Trousers are definitely too long. You'll be tripping over them all day. Get them to a tailor and have them hemmed. Or if you're like me (cheap), you can run them through your own sewing machine and do it yourself. Of course, hemming won't help if the trousers are overall too big. It's only worth...
I searched rather extensively for this, but couldn't find anything, so I'm creating a thread for it. If such a thread already exists, then my apologies in advance.
I create this thread for my fellow loungers to share photographs (and stories, if any exist) behind the *mechanical* vintage or...
If you're underwater, would rough seas necessarily be a problem?
"Und now gentlemen, to the commode. This newly invented toilet facility will allow for underwater use in the roughest seas, providing the greatest level of comfort ever known by submariner!"
As Ingineer says, solid gold spectacle frames would likely be too thin (and weak) to be useful. So it'd either be very low gold-content (like 9kt or something), or it'd be gold-filled brass (both of which would be stronger).
Personally think silver spectacles would look nicer. I think a friend...
I saw a hot water bottle like that at an antiques shop once for a fairly good price. For some reason I didn't buy it. It was yellow coloured. Copper or brass, I think.
I love the hot-water bottle. And the pocketwatch. What's that thing underneath the pocket watch?
My latest finds: Ivory straight razor from the 1890s, and another whistle.
Looks like a variation of the way that Jeremy Brett (as Sherlock Holmes) wore his bowties:
**Screw it. I give up trying to post the picture here...**
I may be wrong. The picture-quality is not fantastic.
My 'oldest object' now has to be updated to this:
Sterling silver gilt-interior vinaigrette.
Hallmarked Birmingham, Sterling Silver, Thomas Spicer, 1823, duty paid.
I own a piece of Georgian silver!...it's a very small piece of late Georgian silver...but it's still...
Nearly broke my back getting the damn thing home, but how's this for flea-market find?
1945 Singer 15 "Indian Star", manufactured, as the name suggests, for the Indian market. It's a hand-crank "portable" model...which I find to be something beyond hilarious - this thing has to weigh more...
Considering that Levi Strauss has been around since 1850-whatever, I don't see how jeans or denim would be considered 'inappropriate' for the Golden Era...
A week ago, I bought an antique wallet, with a view of pulling it apart, rebuilding the lining and then reassembling it.
Unfortunately, the wallet was in FAR worse a condition than I realised, and it just crumbled when I tried to pull it apart.
I pulled out the steel clasp which was the...
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