The picture of the forge blower is more than just a blower The entire thing is a small forge. You can see the fire pit if you look carefully. A piece of pipe or two and it looks like it could be put back in service. Easy to sell.
I am of a generation that remembers all the kitchen gadgets, and still use a lot of them. We called your "soap shaker" a "soap saver" because it uses all the bits left over, for washing clothes or dishes.
2:50 Those tags were more for just indicating WHO had the tool, but that the tool was still out. You wouldn't want an aircraft taking off with some loose wrenches are sockets lost somewhere in the engine bay or fuselage.
Back in the 50's a relative bought a new car, it ended up having a mystery rattle, they finally cut a panel open and found a Coke bottle that had been intentionally welded into an internal cavity.
I still have a few of those bail jars and lids from both my grandmother and my husband's grandmother. I was lucky enough to find rings for them and use them for storage of dry items like flour and salt.etc..
You can make rings by tracing out the shapes on silicone baking mats then cutting them out, I made a wringer washer tub gasket using this method and it works perfectly.
The soap saver/swisher was in common use well before its patent date, typical of unpatented items and concepts being exploited by avaricious people to exclude their manufacture by anyone else.
I take my soap slivers place them in a bottle, add water and shake. I assume others figured this out and didn't have to buy the patented device. Progress marches on.
Going on the shape of those last things, they are maybe meant to let hot irons rest on for cooling down (before electric irons there were different sizes and weights of irons, so that could fit too).
Agree kathy. Before irons had a heel rest built in, this is what one would set the hot iron on when repositioning the clothing item or to cool when the chore was finished. 👍🏻
Mystery item, you can lay an electric iron on it so it doest scorch the surface you're placing it on while pressing your laundry (yes we used to do that😁)
I wish they would have given a size on the mystery items. They look like the taps they would nail to the soles of our shoes to make them last longer (1950's) Big ones for the heel, smaller ones for the toes.
Last one is a poultry cavity closer …
keeps stuffing secure in cavity when baking
The picture of the forge blower is more than just a blower The entire thing is a small forge. You can see the fire pit if you look carefully. A piece of pipe or two and it looks like it could be put back in service. Easy to sell.
Boeing needs to go back to the brass tags, no more missing bolts and erased video or computer records.
I am of a generation that remembers all the kitchen gadgets, and still use a lot of them. We called your "soap shaker" a "soap saver" because it uses all the bits left over, for washing clothes or dishes.
It is shaped roughly like a clothes iron perhaps its to rest the hot iron on.
2:50 Those tags were more for just indicating WHO had the tool, but that the tool was still out. You wouldn't want an aircraft taking off with some loose wrenches are sockets lost somewhere in the engine bay or fuselage.
Back in the 50's a relative bought a new car, it ended up having a mystery rattle, they finally cut a panel open and found a Coke bottle that had been intentionally welded into an internal cavity.
The last item is used to close off the rear cavity of turkeys or chickens after stuffing. Circa the mid to late’50’s.
I still have a few of those bail jars and lids from both my grandmother and my husband's grandmother. I was lucky enough to find rings for them and use them for storage of dry items like flour and salt.etc..
You can make rings by tracing out the shapes on silicone baking mats then cutting them out, I made a wringer washer tub gasket using this method and it works perfectly.
Rubber seals for the canning jars are available @ Lehman Hardware in Kidron Ohio
The soap saver/swisher was in common use well before its patent date, typical of unpatented items and concepts being exploited by avaricious people to exclude their manufacture by anyone else.
I take my soap slivers place them in a bottle, add water and shake. I assume others figured this out and didn't have to buy the patented device. Progress marches on.
Trivets for resting smoothing irons on.
I think the three are rests for old irons used when pressing clothes.
The soap shaker looks like the thingy I use to grill wienies
The mystery object in question is a steel wool holder
Mystery items are for the ace bandages The sharp points hold elastic bandage when wrapping is complete
that last one looked like an iron trivet
the iron shape flat plates with raised arrow tips are hot iron rest when your nonelectric iron is hot and nees to be cooled
How can I submit a photo of an item?
The ladt item looks like a flat iron protective sleeve
Going on the shape of those last things, they are maybe meant to let hot irons rest on for cooling down (before electric irons there were different sizes and weights of irons, so that could fit too).
Agree kathy. Before irons had a heel rest built in, this is what one would set the hot iron on when repositioning the clothing item or to cool when the chore was finished. 👍🏻
Electric irons don't have a size or shape standard, either. Not even today.
Last thing is vaguely familiar but can't place it?
Mystery item, you can lay an electric iron on it so it doest scorch the surface you're placing it on while pressing your laundry (yes we used to do that😁)
I wish they would have given a size on the mystery items. They look like the taps they would nail to the soles of our shoes to make them last longer (1950's) Big ones for the heel, smaller ones for the toes.
Last item" My husband says it's baked potato holders LOL I say they have something to do with an old iron for clothes.
Bandage pin
Hooks point the wrong way for that.
@@hollyingraham3980 multi directional
cast iron candle snuffer
The last item is a foot torture device
Pre-Lego.
@@yt650 yes, it inspired Lego
That thing is not a bell. It represents an ancient Hindu weapon called "Vajra". A Vajra was a nuclear bomb.