengthy task of dipping or molding several hundred candles by hand. With the examples of these two Candle Molds, both are in good condition and have a decorative handle. LifestyleAntiques.com is the web site where one can shop on line or if you are in the area we are an antique dealer in Summerland, California just 3 minutes south of Santa Barbara. Specializing in European Antique Furniture and our accent is antique lighting for your home, or office with handmade parchment shades adorning the selection of unique lamps. We specialize in Decorative Arts and French furniture as well as antique furniture from Spain and Italy, you will find the shop warm and inviting. « Less
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Antique Tools & Work Related
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ITEM IS NO LONGER AVAILABLE |
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Business Closed |
Email : webmaster@antiques.com |
Phone : .- |
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Price :
$475.00
Antique Copper Bed Warmer with Turned Wooden handle, with some wear, H:45" Diameter of Warmer with chasing detail: 12 1/4". Copper was one of the first metal mined More »
Antique Copper Bed Warmer with Turned Wooden handle, with some wear, H:45" Diameter of Warmer with chasing detail: 12 1/4". Copper was one of the first metal mined and crafted by man, and has been the most important one in the oldest times of history, because it was available in great quantities and was initially extractable almost at the surface of ground. In addition, it was suitable to craft weapons and tools, art objects and ornaments. The first copper works were made by cutting, curving and hammering with a stone stroker on a stone anvil. The old blacksmiths made an important discovery: metal hardens under prolonged hammering, but can be brought back to its initial ductility by heating (re-cooking process) with no change in shape. Many ancient objects were manufactured through alternate cycles of hammering and cooking, with a final hammering to obtain the necessary hardness. Throughout history Copper continued to be used mainly for household objects. Working techniques remained almost unchanged over the centuries, while the shapes were continuously improved to fit with the evolution of lifestyle. Its properties, discovered and appreciated by our ancient ancestors, are still very much in vogue in today's use and function of practical cookware and decorative use. LifestyleAntiques.com is the web site where one can shop on line or if you are in the area we are an antique dealer in Summerland, California just 3 minutes south of Santa Barbara. Specializing in European Antique Furniture and our accent is antique lighting for your home, or office with handmade parchment shades adorning the selection of unique lamps. We specialize in Decorative Arts and French furniture as well as antique furniture from Spain and Italy, you will find the shop warm and inviting. « Less
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Antique Tools & Work Related
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ITEM IS NO LONGER AVAILABLE |
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Business Closed |
Email : webmaster@antiques.com |
Phone : .- |
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Price :
$1950.00
Decorative Italian Polychromed Painted Wood Barometer probably from 1920's to 1930's, in the style of the 19th Century Barometers, H:36" W:14.5". The More »
Decorative Italian Polychromed Painted Wood Barometer probably from 1920's to 1930's, in the style of the 19th Century Barometers, H:36" W:14.5". The history of the word barometer was derived from the Greek word "baros", meaning weight, and the Greek word "metron", meaning measure. The barometer, an instrument used to measure air pressure and it was in early 17th century Italy there were many Italian scientist independently working on the principal's of a vacuum and air pressure, however, it was a young scientist by the name of Evangelista Torricelli that first detailed his experiments with what became known as the barometer. The barometer utilizes the principal of a vacuum to measure the weight of the air. For a simple explanation of a vacuum,such as an example just consider your everyday use of a straw to sip water. The illustration of the premise is with your sucking, which removes the air out of the top of the straw, causes a vacuum near the top of the straw, and with the help of the outside air pressure, the water rises within the straw to fill this partial vacuum. Even if you stop sucking on the straw, the liquid will not fall as long as you maintain a seal of this partial vacuum at the top of the straw. It has been noted that the first publicized working barometer, dating back to 1643, has been credited to Evangelista Torricelli. Torricelli had been familiar with, and studied the writings of Galileo, just before Galileo's untimely death in 1642, and used those findings to help him construct the first barometer. Though Galileo is recognized as the first to experiment with a water type vacuum apparatus in early 1642, his primary objective was to simply ratify the "vacuum theory", and he did not extrapolate his findings to deduct that changes in the weather correspondingly caused air pressure fluctuations. Torricelli was first to notice that air pressure changes, related to weather changes, indeed caused the water level to rise and fall. Then later around 1670 that the new marketeers of barometers began producing and selling barometers as a weather instrument to be used in private homes. By the latter part of the 17th century many clock makers, furniture makers, and opticians began to become involved with detailed and magnificent ornate cabinetry and designs of these newly relished barometers. Historically, it was that for the next two hundred years, the mercury barometer became in vogue and to possess one was the symbol of great nobility. Apparently being in vogue there were records indicating over 3,500 registered barometer makers between 1670 and 1900. Today, it is a rarity to even discover a working mercury type barometer, as most were destroyed or replaced by the current day "aneroid type" barometer. Around the year 1840, a Frenchman by the name of Lucien Vidie introduced the first mechanical, or aneroid barometer, which replaced the use of mercury with a metal vacuum disc, with mechanical arms and a pointer, to measure the air pressure. Aneroids became increasingly popular due to their lower cost and their ease of transporting them from location to location. They eventually replaced mercury type barometers by about 1900. This Italian Barometer is a fine example of carved polychromed painted fluted and floral designed case. « Less
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Antique Tools & Work Related
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ITEM IS NO LONGER AVAILABLE |
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Business Closed |
Email : webmaster@antiques.com |
Phone : .- |
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Price :
$5950.00
Antique 19th Century Italian Gold Gilded Barometer, rich in gilt detailed carving, with new interior barometer work. H:36" W:15". The history of the word barometer More »
Antique 19th Century Italian Gold Gilded Barometer, rich in gilt detailed carving, with new interior barometer work. H:36" W:15". The history of the word barometer was derived from the Greek word "baros", meaning weight, and the Greek word "metron", meaning measure. The barometer, an instrument used to measure air pressure and it was in early 17th century Italy there were many Italian scientist independently working on the principal's of a vacuum and air pressure, however, it was a young scientist by the name of Evangelista Torricelli that first detailed his experiments with what became known as the barometer. The barometer utilizes the principal of a vacuum to measure the weight of the air. For a simple explanation of a vacuum,such as an example just consider your everyday use of a straw to sip water. The illustration of the premise is with your sucking, which removes the air out of the top of the straw, causes a vacuum near the top of the straw, and with the help of the outside air pressure, the water rises within the straw to fill this partial vacuum. Even if you stop sucking on the straw, the liquid will not fall as long as you maintain a seal of this partial vacuum at the top of the straw. It has been noted that the first publicized working barometer, dating back to 1643, has been credited to Evangelista Torricelli. Torricelli had been familiar with, and studied the writings of Galileo, just before Galileo's untimely death in 1642, and used those findings to help him construct the first barometer. Though Galileo is recognized as the first to experiment with a water type vacuum apparatus in early 1642, his primary objective was to simply ratify the "vacuum theory", and he did not extrapolate his findings to deduct that changes in the weather correspondingly caused air pressure fluctuations. Torricelli was first to notice that air pressure changes, related to weather changes, indeed caused the water level to rise and fall. Then later around 1670 that the new marketeers of barometers began producing and selling barometers as a weather instrument to be used in private homes. By the latter part of the 17th century many clock makers, furniture makers, and opticians began to become involved with detailed and magnificent ornate cabinetry and designs of these newly relished barometers. Historically, it was that for the next two hundred years, the mercury barometer became in vogue and to possess one was the symbol of great nobility. Apparently being in vogue there were records indicating over 3,500 registered barometer makers between 1670 and 1900. Today, it is a rarity to even discover a working mercury type barometer, as most were destroyed or replaced by the current day "aneroid type" barometer. Around the year 1840, a Frenchman by the name of Lucien Vidie introduced the first mechanical, or aneroid barometer, which replaced the use of mercury with a metal vacuum disc, with mechanical arms and a pointer, to measure the air pressure. Aneroids became increasingly popular due to their lower cost and their ease of transporting them from location to location. They eventually replaced mercury type barometers by about 1900. The Italian Barometer is a fine example of carved gilt floral designed case. « Less
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Antique Tools & Work Related
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ITEM IS NO LONGER AVAILABLE |
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Business Closed |
Email : webmaster@antiques.com |
Phone : .- |
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