What Is This Strange Tool With Wooden Handle And Steel Parts And This Head Shaped Object With Holes?
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- Опубликовано: 25 апр 2024
- What Is This Strange Tool With Wooden Handle And Steel Parts And This Head Shaped Object With Holes?
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#trendingshorts - Развлечения
That last tool, kinda looks like a pie crust crimper. Run it along the edge to cut off excess and crimp the crust.
If you didn't just suddenly end the video and leave us hanging, I would probably keep watching for days and days. Love this channel. I worked for an auction service for 34 years and so far I can figure most of these out. Some are pretty tough. Life is fun😊
The object at the end of the video usually starts the next. So generally can watch one after the other.
Life is fun
The object at the end of a 6mth old video is to find the next one hopefully
Thanks. The Magic Flote is just a 'newer' version of a much older American folk toy called a 'Flipperdinger'. They have been around for over 200 years, and were usually made by hand. Requires more skill than a 'Whimmydiddle', (also known as a Hooey stick or a Gee-Haw) but I love them both!
Burger King had a kids toy in the 70'/80' that looked like a pipe but you'd put a lightweight ball in the bowl and blow it up.
Starting to recognize things again, like the yarn winder and the perfume pendant. Should have recognized the teapot warmer, too, as I have a couple. I recognized the radio speaker, too, having seen similar ones in really old cartoons.
I was close, Victrola horn or ear trumpet for hearing impaired was my guess.
@@user-wm3bf7pi3u I've seen some early radios that didn't have the flared bell to the horn.
John Logie Baird invented the television not Farnsworth.
I heard it was close, but England got it. The US just ignores this fact.
JLB invented a mechanical TV system, during one of his lectures Farnsworth was demonstrating his electrical system in the next hall over, midsentence JLB stopped and walked out of his OWN demonstration to marvel at Farn.'s work.
But by your logic the Wright bros. landed on the moon.
Or better, the Montgolfier Brothers invented the Jumbo jet.
@@jeanettemarkley7299 The fact is they invented two ways to make a TV, JLB's system was never implemented and the basic concept behind Farnsworth's is still being used today.
@@jeanettemarkley7299 England??? Baird was a Scot!!!
That lamp was cool. At first glance it looked a lot like some of the Celtic golden masks I've seen. I'm glad I was right that it was an oil lamp. Very Cool.
I thought it was an ocarina 😊. Oil lamp makes a lot more sense! ❤
At first glance, that's what it looks like. I also thought it was a Death Whistle, until I saw the holes in the beard. Looks can be deceiving when you get that first look. :D
Fascinating as usual.
Let’s make life fun🎉🎉😂
The teapot warmer is actually made at Aluminia, also in Denmark. The A with three horizontal bars was their logo. Seems like Royal Copenhagen makes a similar one. R.C. was originally called Den kongelige Porcelænsfabrik and have now merged with other factories & trade marks (and moved most production to cheap labour countries). R.C. is a resent construction. It is appearantly owned by Fiskars (Finnish).
Last item looks like a device to tattoo the ear or cattle .
Grafting tool or leather work?
I just hope it's not for a Mohel.
pasta---maybe
Got to admit, your channel is highly addictive- and fun! The only items I could identify in this one were the perfume pendant (because I have one,) and the weird Vietnamese drum (simply because it had all the elements of a percussive instrument.)
Keep watching you'll get better, and remember if you have no clue guess "something to do with yarn".
Glad you like them!
The ‘flote’ resembles a device used post operatively to prevent pneumonia call an ‘incentive spirometer’. Often with one to three plastic balls that are to be floated to a certain level
There is a clip of "Would I lie to You" with Bob Mortimer showing off one of those he got after heart surgery.
@@user-wm3bf7pi3u Foreign resident couldn’t remember the name of the device used, so ordered “blow balls blue”, for the three hollow blue balls in it. Close enough.
Last item: For cutting vegetables into decorative shapes?
So a crazy melon-baller?
Why was my comment shadow banned, what is wrong with a melon⚾🥎🏀er?
If I had to guess I would say it is made for stretching fabric or leather.
GREAT SHOS
I swear I did not guess one single thing correct today. I did say that a oil lamp was a incense burner, 4:18 that was close. Okay it’s a big stretch. Better luck next vid. Thank you for today though.
I went to a shop that does custom embroidery. They had a computerized machine that even automatically changed thread for different colors. I was surprised to see that high tech machine was made by Toyota.
Heh, my mother has a stove manufactured by AMC, the automakers responsible for the Gremlin and Rambler...it's always fun to see what other items some companies made, before hitting their stride!
@@mikereid1195 Most dental tool manufactures started during the SPANISH INQUISITION!!!!!!!!
Bet you didn't expect that , now did ya?
@@user-wm3bf7pi3u NO ONE EXPECTS THE SPANISH INQUISITION!
@@mikereid1195
@@mikereid1195 NOT... the COMFY CHAIR!!!!!!!!!
I still have and use a lot of the farm/kitchen items shown on the channel, like the wire stretcher in this program. I keep them because they work, and don't use electricity. Back in the day, we called it 'bob wire', just a colloquialism.
...short for "barbed wire"
Oh, I'm familiar with barbed wire stretchers, or any type of fence wire stretcher for that matter. As well as post hole diggers, post drivers/rammers/thumpers, whatever you want to call them. I'd be happy to be less familiar with them. I never used a stretcher like that but we had one. The one we used was a small block and tackle device with a cam that would keep tension on the rope so one person could do both the stretching and the fastening.
Yay! I got both the perfume pendant and the oil lamp. 🪔
The last one is to make a hole or stamp on something. Or to make a removable object?
Well, I got one today 😂
☝👍
the last item could be a ticket cutter, used by bus/tram/train inspectors to signify your ticket had been checked?
or a can opener,,, ? :) lol
I just hope it's not a Mohel.
i love guessing to see how close i get, thanks for the fun.
Thanks for watching!
At some point we are going to have to define exactly which century we are referring to when we say "mid century".
A real head scratcher...
Final item - just some thoughts without conclusion - it is designed to create a scalloped indentation or cut but not likely used for leather (those tools are mostly hammered), not for decorative paper (paper needs a soft pad on the flat or another offset cutting edge) and for the same reason not likely for food (the welds are clumsy and not easy to clean). It doesn't look like it has ever been heated so not likely a heat-cutting device for synthetic fabric hems (looking at the scalloped ends similar to those used to trim synthetic lace to keep from fraying).
My out on a limb guess would be a tool, when heated, used to sear-trim the end of a synthetic rope... but I have very little confidence in this assumption
As it is all interconnected metal: the handles would get way too hot to handle.
And any food would get stuck as in dough , pasta etc.
But the blade indicates that it is supposed to make an inserted border.
It doesn't look that old.
So my thought is a crimper for rolled fondant for trims, deco for cakes.
@@ande100 you likely know better. I offered my thoughts before the dawn and well before my coffee. if you find out - please let me know. I just don't have such insight for this item.
be well!
👁👁 happy to drop by 8:01
Perfume pendant is one use, I swear I've seen people use that type of thing for laudanum, or worse...
some stuff on this channel is interesting, but I despise this slow and repetitive use of language. Also with most pieces I expect a demonstration of how they work, you know Video rather than slideshow.
I don't understand the purpose, background, mechanism, circumstances or commonality of occurence for most of these pieces, because that's literally not being talked about. Generally I'd say the content here's shallow. It's just disappointing, because it could be so much more. Also, state your fricking sources in the Video!
Another fun episode! knew the toy, speaker part, lamp, and definitely not the last tool which, after a bevy and some careful thought we think its for clipping tire treads, or making fancy edges, or doing edge-work on leather, or toe-torture, marking tickets.... gah!
As long as it's not a Mohel.