Tool Talk
What's-It Forum => What's-It Forum => Topic started by: drummertom on November 15, 2011, 04:20:27 PM
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I thought I was the biggest pack rat in the world till we started going through my brothers stuff. I found this http://www.picturetrail.com/sfx/album/view/23940767 (http://www.picturetrail.com/sfx/album/view/23940767) among other things. It looks kinda like a musket ball maker (I think) except the ends are solid and not cupped. Any ideas?
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"Pinching iron" For straighting hair and setting small flat curls! Hairdressing is not a new trade, there are four pages of hairdressing tools in, The Victorian Catalogue of Tools for Trades and Crafts (circa 1845) Philip Walker 1994
Graeme
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How about a tinsmiths' tool for setting copper rivets on the other side of a beaded edge. It looks a bit heavy duty for a hairdressers' tool. There has to be a purpose for the relief behind the jaw. It would work for flattening a lock seam, but why is it round?
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I've seen them listed for sale as hair flattening irons
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OK Neal, that was a WAG on my part, but if it were mine, I wouldn't put it in my curling iron museum. I'd make a bullet mold out of it.
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John, Had a second look at photo's, they are very heavy and are mallable cast, made for cheapness/easy production! The ones I have are finely forged and don't have the relieve behind the faces. So maybe there is another use for these heavy "pinching" irons? Back to research!!
Graeme
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I vote for hair straightening irons. These were heated on the cook stove, and the ends were heavy to hold the heat, so they could work longer before re-heating. The relief, the rounded out part was there so only the hair separated out to be straightened was heated, and so hair wasn't pinched in the hinge, that might hurt!