Showing 65 items
matching spooner’s
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Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Ephemera - SOUVENIR SPOON, 1050's
... . In the 1950's Keepsake or souvenir spoons were made as an advertising.... In the 1950's Keepsake or souvenir spoons were made as an advertising ...Rolex and Bucherer Jewelers were retail partners. In the 1950's Keepsake or souvenir spoons were made as an advertising gimmick. To obtain one of these spoons a customer had to purchase a Rolex watch from a Bucherer store. They were not sold separately. This spoon features the Lucerne lion and is actually the most common of the Rolex spoons.Souvenir spoon. Logo impressed in bowl of spoon - Lion, and cross..ROLEX Bucherer. Indistinguishable? Bucherer of Switzerlandephemera, mementoes, souvenir spoon -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Ephemera - SOUVENIR SPOON, 1950's
... . In the 1950's Keepsake or souvenir spoons were made as an advertising.... In the 1950's Keepsake or souvenir spoons were made as an advertising ...Rolex and Bucherer Jewelers were retail partners. In the 1950's Keepsake or souvenir spoons were made as an advertising gimmick. To obtain one of these spoons a customer had to purchase a Rolex watch from a Bucherer store. They were not sold separately. This spoon features the Lucerne lion and is actually the most common of the Rolex spoons.Souvenir spoon. Rolex Bucherer. Lion and cross logo in bowl of spoon. Logo on handle.Bucherer of Switzerlandephemera, mementoes, souvenir spoon -
Melbourne Tram Museum
Ephemera - Ticket/s, The Met, Set of 15 Metcard tickets, 2000
Set of 15 Metcard tickets, used during the Metcard era. Has the Metcard logo on it, along with other Metcard, information. All of the tickets appear to have been used. .1 - Millennium Metcards cartoon by Ron Tandberg (3 copies) .2 - Melbourne Comedy Festival - Matt Golding cartoon - estimated travel time (3 copies) .3 - standard Metcard (3 copies) .4 - Millennium Metcards cartoon by Peter Nicholson (3 copies) .5 - Metcard featuring a stylised image of the Sidney Myer Music Bowl (3 copies) .6 - ditto of Luna Park (4 copies) .7 - ditto Melbourne Exhibition Centre (3 copies) .8 - as for 2 - but with a fish line - trolley wire - theme. ( 3 copies) .9 - featuring Melbourne food. ( see also Reg Item 1466 for the same theme) .10 - Metcard featuring a stylised image of the Flinders St Station (3 copies) .11 - Melbourne Comedy Festival - Matt Golding cartoon - Metcard Machine tapping his foot (3 copies) .12 - ditto - Metcard Machine following a passenger onto a train (3 copies) .13 - ditto - Metcard Machine and an ATM ( 3 copies) .14 - Millennium Metcard - cartoon by John Spooner (3 copies) .15 - ditto - cartoon by Mark Knight. ( 3 copies) See also Reg item 1465 for other cartoons cards. Additional copies added 3/5/16 from donation of G. Warburton - see Reg Item 1463.1 for other examples and details of donation.trams, tramways, tickets, metlink, metcard, luna park, cartoons, flinders st station -
University of Melbourne, Burnley Campus Archives
Award - Trophy, Wooden Spoon Trophy, 1972
Unofficial losers trophy for basketball and tennis teams in the Australian Agricultural Colleges Sports Association Intercollegiate 1972 Gatton. Large wooden spoon with decorated handle. A A C S A INTERCOLLEGIATE 1972 GATTON BASKETBALL Neil Cameron Alan Bedggood Rob Hughes Andy Taylor Bill Mounter Geoff Kenna Brian SImpson Lloyd French TENNIS Kahn Franke Warwick Peel Norm Stone Colin Tann Someone has to lose! (Unoffical trophy)basketball, tennis, intercollegiate sports, agricultural college sports, agricultural college sports trophy -
Mont De Lancey
Functional object - Field Rations Eating Device (F.R.E.D), c.1943-1945
The F.R.E.D otherwise known as the “F*cking Ridiculous Eating Device” was introduced in 1943 as part of Sir Stanton Hicks' "Operation Ration Type O2," Australia's first military rations that lasted 24 full hours. This F.R.E.D. matches the second iteration of the combination can opener and spoon popularised during the Vietnam War, and belonged to the uncle of Ian Taylor. Ian remembers his uncle telling him about using F.R.E.D. during WWII, primarily to open baked beans. It is claimed in some military histories that, after the F.R.E.D.’s introduction in 1943, Australian soldiers developed a ‘strange attachment’ to the F.R.E.D., keeping the utensils far after their service was up and, in this case, passing them on to future generations as bean openers. Silver metal two sided tool, one side shallow spoon and other bottle opener, with two raised vertical lines on the back. On the end is a circular hole to attach the tool to a pocket knife.military equipment, cutlery, rations, military rations, world war 2, military heritage, spoons, bottle openers, pocket-knives, second world war, wwii, vietnam war, 1940s, f.r.e.d., australian life, australian military, military life