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This business may have been here long before zoning laws declared this a residential area. Such enterprises are commonly "grandfathered" - allowed to stay but create no precedent for similar ones to start up nearby.
It may have a long history of skilled wood workers, whose grandchildren perhaps are acquiring MBAs and going into finance.
Here is my latest marble machine. It is called Mr. Marbles because the bowtie reminds me of Mr. Peanut. This machine is made from Maple, Cherry, and Zebrawood for the bowtie, however each one I make will have a different species of wood for the bowtie to give them each a bit of uniqueness. Every part has been made by hand, no cnc milling or computerized design was used.
Here is the youtube video:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=GBG3hctA3P8&feature=youtu.be
Enjoy!
Sewing machine Singer Featherweight machines were produced in black, beige/tan and white/green (what the company called Pale Turquoise) There were no red, blue or any other colour machines although many have been repainted in later life and new decals added Black 221 machines were produced at Elizabethport, New Jersey, and at Clydebank, Scotland. Beige/tan machines were produced at Clydebank and at St John's, Canada White/Green machines were produced only at Clydebank. Date made 1941. The Singer Featherweight portable sewing machine is a model made by that company between 1933 and 1964. The machine (model 221), adapted from an earlier portable, the Standard SewHandy (which company was bought out by Singer) weighs about 11 pounds and has been found to be an ideal machine for quilters and other sewers to take to classes or "on location." Very quiet and sturdily made with all-metal parts (mostly aluminum), the Featherweight sews only straight stitches but it sews them very well. Even the oldest machines, if they've been cared for, still sew wonderfully.
Margaret Knight, known as the "female Edison", patented this paper bag machine. Little-known fact: she stole the idea from a one-legged drunken barber.
In the collection of the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History, on display in the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.
[P-20070509-153903-raw]
Mitering steel bicycle tubing in an Anvil mitering fixture on a 1963 TOS FN22 milling machine with a new cutter. 100rpm and a slow feed. A wee bit of smoke, but that's just the cutting fluid. Soundtrack: Derail and demise, by Tommy Tokyo & Starving for My Gravy
Florence + the Machine perform on Dec 8, 2011 at KMTT's Winter Warmth concert at the WaMu Theater in Seattle
A new academy installation we supplied machines for.
More details: warcoblog.com/2014/10/16/machinery-academy-education-inst...
Photo thanks to the Coventry Telegraph: www.coventrytelegraph.net/news/coventry-news/watch-covent...
The machine is used for different kinds of round bottles and bottle in irregular shape in food, pharmacy and chemical industry. VFD is used to adjust the working speed freely.
www.machinepacker.com/liquid-packing/automatic-liquid-fil...
Email: sherry@machinehall.com
skype: live:machinehall.sale
phone/whatsapp: +8618539931566
this used to be my vending machine savior. i'd double fist - one mug of coffee, one mug of "soup" - to stay awake as i sat behind a computer in a back office, entering equipment catalog after equipment catalog into the company library database. i was about 16 then, i think. it was oddly rewarding work.
Photographed at the Sixth Annual Cantrall Car Show in Cantrall, Illinois on July 10, 2011. The show is a fund-raising event for the Cantrall United Methodist Church Men's Club and is held in cooperation with the Cool Cruisers Car Club in Springfield, Illinois.
Please visit my collection of Motor Vehicles on Flickr where you will find more than 10,000 photographs thoughtfully organized into albums, and presented by model year, manufacturer, vehicle type, and more. This project, which began in 2008, continues to expand with new material added daily.
A sewing machine cake for a special lady's birthday. Complete with handmade, edible sewing accessories.
The gumball machine awarded to all Yahoo! employees who have been with the company for at least five years.
The site contained a couple of workshops. This one was known as the machine shop with a second smaller toolroom in another part of the building.
Stan still hand builds tattoo machines which he sells at tattoo conventions, and sometimes over the internet on EBAY. He originally learned to build tattoo machines from Bill "Jonesy" Jones, one of the most famous tattoo machine builders of all time. Stan's tattoo machines are very limited in availability, and are sought after by tattoo artists all over the world. If you're lucky enough to get your hands on one, they are fast becoming a collector's item.