Showing 8 items
matching curling irons
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Kew Historical Society Inc
Domestic object - Hair Care Equipment, Steel Curling Irons
... Steel Curling Irons...curling irons...Pair of steel curling irons ... curling tongs hair care equipment curling irons Pair of steel ...Pair of steel curling irons curling tongs, hair care equipment, curling irons -
Mont De Lancey
Curling Irons, Circa 1890 - wooden handle curling irons
... Curling Irons...Curling irons...Assortment of 5 Curling Irons:- 3 with wooden handles...Circa 1890 - wooden handle curling irons... hair. Curling irons Assortment of 5 Curling Irons:- 3 ...These were heated and used for curing and waving hair.Assortment of 5 Curling Irons:- 3 with wooden handles (Circa 1890), and 1 with a black plastic handle and another with a metal handle.curling irons -
Greensborough Historical Society
Domestic object - Curling tongs, 1940 c
... curling irons... irons hair care equipment "ORGM" ? Curling tongs, nickel plated ...Curling tongs were commonly used by ladies' hairdressers, or at home. Not electric, these tongs may have been heated over a flame or gas.Curling tongs, nickel plated steel, wooden handles"ORGM" ?curling tongs, curling irons, hair care equipment -
Greensborough Historical Society
Curling Iron, Hair curling tongs, 1960s
... curling irons... curling irons hair care equipment Steel curling tongs, green ...Hair curling tongs were used in homes and hairdressers to add curl to hair. These appear to be heated over a flame then applied to hair. Steel curling tongs, green plastic covered handles . Hair fragments attached.hair curling tongs, curling irons, hair care equipment -
City of Moorabbin Historical Society (Operating the Box Cottage Museum)
Toiletries, hair curling tongs, 20thC
... Curling irons, also known as curling tongs, create waves... irons, also known as curling tongs, create waves or curls ...Curling irons, also known as curling tongs, create waves or curls in the hair. Clipless wands have no clamp, and the user simply wraps hair around a rod and squeezes the two parts together. The metal curling irons were heated on the fire or the stove and then the hair could be clamped between these 2 rods to create a curl in the hair . A pair of steel, hair curling tongsEveready Englandtoiletries, hairdressing, curling tongs, moorabbin, bentleigh, cheltenham, early settlers, marcel waves, market gardeners -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Domestic object - Hair Tongs, Marcel Grateau, 1900 +
... the Marcel wave, using heated curling irons, The inventor and stylist... later become the Marcel wave, using heated curling irons ...Marcelling is a hair styling technique in which hot curling tongs are used to induce a curl into the hair. Its appearance was similar to that of a finger wave but it is created using a different method. Marcelled hair was a popular style for women's hair in the 1920s and 30s often in conjunction with a bob cut. For those women who had long hair, it was common to tie the hair at the nape of the neck and pin it above the ear with a stylish hairpin or flower. Accounts vary about the invention of the style, but Marcel Grateau (1852–1936) is widely credited with inventing the hair styling technique in the 1870s. He started with a small salon in Montmartre, Paris where his clients were the poorer classes. As he developed the waving method that would later become the Marcel wave, using heated curling irons, The inventor and stylist emigrated to the United States and changed his name to François Marcel Woelfflé, sometimes reported as François Marcel. He was granted U.S. patents for implements for performing the technique; the first, U.S. patent 806386, entitled "Curling-Iron", was published in 1905, and the second, entitled "Hair-Waving Iron", for an electric version, under the name François Marcel, was published in 1918. His obituary appeared under the name Francois Marcel Grateau in 1936. Originally the irons had to be heated in the fire, but hair easily got burnt until 1924 when electric irons were invented and the temperature could be regulated. A significant item that gives us a snapshot not only into women's hairstyles of the 1920s and 1930s but a look into the social norms of that era. Therefore the item is of social interest in regards to the story it tells and the development of women's fashion in hair styling.Marcel Tongs, metal, used to impart a hair wave by heating and crimping the hairNoneflagstaff hill, warrnambool, shipwrecked coast, flagstaff hill maritime museum, maritime museum, shipwreck coast, flagstaff hill maritime village, great ocean road, tongs, curling tongs, hairdressing -
Orbost & District Historical Society
curling and crimping tongs, late 19th early 20th century
Used by women and girls to wave or crimp their hair, for styling their hair, hairdressing. The irons are heated and then applied to the hair and wound to form curls. Pre-dates electrically heated curlers.One set of curling tongs made of iron/steel, rusted. The tongs are two shaped metal pieces which clamp together over a tress of hair. One set of crimping tongs. These have two wavy iron shaped metal pieces which clamp over a tress of hair to produce crimpy waves.hair-crimpers-curlers hairdressing heated-curlers -
Wodonga & District Historical Society Inc
Domestic object - Electric Toaster, Hecla Electrics Pty Ltd, c1940s
Hecla produced a wide range of appliances for domestic use, beginning with heaters and later branching out to a wider range of kitchen appliances Hecla was established by Clarence William Marriott, a young Melbourne metal worker. He began manufacturing Australia's first carbon filament electric radiators in 1899. He originally worked for his father James Marriott who commenced business in Melbourne as an art metal worker in 1872 and was, in 1907, appointed as the official art metal worker to the Victorian Government producing items including the ornate iron gates and gas lamp standards outside Melbourne's Parliament House. With the invention of nickel chromium wire after 1900, C.W. Marriott began making more efficient heating elements using this new material in 1916. After being influenced by the eruption of Mount Hekla in Iceland, on 19 December 1918, Clarence registered the brand name "HECLA" with an erupting volcano as its logo. The company Hecla Electrics Pty Ltd was officially registered in 1922. In 1928 the company adopted the advertising slogan, 'By Hecla, it's Good'. The Hecla range rapidly expanded to include electric heaters and radiators, electric foot warmers, electric kettles, ceramic & metal electric jugs, immersion hot water elements, electric fans, electric coffee percolators, electric toasters, electric grillers and stoves, electric irons and electric frypans, clocks and curling wands. Electric blankets were introduced shortly after WWII.In 1930, a controlling interest in Hecla Electrics Pty Ltd was acquired by General Electric Corporation. Clarence William Marriott died in June 1967 in Melbourne, Victoria.This item is representative of a common domestic appliance used throughout Australia. It was manufactured by a pioneering Australian company.A small chrome steel toaster manufactured by Hecla Australia. It has a door on either side which flips down to insert or remove a slice of bread on each side, Each door has two black Bakelite knobs. The electric element is placed down the centre of the cavity. A detachable electric cord is included.240 Volts, 600 Watts. Cat. No. T4 Submitted to Electrical Approval Board Ref Application A1/AD01 SECV 240 Volt 600 Watt MANFED. IN AUSTRALIA SOLID BRASSelectrical appliances, hecla corporation australia, clarence william marriott, domestic appliances