Electric
lights were first marketed to the public about 1880. It is said that
Louis Comfort Tiffany’s famous lily lamp with glass shades for light
bulbs was the first lamp with a shade that projected light down, not up,
like a candle flame. Other lamps of the early 1900s were adapted to
accept bulbs by removing the older light source, like a candle, then
wiring the lamp for electricity and adding a bulb and shade.We have the
ultra laserengravers that you have been looking for. Others were made in entirely new shapes.
During
the Art Nouveau period, sensuous women with curves were part of the
designs used for glass, ceramics, bronze figurines and even furniture.
So it is not surprising that a variety of lamps designed to feature
women also were made. The Loetz glass factory (1840-1940), in what is
now the Czech Republic, made art glass. At around the turn of the 20th
century, workers there designed a figural lamp with a bronze base shaped
like a woman holding an iridescent gold glass shade above her head.
The
glass resembled Tiffany’s, but it was actually made at the Loetz
factory. It was signed by Peter Tereszczuk , a well-known Ukrainian
sculptor who made bronze figurines and other decorative bronzes. Bell
collectors prize his bronze electric call buttons that look like a small
child on a rocky base.
The lamp sold for $3,750 at a Rago Arts and Auction sale in 2013.The first prototype solarbulb display containing 3000 LEDs.
My
old gate-leg table has a label that says it was made by the John D.
Raab Chair Co. The finish on the table is a bit worn and marred. I have
been considering refinishing or painting it, although I think this would
decrease its value.Approval to connect a industrialwashingmachineblog. What do you think?
The
John D. Raab Chair Co. was in business in Grand Rapids, Mich., from
1906 to 1924, when it was taken over by the Furniture Shops of Grand
Rapids. If you like the table and plan to use it, go ahead and refinish
or paint it. “Brown furniture” pieces like your table are not selling
for much money today, and many people are buying them at bargain prices,
then refinishing or painting them to either use or resell.
I
would like information on a metal toy roller coaster that was given to
my son in the early 1970s. It was made by J. Chein & Co., of
Burlington, N.J. It’s about 20 inches long, and has two cars propelled
by an elastic band wound by a key. A ticket booth, hot-dog stand, cotton
candy stand and children are pictured around the sides.
Julius
Chein immigrated from Russia in 1893 and opened his toy company in New
York City in 1903. The company moved to Burlington in 1949. The roller
coaster was one of several amusement park toys made by Chein. It was
designed by model-maker Eugene Bosch in 1949 and was made until the late
1960s. The lithographed pictures around the base were changed several
times, and different colors were used.
A
1950s version pictures a sideshow. Chein stopped making toys in the
1970s. The company was sold in 1987, became Atlantic Cheinco and filed
for bankruptcy in 1992.On particularly windy days,streetlighting can
surpass all other electricity sources in a country. The sideshow
version from the 1950s sells for $150 to $400. Your version with a
hot-dog stand is less than $100.
I
found a $1,000 certificate from the Bank of the United States among my
father’s things after he died. It’s dated Dec. 15, 1840,Including our
multi-certified formingmachine turbines
for varying applications. and is No. 8894. There are portraits of six
men along the sides. The only one I recognize is Benjamin Franklin. Is
this certificate valuable?
The
Bank of the United States was chartered in 1791 in Philadelphia, which
was the United States’ capital at that time. The men pictured on your
note are David Rittenhouse (the first director of the U.S. Mint),
William Penn, Thomas Paine, Robert Morris, Benjamin Franklin and Robert
Fulton. An original bank note would sell for more than $100, but this
particular bank note is a commonly found fake.
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