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A style of insulator used for primary power distribution and nickname the "Frog Eyes" insulator. This insulator was produced by the Hemingray Glass Company in Muncie, Indiana around the 1930's - 1940's, and is the smallest in the D-500 series of insulators produced by Hemingray.
Four of the colors in the line up were found along the old Erie Railroad in northern Indiana by me in 1980, right after the railroad became abandoned in the late 1970's. More information about each insulator listed below starting from the left.
1 - Carnival [090]
2 - Yellow [070] Unlisted for this color
3 - Yellow Amber [070], This was picked off the abandoned 440 volt circuit lines along the old Erie in downtown Huntington, IN in 1980, right after the railroad became abandoned.
4 - Honey Amber [090], Three of these were picked off the abandoned 440 volt circuit lines at the same general area as the yellow amber one.
5 - Dark Orange Amber [090]
6 - Red Amber [090], I would call this dark red amber. This was picked off the abandoned 440 volt circuit lines at the same general area as the yellow amber and honey ambers.
7 - Lowex Dark Olive Amber [010], Nearly a hundred of these were picked off the abandoned 440 volt circuit lines along the same railroad above between Decatur and Rochester, IN, with the highest concentration around Bippus in 1980, right after the railroad became abandoned.
The CD 154 style of insulator was the standard insulator used for telegraph distribution that were commonly used along most railroads and were produced by many glass companies from the 1920's-1960's.
This shot shows the five basic amber colors that the Dominion Glass Company of Canada produced. Starting from left the colors are yellow, yellow amber, honey amber, orange amber, and red amber.
In this shot I had to exposed the shot for the lighter two insulators on the left, the yellow and yellow amber ones. Exposing for the middle or darker insulators made the lighter yellow colored one to blown out, even after using the shadow highlight tool in photoshop, which it did help some. So the three darker insulators on the right are about 1-2 shades darker, throwing off the true colors some.
The same insulators in the comment section shows the true colors especially for the darker ones. Some were posted awhile back while the yellow amber, honey amber, and orange amber are new postings.
For more information about the Dominion Glass Company click on any of the insulators in comment section.
Glass bowl, flower pistil detail flashed from behind
Compositionally Challenged - Abstract
In Explore 1/20/2024. Thank you for all the views, faves and kind comments!
The CD 154 style of insulator was the standard insulator used for telegraph distribution which were commonly used along most railroads and were produced by many glass companies from the 1920's-1960's.
This particular insulator was produced by the Dominion Glass Company (1913-1967) which was a re-organization of the Diamond Flint Glass Company. The head office was located at Montreal, Quebec and factories at Montreal; Wallaceburg, Ontario; Toronto, Ontario; Hamilton, Ontario; and Red Cliff, Alberta. Most insulators made by Dominion were produced at the Wallaceburg site.
The majority of the CD 154 orange amber Dominion insulators were used along railroads in the eastern Provinces of Canada.
Embossing (F-Skirt) DOMINION-42 (R-Skirt) ['D' inside a diamond] [Number]
Index # 020
A style of insulator used for primary power distribution that had a voltage rating of 6,600 volts. This insulator was produced by the Hemingray Glass Company in Muncie, Indiana in the c1930's-1940's. This insulator with the style number D-510 became the most popular for Hemingray in the D-series of insulators produced by Hemingray.
Embossing (F-Skirt) [Numbers and dots] / HEMINGRAY / MADE IN U.S.A. (R-Skirt) [Number] / D-510
Index # 110
A very popular CD style of insulator known as a signal insulator, that were produced by many different glass companies from the 1880's to the 1940's for telephone and low voltage power distribution.
These amber CD 162 insulators were produced by the Hemingray Glass Company in Muncie, Indiana around the late 1930's to the early 40's.
Most of these amber signal insulators were used in the state of Kansas with large quantities in Ellsworth, Kansas. Power companies in that state used colored CD 162 signals to specially mark various circuits on the poles like street light circuits.
This mold style was the last used in producing colored Hemingray signals around the late 1930's to early 40's.
On this particular insulator I remember going down with my friend and his dad driving to Connersville, Indiana back in the early 70's to an antique store. My friends dad had seen a bunch of nice insulators in this antique store a few days earlier while driving through.
When I saw this insulator the guy was asking $8.00 dollars for it, which I thought was way to steep for an insulator, especially for a young kid like me. After looking at the insulator many times trying to get the price down, including some other insulators I was interested in, He finally knock $2.00 dollars off the price to $6.00 dollars, which I did pay for at that price.
40 some years later it's hard to believe how cheap I got this insulator compare to the prices they go for now for these colored CD 162 signal insulators.
Embossing (F-Skirt) HEMINGRAY-19 (R-Skirt) MADE IN U.S.A.
Index # 090
The CD 154 style of insulator was the standard insulator used for telegraph distribution which were commonly used along most railroads and were produced by many glass companies from the 1920's-1960's.
This particular insulator was produced by the Dominion Glass Company (1913-1967) which was a re-organization of the Diamond Flint Glass Company. The head office was located at Montreal, Quebec and factories at Montreal; Wallaceburg, Ontario; Toronto, Ontario; Hamilton, Ontario; and Red Cliff, Alberta. Most insulators made by Dominion were produced at the Wallaceburg site.
The majority of the CD 154 yellow amber Dominion insulators were used along railroads in Nova Scotia of Canada.
Embossing (F-Skirt) DOMINION-42 (R-Skirt) ['D' inside a diamond] [Number]
Index # 020
The CD 154 style of insulator was the standard insulator used for telegraph distribution which were commonly used along most railroads and were produced by many glass companies from the 1920's-1960's.
This particular insulator was produced by the Dominion Glass Company (1913-1967) which was a re-organization of the Diamond Flint Glass Company. The head office was located at Montreal, Quebec and factories at Montreal; Wallaceburg, Ontario; Toronto, Ontario; Hamilton, Ontario; and Red Cliff, Alberta. Most insulators made by Dominion were produced at the Wallaceburg site. The majority of the CD 154 honey amber Dominion insulators were used along railroads in Nova Scotia of Canada.
Embossing (F-Skirt) DOMINION-42 (R-Skirt) ['D' inside a diamond] [Number]
Index # 020
A saddle groove style of insulator used for low voltage primary power distribution. This particular flashed amber insulator was produced by the Hemingray Glass Company in Muncie, Indiana which was only produced for one brief year in 1941 and known as Hemingray style # 661.
Flashed Amber was a coating applied to the surface of the insulator while it was still hot. It generally results in various amber colors, which often results in giving the appearance of wood grain streaks on the insulator. The amber coloration was produced to color code a given circuit, often times to designate a different voltage than the other wires on the same pole.
This was common practise along railroads on their pole lines where the power circuits were used along with all the lower voltage telegraph and or telephone circuits. The color coded insulator let the lineman know that the electrical circuit was a higher voltage line. The old Erie Railroad in northern Indiana was one such railroad that used color coded glass power insulators for their 440 volt power circuits.
Embossing (F-Skirt) HEMINGRAY-661 (R-Skirt) MADE IN U.S.A. / [Number] [Number]
Index # 010
A style of insulator known as a cable insulator that were produced for power distribution. Cable insulators were design to support the large direct current (DC) electrical lines so commonly used for old street railways, trolley lines, and interurban lines.
This insulator was produced by the Whitall Tatum Company in Millville, New Jersey which produced glass insulators from 1922 to 1938. There were three different style embossings on Whitall Tatum insulators. The particular embossing style on this insulator were produced from 1924 to 1938. It was about this time in the 1920's when brown glazed porcelain insulators were becoming the standard power insulator, so glass companies like Whitall Tatum started producing the dark amber insulators to compete with the porcelain companies.
The Whitall Tatum Company has its roots going back to 1806 and was one of the first glass factories in America, located at Millville, New Jersey. The Millville glassworks was founded by James Lee in 1806 and went through several changes of ownerships from 1806-1838. In 1838, John M Whitall became a partner in the business, then known as the "Phoenix Glass Works." In 1845 his brother Israel Franklin Whitall joined the firm and in 1848 the firm became the "Whitall, Brother & Company." Later in 1857, Edward Tatum also joined the partnership and the name was again changed to "Whitall Tatum & Company" until finally in 1901 it was changed to "Whitall Tatum Company" until 1938.
In 1806 the glasshouse originally produced window glass then around 1820 the glasshouse would start to produce bottles, carboys, demijohns, vials, druggist, and the like. During the time when the glasshouse was the "Whitall, Brother & Company" and onward to the "Whitall Tatum Company" it would go on to produce large quantities of variety of bottles and fruit jars. In 1921 when the Brookfield Glass Company giant closed its doors, the Whitall Tatum Company would fill the void and start producing glass insulators a year later in early spring of 1922. Whitall Tatum would go on mass-producing glass insulators for power and communication lines throughout the country until 1938. In 1938, the Armstrong Cork Corporation (Company) purchased the Whitall Tatum, continuing insulator production, however, eight years passed before the Whitall Tatum name began to be replaced by Armstrong embossings.
Embossing (F-Skirt) WHITALL TATUM CO. No 511A / [Number] (R-Skirt) MADE IN U.S.A. ['W/T' inside a triangle]
Index # 005
Soft light radiates from this vintage-style wall sconce, its amber glass shade casting a golden warmth that transforms the space around it. The hand-forged metalwork, elegant curve, and delicate petal form reflect the artistry of classic design—a meeting of function and beauty. The weathered wall behind it adds texture and depth, enhancing the intimate, nostalgic atmosphere. Whether in a quiet inn, an old-world café, or a thoughtfully restored home, this lamp evokes the charm of craftsmanship that endures. It’s not just illumination—it’s a reminder that light itself can be an act of art.
A style of insulator used for power distribution that had a voltage rating of 2300 - 6600 volts. This insulator was produced by the Hemingray Glass Company in Muncie, Indiana in the 1920's.
This CD style unique only to Hemingray comes in five different amber colors, red, root beer, honey, orange, and yellow amber. Also in blue and aqua colors.
Embossing (F-Skirt) HEMINGRAY-23 (R-Skirt) MADE IN U.S.A.
Index # 010
The CD 154 style of insulator was the standard insulator used for telegraph distribution which were commonly used along most railroads and were produced by many glass companies from the 1920's-1960's.
This particular insulator was produced by the Dominion Glass Company (1913-1967) which was a re-organization of the Diamond Flint Glass Company. The head office was located at Montreal, Quebec and factories at Montreal; Wallaceburg, Ontario; Toronto, Ontario; Hamilton, Ontario; and Red Cliff, Alberta. Most insulators made by Dominion were produced at the Wallaceburg site.
The majority of the CD 154 dark red amber Dominion insulators were used along railroads in the eastern Provinces of Canada.
Embossing (F-Skirt) DOMINION-42 (R-Skirt) ['D' inside a diamond] [Number]
Index # 020
A style of insulator known as a "Beehive" insulator that were the standard insulator used for telegraph distribution commonly used along U.S. railroads. Beehive insulators were produced from the mid 1880's to around the 1930's time period.
Always one of my favorite insulators, these amber insulators were produced by the Hemingray Glass Company in Muncie, Indiana, and possibly their older Covington, Kentucky plant in the late 1880's and 1890's. They are always full of seed bubbles and come in many different shades of amber colors of orange, honey, golden, and yellow amber, including pure yellow color.
The majority of these amber beehive insulators were put into service on the telegraph lines along the old Great Northern Railway transcontinental railroad in western Montana, northern Idaho and eastern Washington in the late 1880's - 90's. Don't expect to find any left, they were taken down from service from linemen and collectors back in the 1960's and early 70's.
Embossing (F-Skirt) H.G.CO. / [Letter] (R-Skirt) PETTICOAT
Index # 130
Tuesday 17 March 2009: Casual evening entertaining friends at home: dinner, music, 20 questions and lots & lots of icecream w/ strawberries.
Bell sleeve jersey shirt w/ sash belt: Jessica London online, www.jessicalondon.com/, c.$15 (on sale), c.2007
Jersey wide leg pants: Newport News online, www.newport-news.com/, c.$20 (on sale), c.2008
Black wedgie slides w/ silver buckles: Payless Shoes, Ellsworth, ME, www.payless.com/, c.$20, c.2006
Jewelry: Assorted BOGO necklaces (c.$8-$15), Additionelle, Montreal, Canada, additionelle.com/ and Fashion Bug Plus, Ellsworth ME, fashionbug.com/. Sterling snake ring w/ pink glass stone, W Hotel Store online, whotelsthestore.com/, c.$15 (on sale). Sterling Russian wedding band (thumb), street fair, 3rd Ave., NYC, c.$10. Earrings, Lane Bryant, 5th Ave., NYC, lanebryant.com/, c.$15. All c.1999-2009
Hair: L'Occitane olive tree daily shampoo & conditioner, loccitane.com
Face: Clinique 3-step #2, balanced makeup base in porcelain beige, quick liner in black honey, high impact mascara in black brown & soft shine lipstick in amberglass: all from the Clinique counter at Macy's, Bangor, ME or online, clinique.com
During 1916 the British born Australian architect Walter Richmond Butler (1864 – 1949) designed a new Anglican Mission to Seamen to be built on an oddly shaped triangular block of land at 717 Flinders Street on the outskirts of the Melbourne central city grid, to replace smaller premises located in adjoining Siddeley Street, which had been resumed by the Harbour Trust during wharf extensions.
The Missions to Seamen buildings, built on reinforced concrete footings, are in rendered brick with tiled roofs. Walter Butler designed the complex using an eclectic mixture of styles, one of which was the Spanish Mission Revival which had become a prevalent style on the west coast of America, especially in California and New Mexico during the 1890s. The style revived the architectural legacy of Spanish colonialism of the Eighteenth Century and the associated Franciscan missions. The revival of the style is explicit in the Mission’s small, yet charming chapel with its rough-hewn timber trusses, in the bell tower with its pinnacles and turret surmounted by a rustic cross and in the monastic-like courtyard, which today still provides a peaceful retreat from the noisy world just beyond the Missions to Seamen’s doorstep. The chapel also features many gifts donated by members of the Harbour Trust and Ladies’ Harbour Lights Guild, including an appropriately themed pulpit in the shape of a ship's prow and two sanctuary chairs decorated with carved Australian floral motifs. Some of the stained glass windows in the chapel depict stories and scenes associated with the sea intermixed with those Biblical scenes more commonly found in such places of worship.
The adjoining Mission to Seamen’s administration, residential and recreational building shows the influence of English domestic Arts and Crafts architecture, with its projecting gable, pepper pot chimneys and three adjoining oriel windows. The lobby, with its appropriately nautically inspired stained glass windows, features a large mariner's compass inlaid in the terrazzo floor. Built-in timber cupboards, wardrobes, paneling and studded doors throughout the buildings evoke a ship's cabin.
Walter Butler, architect to the Anglican Diocese in Melbourne, had come to Australia with an intimate knowledge and experience of the Arts and Crafts movement and continued to use the style in his residential designs of the 1920s. The main hall has a reinforced concrete vaulted ceiling. Lady Stanley, wife of the Mission's patron, Governor Sir Arthur Lyulph Stanley, laid the foundation stone of the complex in November 1916. The buildings were financed partly by a compensation payment from the Harbour Trust of £8,500.00 and £3,000.00 from local merchants and shipping firms. The Ladies' Harbour Lights Guild raised over £800.00 for the chapel. Most of the complex was completed by late 1917 whilst the Pantheon-like gymnasium with oculus was finished soon afterwards. The substantially intact interiors, including extensive use of wall paneling in Tasmanian hardwood, form an integral part of the overall design.
The Missions to Seamen buildings are architecturally significant as a milestone in the early introduction of the Spanish Mission style to Melbourne. The style was to later find widespread popularity in the suburbs of Melbourne. The choice of Spanish Mission directly refers to the Christian purpose of the complex. The Missions to Seamen buildings are unusual for combining two distinct architectural styles, for they also reflect the imitation of English domestic architecture, the Arts and Crafts movement. Walter Butler was one of the most prominent and progressive architects of the period and the complex is one of his most unusual and distinctive works.
The Missions to Seamen buildings have historical and social significance as tangible evidence of prevailing concerns for the religious, moral, and social welfare of seafarers throughout most of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. The complex has a long association with the Missions to Seamen, an organisation formed to look after the welfare of seafarers, both officers and sailors, men "of all nationalities". It had its origins in Bristol, England when a Seamen's Mission was formed in 1837. The first Australian branch was started in 1856 by the Reverend Kerr Johnston, a Church of England clergyman, and operated from a hulk moored in Hobsons Bay; later the Mission occupied buildings in Williamstown and Port Melbourne. In 1905 the Reverend Alfred Gurney Goldsmith arrived at the behest of the London Seamen's Mission to establish a city mission for sailors working on the river wharves and docks. The building reflects the diverse role played by the Mission with its chapel, hall and stage, billiards room, reading room, dining room, officers' and men’s quarters, chaplain's residence, and gymnasium. It is still in use to this day under the jurisdiction of a small, but passionate group of workers, providing a welcome place of refuge to seamen visiting the Port of Melbourne.
Walter Butler was considered an architect of great talent, and many of his clients were wealthy pastoralists and businessmen. His country-house designs are numerous and include “Blackwood” (1891) near Penshurst, for R. B. Ritchie, “Wangarella” (1894) near Deniliquin, New South Wales, for Thomas Millear, and “Newminster Park” (1901) near Camperdown, for A. S. Chirnside. Equally distinguished large houses were designed for the newly established Melbourne suburbs: “Warrawee” (1906) in Toorak, for A. Rutter Clark; “Thanes” (1907) in Kooyong, for F. Wallach; “Kamillaroi” (1907) for Baron Clive Baillieu, and extensions to “Edzell” (1917) for George Russell, both in St Georges Road, Toorak. These are all fine examples of picturesque gabled houses in the domestic Queen Anne Revival genre. Walter Butler was also involved with domestic designs using a modified classical vocabulary, as in his remodelling of “Billilla” (1905) in Brighton, for W. Weatherley, which incorporates panels of flat-leafed foliage. Walter Butler also regarded himself as a garden architect.
As architect to the diocese of Melbourne from 1895, he designed the extensions to “Bishopscourt” (1902) in East Melbourne. His other church work includes St Albans (1899) in Armadale, the Wangaratta Cathedral (1907), and the colourful porch and tower to Christ Church (c.1910) in Benalla. For the Union Bank of Australia he designed many branch banks and was also associated with several tall city buildings in the heart of Melbourne’s central business district such as Collins House (1910) and the exceptionally fine Queensland Insurance Building (1911). For Dame Nellie Melba Butler designed the Italianate lodge and gatehouse at “Coombe Cottage” (1925) at Coldstream.
A style of insulator used for primary power distribution and nickname the "Frog Eyes" insulator. This insulator was produced by the Hemingray Glass Company in Muncie, Indiana around the 1930's - 1940's. I personally found this along the old Erie Lackawanna Railroad in downtown Huntington, Indiana back in 1980 after the line became abandoned.
Embossing (F-Skirt) [Numbers and dots] / HEMINGRAY / MADE IN U.S.A. (R-Skirt) LOWEX / D-512
Index # 070
My oils can be used as bath oils, perfumes, or ritual/altar oils, & can be useful in affecting your mood and/or outlook on life. I use only the best ingredients, including all pure essential oils & rosemary extract (a natural preservative). All oils are made using jojoba oil (with small amounts of various other oils mixed in), the closest to the skin's natural oils. This allows it to absorb easily, so that your body can reap the full benefits of the essential oils in the blend.
* Lime in Da Coconut = Made with raw, unrefined coconut oil and lime essential oil, this body butter is full of all the goodness coconut oil offers. Raw, unrefined coconut oil is just as it comes from the fruit, pure & natural. Transport yourself to a tropical island. Margarita anyone? ;)
* Amas Veritas = "He'll hear my call from a mile away ... He can ride a pony backwards ... He can flip pancakes in the air ..." Young love; so innocent & sweet. To me, this was always a very innocent spell by little girls, so I've made this scent to be reminiscent of true love and innocence: light florals, citrus, and just a hint of woods & earth.
* BellaDonna = Heat, passion, romance. Adult love. This blend contains ylang ylang, rose, cardamom, vanilla & sandalwood (all potent aphrodisiacs). Wear this to bring forth feelings of lust in you & your love ;)!
* Plant Lavender for Luck = "There's some things, though, I know for certain: Always through spilt salt over your left shoulder, keep rosemary by your garden gate, plant lavender for luck, and fall in love whenever you can." This fresh & flirty garden concoction will make you feel like you've taken herbs straight from the Owens' garden. Lavender, rosemary, citrus, and mint create a fresh & clean natural scent you'll fall in love with over & over.
* Dancing Naked Under the Moon = Using essential oils of plants that fall under the influence of the Moon, I created a scent that will make you want to actually dance naked under the moon. Jasmine, anise, lavender, citrus, and several others combine to create a potion that'll make you feel free! The nudity, however, is completely optional ;)!
My oils can be used as bath oils, perfumes, or ritual/altar oils, & can be useful in affecting your mood and/or outlook on life. I use only the best ingredients, including all pure essential oils & rosemary extract (a natural preservative). All oils are made using jojoba oil (with small amounts of various other oils mixed in), the closest to the skin's natural oils. This allows it to absorb easily, so that your body can reap the full benefits of the essential oils in the blend.
* Lime in Da Coconut = Made with raw, unrefined coconut oil and lime essential oil, this body butter is full of all the goodness coconut oil offers. Raw, unrefined coconut oil is just as it comes from the fruit, pure & natural. Transport yourself to a tropical island. Margarita anyone? ;)
* Amas Veritas = "He'll hear my call from a mile away ... He can ride a pony backwards ... He can flip pancakes in the air ..." Young love; so innocent & sweet. To me, this was always a very innocent spell by little girls, so I've made this scent to be reminiscent of true love and innocence: light florals, citrus, and just a hint of woods & earth.
* BellaDonna = Heat, passion, romance. Adult love. This blend contains ylang ylang, rose, cardamom, vanilla & sandalwood (all potent aphrodisiacs). Wear this to bring forth feelings of lust in you & your love ;)!
* Plant Lavender for Luck = "There's some things, though, I know for certain: Always through spilt salt over your left shoulder, keep rosemary by your garden gate, plant lavender for luck, and fall in love whenever you can." This fresh & flirty garden concoction will make you feel like you've taken herbs straight from the Owens' garden. Lavender, rosemary, citrus, and mint create a fresh & clean natural scent you'll fall in love with over & over.
* Dancing Naked Under the Moon = Using essential oils of plants that fall under the influence of the Moon, I created a scent that will make you want to actually dance naked under the moon. Jasmine, anise, lavender, citrus, and several others combine to create a potion that'll make you feel free! The nudity, however, is completely optional ;)!
Of Treasures:
"For Strange Little Girls" is an all natural, absolutely organic trance in a 1/4 oz. amber apothecary bottle. A sultry mix of sweet almond oil, jojoba, sunflower & hazelnut oils are blended with mine own hands and are then combined with essential oils from around the realm to produce this vessel of girlishly charming goodness.
:Of Wondrous Aromas:
"For Strange Little Girls" is a tantalizing thing, my doves. Fragrance oils where pulled from refreshing cucumber and white tea to create a wonderfully clean aroma perfect for after the bath or to help you wake up in the morning. It holds an almost irresistible charm that will be sure to draw others to you like bees unto honey.
:All Natural & Organic:
Product is all natural and completely organic, vegan friendly and actually good for your skin. Product will come to you in gift-style wrappings, packaged with love and care. Product labels and such are produced in-house & are completely composed of recyclable parchment paper and the like. Peel the label right off & tuck it away as a keepsake or bookmark. High quality amber glass apothecary bottle is also a re-usable little wonder with a plastic lid (safe to wash by hand).
find at pixxxiepieandposie.etsy.com
New arrivals as well as some current Etsy stock. Some lamps have already been sold. Others are patiently waiting to be customized by a new owner or interior designer.
Vintage Lighting:
~Unique & so much more appealing than mass-produced, mix-and-match reproductions seen national retail chains, don't you think..?
~Environmentally friendly, because vintage is reuse and recycling at its very best!
LVL Vintage Lighting:
~Worry free (already inspected/rewired; with a shade if desired)!
~Uniquely yours (most waiting for new owner to customize).
This Amber-Red Frog Dish has Boyd Art Glass maker's mark. The Bottom piece has the Boyd mark. I am not 100% sure the top and bottom go together, but that is how I got them. They are different colors. If anyone has any information about the Frog top, please let me know.
PS:Thanks to TenaciousC I know know they go together.
PPS: I found a mark on the frog, NMGCS (National Milk Glass Collector Society), so this may be a reproduction - They made some of these, not sure of the colors, in 2004 and 1994 for their convention. Boyd made the base, the top piece was from an L.G. Wright mold.
Of Treasures:
"For Strange Little Girls" is an all natural, absolutely organic trance in a 1/2 oz. amber apothecary bottle. A sultry mix of sweet almond oil, jojoba, sunflower & hazelnut oils are blended with mine own hands and are then combined with essential oils from around the realm to produce this vessel of girlishly charming goodness.
:Of Wondrous Aromas:
"For Strange Little Girls" is a tantalizing thing, my doves. Fragrance oils where pulled from refreshing cucumber and white tea to create a wonderfully clean aroma perfect for after the bath or to help you wake up in the morning. It holds an almost irresistible charm that will be sure to draw others to you like bees unto honey.
:All Natural & Organic:
Product is all natural and completely organic, vegan friendly and actually good for your skin. Product will come to you in gift-style wrappings, packaged with love and care. Product labels and such are produced in-house & are completely composed of recyclable parchment paper and the like. Peel the label right off & tuck it away as a keepsake or bookmark. High quality amber glass apothecary bottle is also a re-usable little wonder with a plastic lid (safe to wash by hand).
:Remember:
Bottle Measures: 2.8" in Height x 1" Wide
find at pixxxiepieandposie.etsy.com
Hollywood Regency style Brass Lamp found at a flea market near a lake in a little Texas town. Found this beauty tucked wa-a-a-y, high up, wa-a-a-y far back. The man in the Rebel gimme cap told me it had been there for years. It is so filthy it will probably weigh less by the time I scrub off all of the grime. Needs extensive work, but isn't it fabulous..? The brass flowers on the post remind me of the lamps on either side of Charley's bed in the movie A Single Man. Stay tuned!
:Of Treasures:
"For Lost Boys" is an all natural, absolutely organic trance in a 1/2 oz. amber apothecary bottle. A sultry mix of sweet almond oil, jojoba & hazelnut oils are blended with mine own hands and are then combined with essential oils from around the realm to produce this vessel of boyishly charming goodness.
:Of Wondrous Aromas:
"For Lost Boys" is a tantalizing thing, my doves. Fragrance oils where pulled from delicious chocolate and Colombian coffee... and these simmer with a bit of a woodsy spice oil to create a sultry aroma that seems to appeal to both thoughtful-sexy-geek-guys and the macho man alike. It holds an almost irresistible charm that will be sure to draw others to you like bees unto honey. You'll smell good enough to eat, so do watch out for older women attempting to toss you into hot ovens or warm beds.
Note: I do have quite a few female clients that love this aroma just as much as the men I cater to, so if you're the tomboy type and you like to smell a bit like a macho batch of choco/coffee cookies then this is right up your alley.
:All Natural & Organic:
Product is all natural and completely organic, vegan friendly and actually good for your skin. Product will come to you in gift-style wrappings, packaged with love and care. Product labels and such are produced in-house & are completely composed of recyclable parchment paper and the like. Peel the label right off & tuck it away as a keepsake or bookmark. High quality amber glass apothecary bottle is also a re-usable little wonder with a plastic lid (safe to wash by hand).
:Remember:
Remember to ask questions & read over store policies before purchasing, my doves. I am more than happy to answer any questions you may have.
Bottle Measures: 2.8" in Height x 1" Wide
find at pixxxiepieandposie.etsy.com
Made this simple wreath with the leaves I stripped from my Leucospermum i bought at the farmers market.
blogged: www.biancasnow.com/blog
Of Treasures:
"For Strange Little Girls" is an all natural, absolutely organic trance in a 1/4 oz. amber apothecary bottle. A sultry mix of sweet almond oil, jojoba, sunflower & hazelnut oils are blended with mine own hands and are then combined with essential oils from around the realm to produce this vessel of girlishly charming goodness.
:Of Wondrous Aromas:
"For Strange Little Girls" is a tantalizing thing, my doves. Fragrance oils where pulled from refreshing cucumber and white tea to create a wonderfully clean aroma perfect for after the bath or to help you wake up in the morning. It holds an almost irresistible charm that will be sure to draw others to you like bees unto honey.
:All Natural & Organic:
Product is all natural and completely organic, vegan friendly and actually good for your skin. Product will come to you in gift-style wrappings, packaged with love and care. Product labels and such are produced in-house & are completely composed of recyclable parchment paper and the like. Peel the label right off & tuck it away as a keepsake or bookmark. High quality amber glass apothecary bottle is also a re-usable little wonder with a plastic lid (safe to wash by hand).
find at pixxxiepieandposie.etsy.com
Of Treasures:
"For Strange Little Girls" is an all natural, absolutely organic trance in a 1/4 oz. amber apothecary bottle. A sultry mix of sweet almond oil, jojoba, sunflower & hazelnut oils are blended with mine own hands and are then combined with essential oils from around the realm to produce this vessel of girlishly charming goodness.
:Of Wondrous Aromas:
"For Strange Little Girls" is a tantalizing thing, my doves. Fragrance oils where pulled from refreshing cucumber and white tea to create a wonderfully clean aroma perfect for after the bath or to help you wake up in the morning. It holds an almost irresistible charm that will be sure to draw others to you like bees unto honey.
:All Natural & Organic:
Product is all natural and completely organic, vegan friendly and actually good for your skin. Product will come to you in gift-style wrappings, packaged with love and care. Product labels and such are produced in-house & are completely composed of recyclable parchment paper and the like. Peel the label right off & tuck it away as a keepsake or bookmark. High quality amber glass apothecary bottle is also a re-usable little wonder with a plastic lid (safe to wash by hand).
find at pixxxiepieandposie.etsy.com
This vintage 16 oz BOVRIL amber glass bottle made by Irish Glass Bottle Ltd of Ringsend in Dublin. The 16 oz (1 lb) bottles were the largest size sold for Bovril (also Marmite) and tend to be scarcer than the more commonly found 4 oz bottles.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bovril (Bovril is a meat-based paste made since the 1870's).
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DESCRIPTION:
Size: 4 3/8" height x 3 1/2" width (110mm x 88mm).
Material(s): amber (brown) glass.
Finish: sides embossed with 16oz BOVRIL (EIRE) LIMITED.
Imprint: IGB 417-5 66
Weight: about 375 g.
Approximate age: 1966 / 1967.
:Of Treasures:
"For Lost Boys" is an all natural, absolutely organic trance in a 1/2 oz. amber apothecary bottle. A sultry mix of sweet almond oil, jojoba & hazelnut oils are blended with mine own hands and are then combined with essential oils from around the realm to produce this vessel of boyishly charming goodness.
:Of Wondrous Aromas:
"For Lost Boys" is a tantalizing thing, my doves. Fragrance oils where pulled from delicious chocolate and Colombian coffee... and these simmer with a bit of a woodsy spice oil to create a sultry aroma that seems to appeal to both thoughtful-sexy-geek-guys and the macho man alike. It holds an almost irresistible charm that will be sure to draw others to you like bees unto honey. You'll smell good enough to eat, so do watch out for older women attempting to toss you into hot ovens or warm beds.
Note: I do have quite a few female clients that love this aroma just as much as the men I cater to, so if you're the tomboy type and you like to smell a bit like a macho batch of choco/coffee cookies then this is right up your alley.
:All Natural & Organic:
Product is all natural and completely organic, vegan friendly and actually good for your skin. Product will come to you in gift-style wrappings, packaged with love and care. Product labels and such are produced in-house & are completely composed of recyclable parchment paper and the like. Peel the label right off & tuck it away as a keepsake or bookmark. High quality amber glass apothecary bottle is also a re-usable little wonder with a plastic lid (safe to wash by hand).
:Remember:
Remember to ask questions & read over store policies before purchasing, my doves. I am more than happy to answer any questions you may have.
Bottle Measures: 2.8" in Height x 1" Wide
find at pixxxiepieandposie.etsy.com
Legal California medicine! This is about 30 grams of Honey Oil. This is one of the purest forms of THC (hash, hash oil) that you can ingest. A bird told me that it was analyzed and came back at 98% pure THC. Of course it was made with 5x filtered butane which is an organic solvent. Made from Sour Diesel weed.