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Author Topic: Strange Object, German, Austrian, date? Whats it for??  (Read 2818 times)

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Offline Andy

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Strange Object, German, Austrian, date? Whats it for??
« on: January 23, 2008, 03:44:08 PM »
A strange fun object, any ideas what it might be?
looks a bit nautical, i suppose its just a strange paperweight,
label Glas Kunstvoll gestaltet georgeshutte

Any comments welcome ;D
Andy
"Born to lose, Live to win." Ian (Lemmy) Kilmister Motorhead (1945-????)

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Offline Frank

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Re: Strange Object, German, Austrian, date? Whats it for??
« Reply #1 on: January 23, 2008, 05:52:08 PM »
Candle holder.

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Offline David E

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Re: Strange Object, German, Austrian, date? Whats it for??
« Reply #2 on: January 24, 2008, 09:13:22 AM »
Would the label have gone inside the candleholder? I'm just wondering if it's shown upside-down.
David
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Offline Andy

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Re: Strange Object, German, Austrian, date? Whats it for??
« Reply #3 on: January 24, 2008, 01:05:25 PM »
I agree it could be used for candles (or fork 'andles  ;D)
It is the right way up, to be honest i think its probably a desk ornament, maybe a
commercial gift, for someone in shipping, looks like the thingys on docks.
Actually ,theres something a bit similar in the Czech glass book,1945-1980, its by Jaroslav Beranek
for Skrdlovice, its a 'Bouy' with a similar piece of rope going through it . (page 194 if anyones interested)

I suppose i might stick it on ebay just for fun!
Cheers all
Andy 8)
"Born to lose, Live to win." Ian (Lemmy) Kilmister Motorhead (1945-????)

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Offline Anne

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Re: Strange Object, German, Austrian, date? Whats it for??
« Reply #4 on: January 24, 2008, 01:56:04 PM »
Andy, is it real rope on yours or is it glass looking like rope?
Cheers! Anne, da tekniqual wizzerd
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Offline David E

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Re: Strange Object, German, Austrian, date? Whats it for??
« Reply #5 on: January 24, 2008, 01:59:10 PM »
Fibreglass, by any Chance?  ;) Might not such a silly suggestion as it is possible to wind glass fibres that tight.
David
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Offline Anne

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Re: Strange Object, German, Austrian, date? Whats it for??
« Reply #6 on: January 24, 2008, 02:04:24 PM »
David, that's what I was wondering too... ;)
Cheers! Anne, da tekniqual wizzerd
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Offline Frank

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Re: Strange Object, German, Austrian, date? Whats it for??
« Reply #7 on: January 24, 2008, 02:52:40 PM »
Makes a lot of sense as fibre glass was big in Germany in the 30's on at least! Although not listed in this firms production

Here is the company (Courtesy Glass-Study, source ADG Nr.21 1925)

Quote
Becker & Co., G., in Georgshütte bei Boffzen  Braunschweig. Eisenbahn station Fürstenberg a. d. Weser. Fernsprech-Anschluß Amt Höxter 58. TA: Georgshütte Boffzen. Inhaber: August Becker.
Fabrikat: Hohl- und Schleifglas, Wirtschaftsgläser al­ler Art, Einkochgläser, gepreßte Seidel. — 1 Glasofen, 8 offene Häfen, System Siemens, Braunkohlen. Schlei­ferei mit 12 Werkstellen. Graviererei mit 2 Werkstellen. Dampfmaschine 20 PS. 80 Arbeiter. Stift für alte Glas­macher. (Gegr. 1855. )

Not in Ivo, nor listed in 1945 report on German Glass Industry. Also listed in 1935/36 ADG, states 100 employees.

1945 report states
Quote
The glass fibre Works appear to be mainly in two organisations; A.G. der Gerresheimer Glashüttenwerke v. Ferd. Heye control plants at Düsseldorf-Gerresheim, Hamburg-Bergedorf (Oscar Gossler), Ettlingen and Bergisch-Gladbach; Glaswolle Kommanditges. W. Schuller und Co. operate plants at Coburg and in Thuringia and Sudetenland.

also Glasfaser G.m.b.H, Düsseldorf was the sales organisation for Gerresheimer fibre glass (Glasfaser) (1945 not 1935)

So it is seems unlikely to have been fibreglass.

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Offline Andy

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Re: Strange Object, German, Austrian, date? Whats it for??
« Reply #8 on: January 24, 2008, 02:53:54 PM »
Hi ,
yes , i think its fibreglass rope, certainly not old rope.

Actually , saying that, just gone to Wikipedia, I dont think mine is "natural fibre such as Manila hemp, hemp, linen, cotton, coir, jute, and sisal."
More likely " Synthetic fibers in use for rope-making include polypropylene, nylon, polyesters (e.g. PET, Vectran), polyethylene (e.g. Spectra) and Aramids (e.g. Twaron, Technora and Kevlar). Some ropes are constructed of mixtures of several fibres or use co-polymer fibres"

Im not 100% certain :huh:

Andy 8)
"Born to lose, Live to win." Ian (Lemmy) Kilmister Motorhead (1945-????)

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Offline Frank

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Re: Strange Object, German, Austrian, date? Whats it for??
« Reply #9 on: January 24, 2008, 02:55:42 PM »
Ok easy test, straighten a paperclip, make the tip hot, push into rope (underside). If you get a rush of smoke and fumes it is not fibreglass.

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