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IThe chocolate sugar cookie versions. I made these at the request of my Husband for the end of classes at the shoole he teaches at.
Precisely short after saying 'I have this tool since I'm 14 and I love it'. Well, if there is a tool retirement this one really earned it. How easy is to find a replacement?
The Wilmer Eye Institute, inside John Hopkins in Baltimore, MA. houses a collection of early optical tools.
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Long before electronic computers existed, cartographers used mechanical slide rules such as this to perform various mathematical calculations.
My friend Barry was cleaning out his old shop and rediscovered this tool box. It belonged to his father and may have belonged to his grandfather. We are trying to figure out what brand it is and it's age. It is a very heavily constructed box. It is hard to imagine anyone picking it up full of tools. If you have any information please let us know.
Follow up note: Several people on the Garage Journal forum tell me it is a Chicago made Simonset military box dating from the WWII/Korean War era.
My father had the first tool box he ever had when he first became a Carpenter. I rememnber all of these tools and the almost identical tool box. Strange to think this one was in a museum.
Cartographers used this German-made device to accurately measure the size of an area on a map or plan by tracing the area’s outline. The area calculation used the resulting dial reading.
This photo set describes how I store DVDs in my movie collection. My friend patcave once remarked: "he does gut like an experienced fisherman when it comes to DVD packaging", so I figured I would document the process.
First the tools:
A new DVD
A sharp knife to cut into the plastic wrap. An x-acto knife is preferred.
Plastic CD sleeves (CompUSA SKU 283642).
A paper trimmer.
I also use the following to store the DVDs:
Snap-n-Store cd storage box (CompUSA SKU 20901393)
Plastic CD dividers (from DiscDividers)
2005 - My grandpa died the summer of 2005, he was a carpenter and worked in his woodshop even past retirement. I took photos of his workshop before we cleaned it out.
Miniature garden tools which form part of 'Cathy's Flower House', a model I am making. To give you an idea of scale the watering can is 23mm tall and the trowel 25mm long.
This is the same model which I posted the instructions at www.flickr.com/photos/bruce82/52649992617/in/dateposted/ to illustrate 54 of 123 pictures in 2023 - Instruction.
23 of 123 pictures in 2023 - Could be in a doll's house.