People In This Group Help Solve Mysteries About Weird Objects From Over 100 Years Ago
The number of talented and perceptive people found on the internet is staggering. Take the sprawling ‘What Is This Thing?’ online community, for example. It is filled to the brim with experts and sleuths who help people identify mysterious objects.
Today, we’re featuring puzzling and bizarre antiques that confused people to no end, only for brilliant online detectives to help them out with their niche knowledge. Keep scrolling for a crash course in weird object functionality, and to learn something new so you can show off the next time you’re at an antique store.
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Found This Small Kettle Years Ago. Tried Searching For A Similar One, But Have Always Come Up With Nothing. Anybody Have An Idea Why This Has This Unique Shape?
Brokella:
Isn’t that a portable men’s urinal for bedbound patients?
I'm rather astonished that anyone needed to ask the question."Small kettle " LOL!
If you don’t know something there’s no shame in asking
Load More Replies...My Inner Child Needs To Know. Green & White Pendant Of Some Sort Found In My Stocking 18 Years Ago
What is this thing? My inner child needs to know.
Long story short, I found this in my Christmas stocking when I was 7-8 years old. No one knew where it came from. There would be periods of time throughout my childhood where it would disappear, then reappear months or even years later. It was always a fun childhood mystery to me. I have not seen it since 2013 until today. Part of me wants to keep the magic alive and believe it’s some magical stone with disappearing abilities, but I’ve wanted to know what this thing is for almost 20 years now. It looks like some kind of jewelry pendant, but I’m not sure how it would work. The hole in the third picture doesn’t go all the way through.
phord:
It's a jadeite pendant with a space to hold herbs or sandalwood. The word on the back is "fu", which means "luck". The dragon heads are just common Chinese symbolism, but sometimes there is a bat instead because the word for "bat" sounds like 'luck". If it has bamboo symbolism, it's supposed to be stronger. It's usually strung and attached to your belt and carried for luck.
My Chinese wife, who also claims this is not a well made piece, poor quality sculpting, common in antique markets.
She also warns that Chinese people do not carry old pieces with an unknown history, because they might have belonged to someone who died, and then it was stolen by grave robbers. And then the amulet could bring bad luck.
But if the piece is handed down from their family, someone they know and cared about, it becomes more special to them. They believe it carries a bit of the bearer in it, like part of their soul, from their having carried it for so long.
Wife says it comes back to you because it has become part of you. You should keep it, no matter how much you are offered. Also, you should touch it a lot so it accumulates oil from your skin (your soul). This will make it more beautiful.
What Is This? Was Labeled As A Xylophone? Bought For $9 At An Antique Store
Mudslingshot:
Nine dollars for a tongue drum the size of an end table?! I'm an instrument collector, and I've gotten some goooood deals... But wow. I've never gotten a deal that good.
I'm also a musician and like what the heck, how??? anything that big and that fancy in modern times would go for upwards of $1k, don't know the context of how it works though so idk
DON'T f🔞cking try to play it unless you want to invite a witch for dinner...😅
I am not a musician but i know what a tounge drum is and that looks stunning It looks like it is works more than 9.00
That is gorgeous! A little elbow grease and some practice time with the mallets and you have a class act party favor to show off.
Never heard of these but check out the sound! https://www.youtube.com/shorts/KpL-hpAm-aU
It is also called a slit drum or tank drum. Not totally sure if it's ancient origins but seem to remember Asia, Africa and in some areas of South America
Good instincts, environmental awareness, solid judgment, lots of curiosity, and plenty of life experience can give you a solid foundation for internet sleuthing. But if you want to be an actual detective or investigator, you need a wide skillset to complement your wise gut.
According to National Private Investigators, PIs need to have strong analytical, research, problem-solving, internet, and communication skills.
Spoon Type Thing With A Metal Plate And Hole?
My husband and I went thrift shopping and found this weird sterling silver spoon but we have no idea what it’s used for? Looked up the brand “reed and Barton” and found that it’s an old sterling silver company but couldn’t find a spoon like this anywhere. Anyone know what it is or what it’s used for?
TeeBeeDub:
That! Is a soup spoon for mustachioed gentlemen.
We have a couple of old coffee cups at home with the same mustache "bridge" across the opening.
I would guess it was to squeeze the,tea bag. Those Brit’s had an utensil for everything.
I Inherited This From My Grandpa. It Probably Belonged To My Great Grandpa. It Came With A Vintage How To Sketch Book
cynikalAhole99:
Precision vintage drafting tools.
Really beautiful. I'd have that framed in glass and hung on the wall. A couple of tools seem missing. That circular depression with a knọb (?) at the right for example. I wonder what that was.
Load More Replies...Drafting - ink pens, dividers, and one end of a beam compass (you clamp a ruler in it)
You can actually do some interesting calligraphy with ruling pens (what they're called)
It's to perform surgery / autopsy on a levitating witch and her broom...🧹 🧙🏽
Found In My Grandfathers Garage, They Appear To Be Hand Stamped
Purrsy_Nappington
These are the work of Kawase Hasui.
The one on the left is titled, "Kasuga Shrine in Nara." 1933
The one on the right is, "Snow at Hie Shrine (New Years Day)." 1931.
What a shame they are in less than good condition. They are beautiful woodblock prints.
If I loved GrandPa and these hold great memories, I would still frame and display them. They may not be worth much money, but they hold memories.
Load More Replies...These were often used simply as packing material for ceramics from Japan in the (I don't remember exactly) 1800s. Presumably the less perfect prints which would otherwise be thrown away.
With so much investigative work taking place digitally, you need to be great at using the internet to get the information you need. That means looking through public records, social media networks, specialized databases, financial records, etc. On top of that, good tech skills are a must, as you’ll have to gather and analyze evidence and use software.
Private investigators should also have integrity and know how to be discreet. A large chunk of their work deals with sensitive matters, so you have to be ethical and objective. Your reputation (and by extension your livelihood) depends on it.
Found At Antique Festival Near Atlanta, Is 17" By 5.5"
nitro479:
It's for rolling newspapers into a "log" for the fireplace.
Growing up in the 50s and 60s in MIchigan in a house with a fireplace. my parents had a modern version of this. We got daily newspapers back then and it was my job to take the old ones to roll up in logs for the fireplace.
This is a mangle used to dry a dripping wet witch after she bathed in foamy toad blood...😅
LMAO- Whoever downvoted you has no sense of humor. As a witch myself, take my upvote 😂❤️
Load More Replies...Found This Cast Iron Coffin In A Closed Funeral Home. I Have Ideas On What It Is, But Want To Be Absolutely Sure
FreedomDragon01:
I would guess it’s a version of the Fiske coffin. These coffins were designed after the advent of major railway transportation and offered airtight coffins. This helped to naturally preserve the body. When people began traveling far from families and then subsequently dying, people needed a way to transport bodies long distances to get them back for the funeral and last goodbyes from living relatives.
The window was put in place for health reasons. Should a person have died while in quarantine or from a deadly disease, the window allowed relatives to see and confirm the body's identity before burial.
Watch the PBS documentary on Secrets of the Dead...The woman in the Iron Coffin. Fascinating.
I Found This Ring In My Backyard While Doing Gardening. After Cleaning It, It Doesn't Look Like A Normal Ring. Any Ideas?
batbrat:
It's a Georgian/early Victorian mourning ring. The initials belong to the lost loved one.
They were typically made from gold (18k+) and enameled in black. Yours looks like it was made around the 1820s-40s.
The “What Is This Thing?” online group is a legendary subreddit. It was created all the way back in 2010, and over the past 15 years, amateur and professional internet sleuths have been helping identify people’s mystery items nonstop. Currently, a jaw-dropping 1.5 million internet users visit the online group every single week, with 6.4k weekly contributions.
We’d like to hear from you now, Pandas. Which of these peculiar antiques piqued your curiosity? Were there any strange objects that you could actually identify? What is the weirdest item that you’ve ever stumbled across in your life? Let us know what you think.
The End Appears To Be Rabbit Hair And The Handle Is Like A Marbled Bakelite Or Maybe Plastic?
Nanerpus_is_my_Homie:
It’s a powder puff wand for face powder. This is a very nice example! Also called a “patter wand”. The idea was popping/beating the powder on your face has a more finished look than using your hand.
Bakelite was an early step in the development of plastic. Lots of beautiful objects were made from it.
Witches use this gadget to de-dust their glass eyes and their sockets...🤦🏽
Found This Hidden In The Ceiling Of My Basement With A Bunch Of Others. Made Out Of Glass, Appears To Have Some Sort Of Tape Or Paper Border Around It
-_-BaDgEr-_- :
Nice find! Magic Lantern glass slide.
You will find the missing piece buried in plain sight underneath the remains of a witch's dentures...🤹🏽
You have any idea how much fun I'm having reading your responses?
Load More Replies...I thought it looked German (south) or maybe czech and tried to look it up. Redditors had no idea either, unfortunately, though they mostly went for "somewhere Swiss, probably". Too bad that there is no inscription on it.
Expandable Metal Circle With Chain And Lid. This Top Comes Off But Is Attached With A Hinge. When The Top Is Off It Can Expand
It says it's from Germany. It belonged to an antique shop owner who didn't know what it was.
SilverScimitar13:
It's the top of an expandable purse, yours is just missing the actual fabric purse part.
It's an expandable metal circle with chain and lid from Germania...🇩🇪
Old Leather Boot With Long Metal Spikes. Leather Is Old And Stiff, Sole Is Wood, Metal With Nails Or Rivets Around The Sole, 4” Spikes. Seems Like It Might Be A Mountaineering Boot
DoctorOfMeat:
They're for crushing chestnuts.
I agree. Can still buy modern versions today. Don't see why you'd want to crush chestnuts.
Load More Replies...At first I thought horse-chestnut, and wasn't going to believe it, buuut, I can imagine these being actually really useful at getting the outer shell off of sweet chestnuts. Those things are brutal to touch.
Have tried to pry open a sweet chestnut with bare hands. Would recommend the top of the boot made out of iron as well
Load More Replies...It's a rusty witch's slipper they use to avoid said slipping / squatting on shiny wooden floors whilst getting more booze from the witch's kitchen fridge...🤷🏽
Either lawn aeration or glacier crampons. Not chestnuts (why on earth would you want to do that?)
Open Spoon With Spikes; Trident-Like Fork; Tongs With A Chicken Foot And A Perforated Spoon. All Antique Silver
AnnabananaIL:
Olive server, lettuce server, ice tongs. Having a talon on ice tongs is a novelty feature, but there are a lot of them out there!
Oh my word - my parentshad some of these and were given to a charity shop!
Ya know, you're pretty much being a clod here and spoiling this article for everyone else.
Load More Replies...Found In The Yard Of My Old House. Agra, India
My father sent a few samples to the Archaeological Survey of India in Agra, as suggested by many, so thank you. Those of you who said they are Terracotta figures, you were correct. They are Portuguese Terracotta figures from the 3rd to 4th century. Though there haven’t been many accounts of such well-preserved Terracottas, they’re not uncommon for the area of Agra, as the Taj Mahal features many Terracotta designs and mouldings. I can’t believe I thought these figurines were nothing of value, and considered throwing them away. Thank you all again for urging me not to throw these away, notifying me about ASI, and warning me about scammers. For now, my family plans on keeping the figures in a safe place.
Something's not right here. "Portuguese" didn't exist in the 3rd and 4th C. The figurine on the right looks to have east Asian features. Not doubting the age, just the origin.
Found In The Basement Of German House That Was Built Shortly Before World War II
ImclearlyBatman:
Mortar and pestle. A very old one, too.
This one looks exactly like modern ones, how could this be a mystery?
I suspect there are people who haven't come across a mortar and pestle.
Load More Replies...Cleaning Out A House And Came Across This. The Little Cup At The Top Swings Back And Forth. Says It’s From Japan
Real_Consequence1240:
It’s a bridal cup. Bridal cups are a Nuerenberg, Germany tradition that date back to the 1400's. It represents the start of a life long union between man and woman and is a symbol of faithfulness and good luck.
The small swiveling cup and inverted hollow dress were designed to allow both bride and groom to drink simultaneously to toast their wedding. The groom would drink from the larger cup (the inverted skirt), and bride would drink from the small swivel cup.
And Nuerenberg in Dutch, maybe the writer is Dutch and accidentally using this name. It is confusing all those different names for the same place in different languages.
Load More Replies...I was thinking that the dainty cup would be better for the bride since it would be less likely to spill down the sides of her mouth, ruining her dress. The large skirt side might spill out.
Load More Replies...I have one of these! It doesn't have a gem stone though. I don't know where in my ancestry it came from, only that my parents had it from someone.
Found In A Demolition Along With Old Money. They Appear To Made From Some Sort Of Fabric
sonjaalb:
These are German emergency bills that were issued in times when there wasn't enough money available at the central bank. I believe the ones you have may be made of silk or linen.
Found on Reddit: "The corner images on the 25-mark bill show Hennerken Puls, a true Bielefeld character, taking a bath in the Lutter creek on a Sunday morning. The Bielefeld dyeworks led their wastewater and dyes into the Lutter creek. Hennerken, slightly inebriated, did not think of that, stepped into the creek naked and suddenly noticed with shock that he was dyed completely blue. His efforts to clean himself failed miserably, to the great exultation of the Bielefeld youth. Also: when Bielefeld was still a small linen weaver town, the council’s attendant told the bleacheries and dyeworks not to pollute the creek with their wastewater on brewing days: Es wird hiermit bekannt gemacht, daß niemand in die Bache kackt denn morgen wird gebraut. [Let it be known, No one shit in the creek. Tomorrow is brewing day.] The text is written in the corners, too.
I did type the name of the German city that doesn't exist, so I don't know what the HECK just happened there!
Load More Replies...Miniature Antique Mini Glass Ball Things? The B***s Are Hollow And Delicate With Little Tips/Ends. Each One Is Numbered On The Top
SincerelySpicy:
They're called Hydrostatic Bubbles or Spirit Bubbles, among other things, and they're used as hydrometers for testing the alcohol content of liquors.
Betting the censored word hangs low and dangles to and fro, and they both bounce up and down and they drag along the ground. Bet they wiggle and they jiggle and make their girlfriend giggle, and they do hang low.
Do people really get upset at seeing words? And if they do, do we really want such people controlling what words the majority of us are allowed to see?
Made Of Wood. Too Shallow To Store Pens. Hangs On Wall
DaddioHeff:
It is for a large box of matches.
That is beautiful. I have a couple cast iron ones . Have not seen a wood one before. I wonder if it has a strip to light the matches on.
Probably not. In the "old days," matches were generally the kind that don't require one. I guess this would have hung on the wall in the kitchen, for lighting the stove.
Load More Replies...Stick match holders were common in my youth. Wood ones were seen in rooms that were frequented by guests. The enameled metal and cast iron ones were more common in the kitchen and near fireplaces.
It is for tobacco pipes, hot enough not to put om table bc FIRE DANGER
Hard to tell. Perhaps a phone case? My mom also had something like this to hold her paper for the grocery list.
A witch's broom shall never touch the ground, so these parking lots were invented to avoid setting their brooms on fire accidentally...🔥 🧹🅿️
A Departed Someone Loved To Garage Sale Shop. Trying To Identify This Old Antique. I Think It May Be Used To Hang Or Display Clothing But I’m Really Not Sure
It has a hook on the top as well as the bottom, and a couple of long wooden angled platforms in the middle.
iwegian:
It's a valet stand. It holds a man's suit and other accessories.
I have one of those, it is basically a fancy version of the chair you throw your clothes on.
Valet Stand. Next days clothes would be set on them, the night before. You can still by the today from places like Wayfair, Williams-Sonoma.
So the man's jacket drapes on the floor? There are hooks 2 inches above the floor: what for? Where would the trousers(pants) hang?
These still exist, albeit less fancy. I am surprised this needs explanation.
"To garage sale shop?" That's an awkward construction. I'll shut up now.
It's a witch's broom sleigh with an attached homecoming b(r)oomerang...🪃
What Is This Large Vessel I Found In The Basement Of An Old Psychiatric Hospital?
Looks like a great big autoclave used to sterilize mattresses and bedding.
It looks like it is for cremation, maybe that's why.
Load More Replies...Before they had everything in plastic.need to bring the autoclave back. I remember doing that.as a student. Just a few years ago.
Found In My Grandparents Basement. What Is This?
TheShyPig:
Solitaire Game. It's pretty expensive.
Nah this is different. "Chinese" checkers was a board game invented in Germany. This might be the OG game that inspired it though.
Load More Replies...Much more beautiful than the plastic one I grew up with!!
Load More Replies...Aw! My aunt and uncle had a set. I was so fascinated by it as a kid that they gave me my own set for Christmas the next year.
My gran had one of these, all of their grandchildren would fight over who got to play first.
Such a beautiful set, I used to be able to solve the game so I was left with just one marble in the middle, might have to find a game and see if I can still work it out
Chinese Checkers. A more modern version has holes to store the waiting marbles and has much smaller marbles.
Mom Found This In A Box In The Attic
Phurba, a three-sided peg, stake, knife, or nail-like ritual implement deeply rooted in Indo-Tibetan Buddhism and Bön traditions.
Now I know where they got the design of the "Dagger of Ajanti" in the movie "The Golden Child".
I found one of these in a yard sale in Toronto. From its feel and weight, it might be cast from pure copper. Certainly worth two dollars.
Antique From The 1800’s, Have To Figure Out What It Is For A School Project
reflected_shadow:
Antique Soap Saver. Small scraps of soap were put in the cage, and when people did dishes by hand, the soap saver was swished though the dishwater to made suds.
That was my first thought too but the wire mesh doesn't look the right size. Seems to me the unpopped kernals would fall through the holes before they had a chance to pop.
Load More Replies...My grandmother had one of these soap savers for the exact use in the description
when people did dishes by hand ????, this people has never and would never own a water wasting dish clean machine.
Antique? Oh dear. We used these to wash the dishes in the 1950s in Australia. We used to put a full bar of "Velvet" soap in it and swish it around in the water to get suds.
Found In An Old Junk Drawer
Matsojr222:
Traveling ink well 100%.
Ceramic Dachshund With Small Dish On One Side And Larger Rectangle Dish With Holes In The Bottom On The Other Side. No Markings. Found At The Relative's House
We cannot figure this out. Lots of crazy ideas, but none of them actually make sense.
amnitol:
It’s a ceramic dresser valet from approximately the 1950s! The square side is to hold a wallet, and the round one to hold misc small items from your pocket.
My dad had one of these. He also hung his belt buckle on the tail to store his belt.
This brings back memories for me! My grandfather had one, and I always loved it for some reason. I don't know what happened to it after he passed away, unfortunately.
Old Document, Possibly An Indentured Servitude Contract, Found In Box Of Family Photos, C. 1750?
Was sorting through a box of old photos from my dad's side of the family and came across this really ancient-looking folded up piece of paper or parchment with fancy inkwell script and a wax seal... At first, I thought the date read "1950", but then I realized the 9 is actually probably a 7, which would make this over 250 years old. The large letters appear to read This indenture so a friend suggested this was an indentured servitude contract.
What's weird is that it's in English, but to my knowledge my dad's family had no ties to any English-speaking countries until his parents immigrated to the United States in the 1920s (they were from the Metz area originally and, according to genealogical records, were still living in Germany in the 1700s) so I can't imagine it was from someone on my dad's side if it really does go back that far. What is this thing??
Linguist208:
It's actually a land sale contract. Indenture just meant contract.
Notice the bit in large bold letters, the third one from the bottom, in the center over the red wax seal, that says "To have and to hold," and three lines above that it says "was formerly the Estate and Inheritance of John Sparks and his wife Mary," and talks about the Parish of Sheffield.
If it's truly from the 1700s, the script, even in English, may be hard to read. A word like success wouldn't like that in 1700s script, it would actually look like sucesF. Also if it's in cursive (harder to see in this image), a lot of people can't read cursive anymore
Load More Replies...Just Moved To A New Apartment, Found This In The Living Room. What Is This?
dakta:
It is an antique Turkish brazier, used for heating. Also called a mangal.
Found In An Antique Store
eltonnovs:
It's a wild boar tooth.
What Is This Thing? Circular Thing On A Post In An Antique Place
jjdiablo:
This is an Engine Order Telegraph used in older marine vessels. Allowed the Captain remote communication with the ship's engine room.
and even some who have not watched Titanic, like myself...
Load More Replies...we have one of these in our house :) they're really loud when you turn the handle lol
My father used to command Naval Training Centers around the country. Every building had one, along with knot boards.
It is indeed an Engine Room Telegraph. Setting it would cause a bell ringing in that engine room and an overworked and underappreciated individual would order his mates to set that speed.
Found This In Grandpas Box Of Old Things. Might Be From Asia Because Of The 3rd Eye? Any Ideas?
msebeth:
Sorry for the letdown... This was part of a set of premiums for malted milk. Very cool, but not very exotic.
You would collect a certain number of box tops or whatever from the product and then send them in to get an item.
Load More Replies...Found An Antique Metal Object At My Local Charity Shop. It Is In The Shape Of A Droplet And Has Button Or Pressing Mechanism And A Tiny Hole In The Top
The front has a button that can be pressed in. It also come with a matching box. There doesn’t seem to be a clicking mechanism.
Sparky81:
1930s Art Deco Marcel Franck Atomizer Perfume Bottle.
Landlord Found It In The Basement. Heavy Metal. Google Isn't Responding Well To "Scary Wand"
drowninginidiots:
Soldering iron. The end you are holding is the head, and is usually copper. The other end would normally have a wood handle.
Anything can be...er, so a friend told me.
Load More Replies...That's one heck of a soldering iron! What n earth is so big it would hold secure with solder?
Copper plumbing pipe. Also used for making and repairing tin pots and pans.
Load More Replies...I Found This Under The Floorboards In A 1800s-Era House
Dances_for_Donairs:
Removed the top of soft-boiled eggs, I think.
A Knife I Received From A Friend. His Grandparents Had Owned It. Seems Pretty Old And Rustic! Any Ideas?
StrugglesTheClown:
I think it's specific to the early 20th century. Moroccan Koummya dagger. They look very similar, look kind of the same materials and the shape, and the bevels on the blade look identical.
Yes, I have one of those my grandfather brought back from Morocco in the 1950s.
Found In A House Along With Lots Of Old Maritime Artifacts
Pillowussey:
Knot gauge/ speed log. Basically, a boat speedometer. The propeller looking object is in the water, spinning as the boat moves, the rope spins and moves the dial, letting you know the speed as indicated on the dial.
The instrument also acts like an odometer to tell how far through the water the boat has traveled. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chip_log
Knife Found At The Bottom Of My Grandfather's Belongings. Supposedly, It Was Given To Him By My Great Aunt, Who Was A Diplomat Pretty Much All Over Asia During The Vietnam War
In addition to the larger knife, there are two smaller knives as well that can be drawn from the same scabbard.
SaoJi:
Big one is definitely a khukuri, I'm from Nepal. As for the two smaller ones, The “Karda” (one edge sharpened) is a small utility knife used to perform small tasks that the big kukri blade cannot. The “Chakmak” (Both edges dull/unsharpened) is the sharpener used to sharpen both the main blade, which is the Kukri.
That is a beautiful Kukri! I have one myself but it's far more utilitarian.
I have two Khukuris, one is very ornate with the scabbard dressed with silver filigree and the other is a working Gurkha Khukuri. Because I have worked with some amazing Gurkhas.
The name looks familiar. There is a show called Forged in Fire. I believed the contestants had to make this blade on one of the episodes.
Probably Around 5kg, Found In An Antique Shop In Australia. About 20-30cm Deep With A Binocular-Like Leather Case, Not Sure If Removable
thenewtestament:
It’s a Geiger counter.
how do you know they rushed making it maybe they took their time
Load More Replies...My Father Found And Bought This At A Garage Sale Last Week. It's Cool To The Touch, And The Little Doors Make A Clinking Sound, So I'm Guessing It's Carved Stone
Heavy, so probably solid. My best guess is it's a religious relic, since I don't see another use for it.
Reddit user:
It looks like it features images from the Nativity of Christ--the overall shape being the stable where he was born. Based on the artistic style, possibly Coptic (Ethiopian Christians)? Their iconography looks extremely similar.
Dude, what you think is clever is really boring as hell. Time to drop the whole “witch” routine. That horse is beyond dead, so please stop beating the d**n thing.
Load More Replies...Wood Artefact With Fabric Stripes. It Seems An Old Piece Of Furniture. Picture Taken At A Market In Piedmont, Italy
nitro479:
Victorian fireplace screen like this.
It deflected excessive heat from the oh-so-delicate faces of dames - mainly to prevent the makeup from melting, also to avoid a ruddy complexion (which was perceived as not ladylike)
Load More Replies...It was not like a screen to shield the fire. It was placed near the seat of the lady
Load More Replies...Bought This From An Antique's D****r A Couple Years Ago. All I Know Is That It's From India They Said
BusterBloodvesselBR:
It looks like a dowry chest (massive antique Indian carved wood dowry chest).
d-e-a-l-e-r, ffs BP, words have multiple meanings, and usages...your headlines, and your articles are getting close to unreadable...perhaps stop relying on AI censorship, and read the d**n articles yourselves?
Must have been also used by drūg deālers, otherwise they'd be no reason for the censorship.
Load More Replies...at this rate, BP will be censoring so many words, we won't be able to use words at all
Someone should start a threat asking what censored words are. Some are obvious but others are just odd.
Load More Replies...Teeny Tiny Flask-May Be 100 Years Old And Smells Like Cloves Inside
Small flask-nickel photographed alongside for comparison. Smells like clove inside. My 90-year-old grandma thinks it may have belonged to her grandmother, or she may have found it at a thrift store.
notimefortalking:
It is for toothaches, not perfumes. The clove and design give it away. The perfume necklaces are usually very delicate; they are usually made of silver, and those are the ones that survived to be antiques today.
Cloves are good for easing tooache. A girl at promary school (1950's) used to chew a clove when she had toothache
Clove oil contains the active ingredient eugenol, a natural anesthetic. Eugenol helps numb and reduce pain to ease a toothache.
Load More Replies...Cylindrical Unfolding Artefact. It’s Quite Heavy With Metal Hinges. Recovered From Grandparents' Home
jackrats:
It' a travel triptych.
A work of art having three panels. It can be displayed open or closed. triptych-6...6-jpeg.jpg
Old Mechanical Device Found In A Dumpster. Extreme Heavy. Cash Register? Mechanical Calculator?
lordsteve1:
It is indeed a mechanical calculator, an Odhner 1950/60’s model.
Oh wow - we used similar things in maths lessons (and slide rules) None of your calculators then.
What Is This Antique Fork Looking T**l, And What Is It Used For?
jackrats:
It's an ice breaker.
Stab it into someone's leg at parties, gives you all something to talk about
tool is censored ???good grief....your AI has the vocabulary of pubescent private shool boys
use for stabbing BP censor for over doing his/her work; censored the word "tool". Very weird!!!
Picked This Up At A Local Antique Shop. The Left Side Is Copper Lined, The Right Side Is Not, And The Center Divider Is Concave
JasnahKolin:
It looks something like an old "smokers table". The copper could be an ashtray and the curved area could be for bottles as well. Combined booze and tobacco table?
Copper lined is usually for cigars because it keeps the moisture level perfect but doesn't transfer or ruin flavor
Wall Mounted Wooden Antique Cylinder With Belt Mechanism That Rotates The Cylinder - Labels Says "Charles Parker Manufacturing"
The shield with wheels on top of the cylinder will prevent a piece of paper from being displayed. Unless you are suggesting when you find your map, you reverse roll slightly in order to make the paper bow out giving you access to then pull on it by hand to then expose it entirely for display.
KryptosBC:
I believe it is a map roller for multiple maps. Each map would have been attached in one of the visible slots. The map would be selected by pulling down on the rope close to the wall, then reversed to display the chosen map. My memory of it is vague, but I once saw something like this in an old bank office that was being dismantled in about 1960. I do not recall seeing it operated. There is likely some sort of spring loaded ratchet mechanism involved, hence the noisy operation.
Small Plastic Figurines Found Buried In Backyard. 1” Mustachioed Bald Men With Hands On Head, Printed With Arrows
ornithoid:
Think I solved this one! Hasbro produced a Monopoly mini-game in 2009 called Monopoly: Get Out Of Jail. It looks like these were the game pieces used.
Old time prison clothing had arrows printed as integral to the clothing; couldn't be mistaken as anything other than prison garb, made escaping more problematic. If you're outside wearing this clothing you're almost certainly an escapee unless under obvious guard.
I was in Rwanda in the early 2000’s.while prisoners there (and many other countries I believe) wore bright orange coveralls. But, those convicted of murdering Tutsi people were made to wear one in neon hot pink. I think it was to mark them as the murdering bigot scum that they were, and that wearing pink made them less of a man..
Load More Replies...Found In The Woods Behind My House... Definitely Not A Real Gun, But I Haven't The Foggiest Of What It Might Be
TaikongNiuzai:
Buck Rogers disintegrator.
I think that is a Flash Gordon Ray Gun. My brothers had one, until I took it when they got older.
Well it was a pistol but not the kind associated with Buck Rogers, they used rocket pistols. The other guys did once they figured out how to power them. Flash Gordon might used such things though.
Found In A Garden. Metallic Object That Closes In On Itself
Treefrogprince:
Looks like a Hindu ritual box. It is missing the middle piece that would sit in that central hole.
Specifically this is a small oil lamp. You put oil and a short wick into each of the central chambers. When you want to put out the lights, you close the covers.
Looks Like An Antique Night Stand But I Just Can't Figure Out What The Inside Is For. Seems Like A Jewelry Drawer Or Something
Canyouhelpmeottawa:
It is to hold your good silver flatware (utensils). The knife tips fit into the holes on the lid and the utensils sit in piles between the spacers on the bottom.
Found While Helping A Friend Clean Out A House
It's a small steam engine toy. Add water and one or two Esbit bricks, ignite, and learn.
Wow, had one just like that as a kid!! It was a bloody health hazard....
Cool! The very same one still or again is sold today: https://www.amazon.de/45mpfmaschine-Durchmesser-L%C3%A4nge-100-Fertigmodell/dp/B000NWGPPE/ref=sr_1_5?__mk_de_DE=%C3%85M%C3%85%C5%BD%C3%95%C3%91&crid=1M4XSYRM3QFKN&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.S65EJPBtuhPoVbQ5NdcOd7PvP4AokQdavdpQYzsXVKZ2c87o8K9GFyT3z9bFTmy9L6KbSw-NQXd6nBeKFCIRwNuLjE3x5iK1BlpZ-5WnN-fG_TfHhE5UOAiBkrE0h5-qx63Ul9mYatntTH338b-TBeWXAPiBmMiRbQjHfROQ03TZX836gunj68UHdU8TURetmdWAhdMlSIiDbvBySxpX1AvD2VveQf2Z3Ur1ElLubBMH3B8xGzFQJlugnBgeJSVQHzfoM7uU0lNxOc_o0rDq4wyWry42F3aaslfZGwMjsjo.9llfC24ld32WrhlKVk58lLUS1_BHUHm7wYG2F-z9K74&dib_tag=se&keywords=dampfmaschine&qid=1759751662&sprefix=dampfmaschine%2Caps%2C177&sr=8-5
I had a couple of these when I was a kid. Fantastic ! I loved playing with it. Some models had pulley belts for driving mini machinery. Spent hours with it. Mine ran on cotton wool soaked in methylated spirits.
I never had one but my best friend did. It was interesting, but only worked as a model, you couldn't do much "play" with it, more of an "educational" (read: BORING for a ten-year old) toy.
Found In An Unfinished Basement Of An Old Home. Looks Like A Coin But It's Hollow And Opens Up
dont_say_choozday:
Possibly it was a coin lighter, but now it's missing some parts.
The Little Metal Dowels Raise Up, But Can't Be Pulled Out. The Tag Was Not Descriptive At All
Found it in Abilene, TX. I think the place is called Blue Willow Estate Sales.
ferkinatord**n:
Looks like the most unique cribbage board I've ever seen! Do the pegs stay up in their own when you pull them up? If so cribbage is my bet.
Old cribbage player here. Unequivocally a cribbage board. For those not in the know the board was used strictly as a score keeper; play and scoring was card-by-card so scoring could happen with each turn of the card, often alternately between opposite players and happening quickly so paper-and-pencil scoring was cumbersome and impractical. Two rows on each side for each player, thirty points per row, up and around and back again until the first player to score one hundred twenty-one points won the game. These days there are just holes in the board and each player uses just two pegs; the foremost peg indicates current score, subsequent scores are made by using whichever peg is hindmost at the time, jumping over and ahead of the foremost peg. Simple mechanism, but mystifying to anyone unfamiliar with the game, explanation becomes long-winded, sorry.
That was my guess. That was a very popular game in my Grandfather's era (born 1897). He taught me to play. My dad also played. (born 1923).
Antique Glass Vial Embedded In A Small Wooden Case. Found In A Lot Of Items Which Dated Primarily From The 1920s Though Some Were Older
jeffersonairmattress:
My great-grandma had one of these. You put it in the fridge. She said it was to cool your eyelids and under your eyes before applying makeup.
A fancy, expensive marker. They only started selling them in South Africa about 10 years ago.
Load More Replies...This Dagger I Found In My Grandma’s House
Einaiden:
Yemenese Janbiya, also known as a Khanjar. Commonly worn by men as a status symbol.
Small Booklets Of Gibberish Found In A Vacant Home, Appears To Possibly Be Military Related
biotek6:
That's actually a ritual book for the Independent Order of the Oddfellows. The heading translates: FD OTDOF, which is First Degree, or The Degree Of Friendship.
My grandpa is an oddfellow. They're a funny bunch of men. At least most Swedish chapters seem to mostly be men being soft friends in secret. Because friendship isn't manly or something.
Large Cylindrical Drum With Openings On Either Side, And A Spigot On The Bottom Left Corner
mrthisoldthing:
It’s the measuring sight glass from an old gasoline pump that’s been repurposed and turned on its side. The spigot would have been on the bottom. That’s where the dispensing hose connected.
Gassed up at a station that still had two of these old style pumps about 15 years or so back. Small town well off the beaten track.
In the old days, petrol (or gas) pumps had a glass container at the top, showing the fuel, and usually a hand crank at the side, to pump the fuel into your car. Someone has repurposed it for some reason - who's the nonsense now?
Load More Replies...Antique Brass And Steel Contraption. Approximately 7.5" Long. Origin Unknown
Picked this item up from a friend but have no history on it. The brass portions are surprisingly ornamental and it has a working "piston" or slide that moves approximately 1". The end is tooled, possibly to fit an attachment.
ibuybundy:
Clock pendulum.
Yes. Clock pendulum. The centre cylinder sometimes had mercury in it.
Family Antique, 6 Inches Tall Around 250g. Has Small Cups, And A Scroll Inside
jackrats:
Looks like Ceremonial Judaica with Esther Scroll and Kiddush Cup.
I believe it is. Extremely rare. And very special. Usually seen out on the Sabbath and some holidays.
Found At An Antique Shop, What Is It For?
effinfantastic:
It's a napkin holder. You fold napkins into triangles and stick the points in the holes, making it look like an umbrella.
Antique Farm Item
blacktransam:
It is for bundling sheaves of grain. Line would be passed through the eyelets, and connected to spools on the ground. You would feed the line up through the top and bottom of the jaws, then put your grain stalls in and clamp them. Then you would cut the line and tie the bundle.
Small Metal Contraption From An Estate, Possibly Antique. Pokey Tab And Flat Sharp Blade-Like Piece Coming Out Of The Top Move Together On A Very Tight Springy Mechanism
The back panel slides off and top button can be pressed. Comes in a case with a pocket. Measures 2" x 7/8" x 1/2".
Reddit user:
This looks like an old blood-letting knife.
You just need a good bleeding. But im already bleeding. Hey, who's the barber here -snl. Im old
This Thing That My Friend Found In The Water
MsMargo:
This is a figure of the Santerian Orisha Olokun. One hand holds a snake, the other a mask. They typically come off because these figures are kept in water 100% of the time. If you found this in the ocean, then this is more evidence towards that as Olokun is tied to the ocean. This was probably disposed of ritualistically and replaced with a new one.
Antique Wooden Box With Metal Rings And Bubble Level. Discovered A Relic Left Behind In A Friend’s Garage, After He Passed Away
nitro479:
This is a telco cable splicer's lead end plate casting kit. In the olden days, up until the 80's, telco splices were enclosed in lead sleeves. Where the cable entered the sleeve there was an end plate, also made of lead. The splicer was able to use this kit to custom cast whatever end plate he needed. The rings would define the diameter of the plate, and the solid rounds would be used for the entry points of the cables. The solid plate was of course the base, and the level was used to make sure the end plate had uniform thickness. This was one of the more fun aspects of being a cable splicer. Spliced cable for 2 years in the early 80's. Had an identical kit on my truck at that time.
It is indeed. Oh and the electric company did so as well. In fact ConEd here still does.
Rotating Wood Panel In Old Freemason Building. About 4 Ft By 4 Ft, Leads To Nothing
I just got an office job in an old Freemason’s building. Along with interesting relics like stained glass and wall-sized murals, there is this random panel at the top of the stairs. It’s a framed series of triangular-shaped wooden pieces. They rotate on a pivot point, top to bottom, and have ridges on one side. Behind them is just the wall interior. No window or vent or secret door. They’re also numbered at the top.
BackgroundGrade:
Is there a chimney behind it? If so, it's a "thermostat". Once the chimney starts radiating heat, you open the louvers to let out the amount of heat you want.
No fire hazard as only controlled the heat coming from a chimney. There was probably a small chimney vent behind it.
Load More Replies...A chimney mat well have been behind it. Maybe some remodeling done that eliminated the chimney?
Found This While Repairing My Bathroom Vanity
DarkAngel900:
That's most likely Kwan Yin, or spelled Guan Yin on the card. The ram and the Lotus are good fortune symbols. If it fits in a card slot in a wallet, it's pretty modern. It's most likely brass over copper. More than that, I can't tell you.
I have a gold card that I keep in my wallet with a similar figure that a Buddist Monk gave me,it says Kai Guang A mu let on it...
10" Long Cast Iron Interlocking Monkey Figurines Found At Flea Market. There Are 25-30
arathorn867:
Plant hangers. You can get them on Amazon for a couple of bucks, search "cast iron monkey plant hanger".
As a kid in the 70s I had a plastic version of these. Was a game called Barrel of Monkeys.
When I 1st got married, we were so poor, on our 1st Xmas tree, we hung a bunch of the "Barrel of Monkeys" monkeys on the tree. 30 years later and we still have the same ones, only fewer of them.
Load More Replies...Me And My Parents Found This In Our Backyard Earlier Today (It Reads "Do Not Enter P****n Gas") It's On A Circular Concrete Thing
Inconceivable_Wolf:
It is the cap to a septic tank.
Found In Grandma's Old Necklaces. Can Anybody Recognize These Symbols? I Only Know The Ouroboros Around The Letters
pixiespocket:
Grandma was a Gnostic, an occultist, or had it as a good luck charm.
Abraxas: "Abraxas is the name given by some of the early Gnostic Christians to denote the embodied form of God. In the language of Gnosticism, God in the true sense is called the 'Pleroma', which means fullness. So Pleroma would correspond with Brahman in Hinduism, Ein Sof in Jewish Kabbalah, and the Tao of Taoism, etc. All these terms are referring to God in the unknowable sense, the God is beyond concept and beyond imagining. The God that is the source of all being and the ground of all existence, so God in the true meaning of the word. Now, if God were to manifest in the temporal realm, then we would have something that we can conceptualize and label. For the Gnostics, the label for this phenomenon was Abraxas."
Found This Antique Doctor's Kit. No Year Or Online Research Success. Chock Full Of Old Medicines
verdatum:
Many of these components, if they are what they claim to be, are poisonous, carcinogenic, or illegal to sell. Most of them will have broken down into more stable molecules and will have barely a trace of the original d**g, but yeah, you don't mess around in that department. As far as it being a doctor's bag...I don't usually see doctors of that era walking around with that massive a variety of meds. It's also weird that everything is in roughly the same quantity. A normal doctor would keep larger quantities of more commonly used d**gs. Unfortunately, that's about the limit of my knowledge.
Yep, more specifically a snake oil salesman's sample kit. Henry K. Wampole & Co. was a major manufacturer of mostly patent medicines and tonics - rather than what we would classify as pharmaceuticals - in the late 1800s and early 1900s. They're mostly known today for the interestingly shaped molded glass apothecary bottles that bear the company's name, popular among antique bottle collectors.
Load More Replies...Antique Metal T**l, Rectangular With A Sharp Scalloped Edge. Meant To Be Struck With A Hammer. What's It Used For?
This object is rectangular, 12" x 2.5" at the base, with a scalloped edge and sharp grooves. No manufacturer marks are visible. The rectangular base has a cast-iron handle, which is designed to be struck by a hammer. It weighs about 9 lbs.
jeffersonairmattress:
Leather blanking punch. Called A bridge or arch punch due to the structure of it. "blanking" means the good piece you want is inside it.
seems that if you're going to censor the word 'TO0L' you should censor the word 'hammer' too, you know - as in "I'm going to hammer that a*s" or something similar. And I'm certain the word 'hammer' would trigger all the nails out there....
Found Among My Dad's Things. Interesting Velvet Box With Black Object Inside
cynikalAhole99:
It's a pocket handwarmer... an old one too. I used to have a few for camping and fishing. Haven't seen this style for a while. You light the rod in the middle. It is a coal, you close it up and pop it in your pocket. Blow in it to stoke it up.
I had them too. Be aware of the fact that the white fluffy stuff (in the hole where the lighted coal goes) is probably asbestos. No it will not instantly mur/der you, but don't play around with it, avoid dislodging fibres.
In December, I Took A Trip To Meet My Family In Guerrero, Mexico. My Grandma's Boyfriend Talked About Finding These While Out For Walks In Water Streams
Inevitable-Aardvark:
The round ones are spindle whorls or malacates, used for making thread.
The other ones are fragments of figurines. Looks like they were molded. Typology might give you a date if you have an expert look at them. Two of them are anthropomorphic (they represent faces), the third (the one in the upper right corner) could be zoomorphic, although it may also just be an abstract decoration on a broken support of a vessel.
The local INAH office would probably be interested in seeing these and recording their find location.
I've Just Moved Into My New Apartment And The Previous Owner, An Old Fellow, Left This Weird Glass Thing Here. I'd Like To Know What Is It?
HoardingMinimalist:
My guess, and it may be too obvious, is an artist’s iteration of a blown glass oil lamp. The small nub is what you would use to raise or lower the wick, and the curly piece is the handle.
Yours is likely a one-off piece made by an artist copying one of those bedside oil lamps.
I think it is one of those old storm glass weather predictor things
r e c t u m...............................lay off this is getting out of hand
Load More Replies...At An Antique Shop I Work At, Glass, Metal Cap To The "Spout" Which Is Actually Solid, Looks Like It Might Be Broken Off Of A Larger Piece At The Bottom
roanmartigan:
This is a piece of a Murano chandelier or another type of Murano lighting. The metal part goes into a hole in the main body of the chandelier. It is very recognizable.
Antique Mystery Item Possibly From The Old Mining Era In Colorado
brock_lee:
Early jukebox. Mills model 801.
What Is This Red Antique T-Shaped Leather Stool Thing? Handle On Top And In The Middle Of A Formal Lounge. In A Private Members’ Club In London, England
1cat2dogs1horse:
I always thought stools like this were called gout stools. Yours is one of the many different styles and forms they come in.
Just looked it up because I was curious too. It looks like people with gout would use this to prop their foot up while they were seated on another chair, apparently to relieve some of the pain of the condition. The type in the photo above wqould have actually been put on its side so the long middle part would be at a slant. Circa 1700s-1800s.
Load More Replies...It is carried as shown. Then the end with the handle is placed on the floor. The T-shaped end is used as a stool to elevate the leg of the person suffering from gout.
Because you Have it up on its End!! Lay it Down They Rested their Foot Throbbing with Gout on the Stool.
Sterling Silver, Ball On The End That Comes Loose When You Push On The Other End, Doesn't Come Apart Otherwise. Found In An Old Woman's Estate Along With Very Random Antique Items
I've done various Google lens searches with keywords: f&b sterling, push pendant, antique sterling, f&b pendant. The estate had plenty of fine jewelry, craft supplies, and various antiquities. The top seems to be on a spring/chain so the ball comes loose when you press on the top. It's also Engraved with the previous owners initials.
FranticWaffleMaker:
Looks like possibly a fragrance pendant.
It could be for restringing a drawstring. The new piece gets tied to the unit. The entire cylinder is pushed through where the drawstring goes, and it pulls the new string through. I grew up using a safety pin for that purpose.
Thin Slabs Of Ivory With Days Of The Week On The Top Found In My Closet
Artbrutist:
Aide de memoir.
yes, a little re-useable appointment book, generally used by society ladies. You would write on them in pencil, and then wash it off at the end of the week to re-use. I think the "pages" were generally made from ivory.
Load More Replies...Found This Metal Detecting In New Hampshire. Small But Super Heavy
I think it's too small to be a torch holder, but lots of people are suggesting a candle, and it does have a little indent that you could probably fit a thin candle into.
Found In An Old Leather (Possibly Medical) Suitcase. 12cm Long, Pincers Open When Red Top Is Pushed Down
agamemnonIV:
Olive Pickle Grabber Tongs Red Bakelite.
My mum has one that is plastic (possibly tupperware) and I've been trying to find one secondhand for a few years.
Antique Wooden Chest With Various Odd Holes
Our best guess is that it has something to do with dentistry (grandfather was a dentist decades ago) but other than that, we’re stumped. The pencil is regular-sized and is used to demonstrate how deep the holes go. The wood that the holes are drilled into does not lift up.
jackrats:
Knife box.
Knife box? Please explain, the smaller holes are round and not deep.
A knife box is a locking chest for silver flatware and cutlery, not just knives. If you search Ebay for "knife box" you'll find many examples, including some that are nearly identical to this one.
Load More Replies...What Is This Thing? Found It Clearing Out My Great Grandfather's Loft
Kfd49597:
MG-42, an MG that can fire 1200 RPM, I think.
This is indeed an MG42, used by the German Army during WW2. Many Allied troops actually got training where they would fire this gun so they could get used to the sound of it, as its firing rate was so high that soldiers could get scared or stunned when it started firing. The high rate of fire also caused the barrel of the gun to overheat repeatedly, requiring to replace the barrel regularly, so it was made easy to change the barrel on the go in the field.
Even in non-working condition, original MG42's are worth between 40k and 60k to collectors depending on condition and provenance. Working MG42's, which are legal to own if they predate the 1986 cutoff, and were registered prior to that, are worth 200k plus.
Any Ideas Of The Origins Of This Necklace Found In Parents Loft?
TheDrDetroit:
It's a Masonic Lodge Officer Jewel for the position of Treasurer. The blue cord makes me think it's for a "blue lodge", meaning the first three degrees of the Masonic hierarchy.
Utensil Found In An Antique Store, The Slit In The Middle Is Dull So Not A Peeler, Any Ideas?
Nocturnalized:
Looks like a sugar holder for Feuerzangenbowle.
"Feuerzangenbowle" ("fire tong bowle"): for those who find "Glühwein" ("mulled wine", literally "glow wine") too boring. You put about 2 or 3 litres of dry red wine into a pot and heat it up, together with spices (cinnamon, cloves etc. - the usual christmassy suspects) and some fresh squeezed orange juice. Once hot you put it into a special "kettle" and place it on a portable hearth on the table. The sugar tong (pic) lies horizontally across the opening, holding a sugar cone which is then drenched in high voltage (at least 56 %) rum and set aflame. Once it has burned out, caramellized HOTHOTHOT sugar dripping through the open groove in the middle, the bowle is served.
The Original Owner Was Related To A Civil War Saddle Maker. The Back Has "Made In France" And "Fait Main" Stamped On It
We found it in an old antique collection. It's a leather loop with buckles screwed to a block of wood. We've taken it to antique shops and nobody knows what it is.
Dippenflipper:
Crupper.
Had to Google crupper, in case anyone else is as lost as I was: the loop goes under a horse's tail to helo keep the harness in place. Most often seen on working horses.
The leather loop goes under the horse's tail when it's hitched to a cart or similar.
What Is This Red Leather Devil Figure, Found In A Wooden Box In An Attic?
MoistBodySquirts:
Turns out one of the weirder ways skates and rays have been used by people is as curiosities. These cartilaginous fish, related to sharks, were flipped over and “shaped” into gruesome likenesses of imagined sea devils or maybe evil-looking mermaids. After being dried out and shellacked, they were sold in port cities and seaside towns as far back as the 16th century. The origins of the name are obscure, but some articles reference jeune fille d’Anver, which translates as girl from Antwerp.
Intentionally fishing and drying out sea creatures as tourist trinkets, whether sea stars, sea horses, or Jenny Hanivers, has fortunately fallen out of fashion. But beach combing is still a great way to come upon all sorts of interesting bits and pieces brought in on the tide and tossed ashore by a wave to dry in the sun.
Antique Table Found In The UK, With A Secret Compartment Full Of Hidden Wires
Found this today. Shop owner thinks it is something to do with faking seances… age would be about right. Solid wood. Has a hidden nut and bolt on the underside, which opens up the top and reveals a secret compartment. This is full of electric wires. They don’t go anywhere or attach to anything. On each side of the table, there is a little hole drilled, just wide enough for a wire to come out. Wondering why you would need to hide electrics inside a table? Would make sense if you wanted to fake spirit activity with lights and sounds! Wanted to get opinions and ideas from you before I bought it - wouldn’t be interested if it was actually for something totally mundane.
voltairpaine:
It's an electrophone table.
What's it for? *electrophone table, by National Telephone ... Science Museum Group Collection https://collection.sciencemuseumgroup.org.uk › objects An Electrophone table was used for receiving concerts and other public events from theatres, churches, etc, which were wired up with Electrophone microphones.*
This is an antique wooden table with a secret compartment, revealed by lifting the hexagonal top. The compartment contains old electrical wiring and components, which appear to be disconnected and non-functional, suggesting a previous use or perhaps a decorative element. The table also features small holes drilled into its sides, possibly for wires to pass through. ~ Google Lens
A Unknown Metal Purse/Handbag And A Small Flask/Pendant
Both seem to be pretty old, but they just could be some Souvenirs.
The stones on the purse could be Turquoise and red jasper and the purse is probably made out of copper/bronze and iron (not sure tho) also the cord looks really cheap and synthetic. Might be something asian because the neighbors i got it from spent a lot of their time travelling through asia. Also, I can't assign the letters on the lid to any letters I know. (Might also just haven't Google the right thing) I'm totally clueless what the little flask thingie is, might be used for "snuff" or perfume. There should probably be a small spoon on the end of the lid, but it could also just be broken.
MaryN6FBB110117:
The small one is a scent bottle, for perfume or scented oils. The stick is used to dab it on your skin.
I a different kind of the larger one from Egypt, originally from Morocco. They are carriers for Quran scrolls or books (mini ones). I had to research mine myself as I was told mine was a camel back satchel for scrolls and it made no sense to me why they’d be strapped to camels. They are worn around the belt typically and very common around the 1800s this design. Mine has only red and orange stones and has dangly bits . Design varies world wide etc but is for Muslim scripture.
Camel-back is a term to describe the shape. A camel-back item is humped rather than flat.
Load More Replies...What Is This Intercom Looking Device That Came Into Our Local Antique Store? Aluminum, Has Electronics, All Made By United States Instrument Corporation
Not ver big or very heavy, while we suspect its an intercom or radio its missing some key parts ti make it function like one. The knobs spin the numbers listed about the object next to it we dont know if its a speaker or microphone. Believe its military/navy related cause it came in a lot of military stuff.
-Blackfish:
Sound-powered telephone.
Navy related. It is a portion of a 1MC setup. Sound activated intercom.
Found These 1970's "Medical Micro Samples" At An Antique Store Recently. Cant Tell Of They Are Solid Material Or Tiny Vials Of Liquid
Hypochondriaco:
I saw your post with my girlfriend who is a nurse, and she said she’s almost sure they are brain microdialysis cartridges.
An Old Shield From My Grandparents. About 30cm Across. Has “Elkington” Inscribed On The Back
MaryN6FBB110117:
Looks like Elkington & Co. used to be an electroplate manufacturing company that made replica shields, among other things. Maybe it’s one of those?
Vintage Metal Medallion (With Smaller Metal Piece Inside). This Was Labeled Simply As "Relic'" When I Picked It Up, But Frankly It Doesn't Look Anything Like Any Relic I've Ever Seen
Title describes the thing. It looks like it's meant to be a pendant, and I've tried searching up a variety of other Medallion Relics on Google, Worthpoint, and eBay, but haven't run into one that resembles this one.
pamanley:
Someone is selling one like it on etsy. They call it bronze medallion from Burma. 1950’s. Also found a bunch very similar with the chains on other sites saying from the Philippines.
Wooden Board With Numbers In Circle Found In Grandparents’ Attic
SingingTiger:
it looks a lot like what other users have mentioned as Glückshaus. Maybe your board used to have other pieces attached?
Found At An Antiques Store. 4 Identical Objects Marked As "Smoked Glass". They Were Heavy, About 6" Long With Loops On Top
Honestly had no idea where to start researching what these could be. They could be weights for something, maybe? They were just sitting on a chest of drawers, with no more clues around.
ALLCAPS-ONLY:
Part of a chandelier.
Enjoyed the post. Nice learning about items that people find and there is someone out there that knows what the item is.
Enjoyed the post. Nice learning about items that people find and there is someone out there that knows what the item is.
