Wednesday, 24 February 2016

Son et Lumière ~ and something to write home about


1.

2.
3.

4.

5.

 6.

7.

8.

9.

10.

11.

12.

 13.

14.

15.

9 comments:

  1. (6) This is a sheet brass tinder box, made in the Netherlands, probably in the mid/late eighteenth century. It has the usual Dutch repousse work and light engraving. It would have contained a flint, steel, tinder, and sulphur splints: and probably a brass 'douter'.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You'ze de MAN bro (I believe that is idiomatic 'jive-talk' for Yes you have given an awesomely complete response.)

      Delete
  2. (3) is a mould for making twelve wax or tallow candles. It is probably English or early American - dates from the 18th/19th century.

    Numbers 4 and 8 are 'chakmaks' or tinder purses, from Thibet. 18th/19th century.

    (7) Is a fire steel, fancifully made as a swan, probably early 19th century, and probably North West Europe.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Nos. 2, 9, 11, and 12 are tinder tubes, made in India, probably in the 19th century.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. three and a half out of four, Mike. I think 9. is probably Russian and the tinder tube is integral to a tinderbox, which was catalogued as a cigarette case.

      Delete
  4. Number 5 intrigues me. Is it a mould for making wax tapers for use in a waxjack? If so it is probably English/American, and dates to the first half of the 19th century.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I had thought it to be a wax pourer, probably for use with a 6x3 candle mould similar to (but larger than) item 3. but I am less informed than you on the alternative light sources of the time.

      Delete
  5. I suppose for completeness I should add that 4 & 8 are modernly spelled chuk muks {c.f. nun chuks where the element chuk means 'strike' and the pluralising 's' on chuk and muk is an English language addition to the Thibetan words chuk & muk (of course this is only a near transliteration of an oriental script which has little exact correspondence to our alphabet and its pronunciation).
    1. is a Thibetan singing bowl which is cushioned on its textile ring and the striker is inserted and stirred around the inner rim to produce a sonorous ringing tone as an aid to prayer and meditation.
    10. is a wax-sealing compendium containing a screw-capped brass spirit lamp and ladle for melting the wax and an engraved stamp to impress the molten wax. I assume a couple of sticks of red sealing wax would have been kept beside the ladle handle.
    13. is a brass and coromandel-wood inkwell.
    14. is a pocket ink-pad and rubber stamp whose original circular seal appears to have been modified or replaced.
    15. is a 7,500 year old toy cart.

    ReplyDelete