Showing 137 items matching glass technology
-
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Domestic object - Tumbler, c1888
... glass technology...' engraved As above glass technology engraved civic mementoes royal ...Clear glass tumbler with leaf pattern etched and 'Centennial Exhibition 1888 R & ER' engravedAs aboveglass technology, engraved, civic mementoes, royal souvenirs -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Domestic object - Custard Cup, c1900
... glass technology... blown glass with handle. glass technology glassware ...Custard Cup - Hand blown glass with handle.glass technology, glassware -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Domestic object - Salt Cellar
... glass technology... used for salt at the table glass technology glassware domestic ...Cut glass container used for salt at the tableglass technology, glassware, domestic items, table setting -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Domestic object - Bowl
... glass technology.... glass technology glassware ...Blue glass bowl on stand in graduations of blue cut glass. Has been damaged see condition report.glass technology, glassware -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Domestic object - Saucer
... glass technology... saucer glass technology glassware ...Small decorated glass saucerglass technology, glassware -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Domestic object - Dish
... glass technology... container glass technology glassware ...Small decorated glass containerglass technology, glassware -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Domestic object - Jug, 1930 - 1940
... GLASS TECHNOLOGY... Cooking GLASS TECHNOLOGY Bottles ...Collected from Eastern Emergency NetworkHeavy glass measuring jug with imperial measures from two pints to 40 ounces.1/4 PT - 2 PT; 5 OZ - 40 OZdomestic items, cooking, glass technology, bottles -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Domestic object - Glass Bowl, 1920s
... glass technology... Mitcham melbourne Glass Bowl Domestic object Glass bowl. Fine ...Glasswear belonged to donor's grandmotherGlass bowl. Fine scalloped edge, clear to half way down. Embossed ring around and star design.glass technology, glassware -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Domestic object - Glass Bowl, 1920s
... glass technology.... Glassware used by donor's grandmother glass technology glassware ...Glassware used by donor's grandmotherRound glass bowl decorated with clear glass rounds and diamond embossed dsquares.glass technology, glassware -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Domestic object - Butter Dish
... glass technology... for her marriage in 1897.Ref NP3306 & NP3307 glass technology ...Glassware belonged to Martha Edwards, grandmother of the donor, and were wedding presents for her marriage in 1897.Ref NP3306 & NP3307Oblong glass dish, base and cover. Star design and matching base. Base extended at each end for easy handling.glass technology, glassware -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Domestic object - Jam Dish
... glass technology... presents for her marriage in 1897.|Ref. NP3306 and NP3307 glass ...Glassware belonged to Martha Edwards, grandmother of the donor, and were wedding presents for her marriage in 1897.|Ref. NP3306 and NP3307Round glassware base and cover. Star design with matching lid.glass technology, glassware -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Domestic object - Glass butter churn
... glass technology... Demonstrations in the previous sixty years. glass technology glassware ...Nothing is known about the origin. IN 1895 Emma Blanche Annie Dear married Alfred Ernest Wellard, a young Methodist Minister in Tasmania and this was her churn. The Wellards used it in both Tasmania and Victoria. Later, it was handed on to their daughter Winsome Faith when she married Archibald Dufty, a farmer from the Wimmera. By then it was kept as an interesting relic of earlier days, as farming families in the 1920s and 1930s usually made their butter in Cherry butter churns. In the 1980s it was passed on to their daughter, Patricia Gibbons having only been used at several Farm Day Demonstrations in the previous sixty years.Large glass container, iron mechanism with tin lid for container and a wooden paddle. Wooden handle to turn cog mechanism.glass technology, glassware -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Domestic object - Cocktail Glasses, 1920s
... glass technology... - each with plain glass bowl with green twisted glass stems ...Belonged to donor's father's catering business - Glyn Francis of Ford Catering Company. This company also catered for the opening of Schwerkolt Cottage, when Governor Delacombe attended.Three glasses - each with plain glass bowl with green twisted glass stems and plain green base.domestic items, food & drink consumption, glass technology, glassware -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Container - Bottle
... glass technology... Mitcham melbourne Bottle Container Green glass bottle glass ...Green glass bottleglass technology, bottles -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Container - Avon Jar
... glass technology... commercial glass technology bottles ...Small round glass jar with pink carnations on lid.Avon Carnation Cream Sachet Fragrance in ---- over skin Net 19g Avon Prod Pty Ltd Sydney.containers, commercial, glass technology, bottles -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Domestic object - Bowl, c1805
... glass technology... Mitcham melbourne Bowl Domestic object 'Carnival Ware' glass bowl ...Belonged to donor's grandmother, Mrs. Esther Gledhill. Esther came from a pioneer family and was married to Robert Gledhill who was a sleeper cutter for the railways.'Carnival Ware' glass bowl with three fluted edges standing on three legs. Leaf and berry pattern inside.glass technology, carnival -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Functional object - Milk Carrier, Bottle
... glass technology... permission domestic items containers glass technology bottles ...Metal milk carrier with six compartments. Wound metal handle. Five clear glass pint bottles and one half pint bottle - all with wide mouths.one pint This bottle belongs ---- Written permissiondomestic items, containers, glass technology, bottles -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Container - Bottle
... glass technology.... Boot Cream G.E.Allens glass technology bottles ...Cream Bottle - Roughly made.Boot Cream G.E.Allensglass technology, bottles -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Domestic object - Cup
... glass technology... Mitcham melbourne Cup Domestic object Small glass cup glass ...Small glass cupglass technology, glassware -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Container - Bottle
... glass technology... Rotterdam. glass technology bottles ...Tapered square green bottle. Label - Genuine Hollands Geneva John DeKuyper & son Rotterdam - ProofJDKZ This bottle is the property of John DeKuyper and Son Rotterdam.glass technology, bottles -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Bottle
... GLASS TECHNOLOGY... GLASS TECHNOLOGY Bottles ...Used by Philip Bennett of 122 Thames Street Box Hill.Brown glass bottle with screw cap containing peroxide of hydrogen. Label.Peroxide of Hydrogen B.P.|Bottled by the Kenyon Drug Co. 99 Helen Street, Northcote, Melbourne.medicine, pharmacy, glass technology, bottles -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Container - Bottle, J R Alexander & Sons Ltd, c. 1936
... glass technology... Shipwreck Coast glass technology bottle glass bottle brown glass ...This bottle labelled No Rub liquid wax proclaims the wonders of No-Rub, no-slip, and shines as it dries. The bottle still contains some of the liquid floor wax, made by J R Alexander & Sons Limited. The company was registered as a limited company from 1924 to 1975. However, the firm's advertisement and referrals from satisfied Melbourne customers, printed in The Argus, Melbourne, on Mach 19th, 1954, states that it made the first shoe polish, Supreme, in Australia as long ago as 1900. The firm made a range of household cleaning products such as floor wax, shoe polish and fabric starch. The J R Alexander & Sons Ltd. No-Rub liquid wax was advertised in various states of Australia from around 1936 until the 1950s. Later advertisements show sketches of the wax containers, which were round bottles or metal cans. The bottle in our collection is likely to be made around the 1960s.Bottle; brown glass with metal cap and yellow, orange and black label on the front. Flat rectangular-shaped bottle with a short neck and rounded shoulders The bottle has a black metal screw top lid and contents inside. There are inscriptions on the label. The bottle contains No Rub Floor Wax. Made by J R Alexander and Sons, of Adelaide, Melbourne, Sydney and BrisbanePrinted on the label: "SHAKE WELL" "No-Rub" TRADE MARK REGD." "THE NON-SLIP / Liquid / FLOOR WAX / Saves Labour / Saves Time" "Shines as it dries" "NETT CONTENTS 15 FLUID OZS"flagstaff hill, flagstaff hill maritime museum and village, warrnambool, maritime museum, maritime village, great ocean road, shipwreck coast, glass technology, bottle, glass bottle, brown glass, cleaning product, floor cleaner, floor polish, domestic cleaner, no-rub, floor wax, non-slip, flat bottle, bottle contents, liquid wax, j r alexander & sons, household cleaning, cleaning products, zippy starch, zippy window cleaner, liquid floor wax, no rub floor wax, supreme shoe polish, rectangular bottle -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Container - Bottle
... glass technology...medicine first aid glass technology bottles Sloans Family ...Brown glass bottle with screw cap containing liniment including a brown cardboard box.Sloans Family Linament.medicine, first aid, glass technology, bottles -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Container - Bottle
... GLASS TECHNOLOGY...-1997. MEDICINE Pharmacy GLASS TECHNOLOGY Bottles Lysol ...Used by Philip Bennett of 122 Thames Street Box hill,m 1926-1997.Brown glass bottle, with cork, containing Lysol. Label.Lysol Disinfectant + germicidemedicine, pharmacy, glass technology, bottles -
Clunes Museum
Container - BOTTLE, FAULDINGS
... glass technology... history glass technology container medical - pharmacy PURE ...USED AT LOCAL PHARMACY - MR. R. DOLANS - PHARMACISTDARK BROWN BOTTLE WITH LABEL - CONTAINED PURE CLYCERINE AT ONE TIME - WITH STOPPERPURE GLYCERINE - KEEP OUT OF THE REACH OF CHILDRENlocal history, glass technology, container, medical - pharmacy -
Clunes Museum
Container - BOTTLE
... BOTTLE OF ANGUS & CO. INK. local history glass technology ...BOTTLE OF ANGUS & CO. INK.GLASS INK BOTTLE COMPLETE WITH INKFOUNTAIN PEN ANGUS & CO. PTY. LTD. INK.local history, glass, technology bottles -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Domestic object - Kerosene Lamp
... glass technology... in the 1950s. lighting kerosene & oil glass technology glassware Glass ...Used by donor's parents in their home in Croydon in the 1950s.Glass kerosene lamp. Consists of base and the bowl for kerosene. Base has a wrinkled finish. Bowl has a metal holder for the wick and its adjuster. Chimney is missing and is to be purchased.lighting, kerosene & oil, glass technology, glassware -
City of Moorabbin Historical Society (Operating the Box Cottage Museum)
Manufactured Glass, Pharmacy beaker, c1950
... found the Schott & Associates Glass Technology Laboratory... the Schott & Associates Glass Technology Laboratory in Jena, Germany ...Otto Schott, a chemist and glass engineer, had the vision of uniform production ie making glass items that would resemble one another. At the end of the eighteenth century, with most glass items still created by hand, the quality of output was still a guessing game. Schott was the first to render this an industrial certainty. 1884 Otto Schott, Ernst Abbe and Carl and Roderich Zeiss found the Schott & Associates Glass Technology Laboratory in Jena, Germany. Glastechnisches Laboratorium Schott & Gen was born. Production started in 1886. Original products included optical and thermometer glasses. The following year, a crucial discovery was made: borosilicate, a heat and chemically resistant glass. By it’s 25th year anniversary, the company had grown from an experimental glass factory into an internationally renowned manufacturer of optical and industrial glasses. Soon to be added was fiolax, tube-shaped glass used for vials, ampoules and syringes thus allowing the company to play a significant role in supplying Europe's nascent pharmaceutical industry. Post WW2 USA Army opens new factory in Mainz, West Germany and factory in Jena , East Germany taken over by the DDR State both using same trade name. Legal action for 30 years resolved in 1980 - split name. Berlin Wall 1989, Factories reunited 1991A pharmaceutical clear glass beaker with graduation 100ml -300ml DURAN 50Front : DURAN 50 / SCHOTT & GEN / MAINZ / JENA (ER) GLAS 300 Back : PYREX 300pharmacy, medications, medicines, glass manufacturing, glass works, early settlers, moorabbin, bentleigh, cheltenham, jenaer glaswerk schott & gen company, west germany, east germany, berlin wall, ww2 1939-45, schott otto, zeiss roderich -
City of Moorabbin Historical Society (Operating the Box Cottage Museum)
Manufactured glass, graduated cylinder 10ml, c1948 - 1991
... found the Schott & Associates Glass Technology Laboratory... and Roderich Zeiss found the Schott & Associates Glass Technology ...Otto Schott, a chemist and glass engineer, had the vision of uniform production ie making glass items that would resemble one another. At the end of the eighteenth century, with most glass items still created by hand, the quality of output was still a guessing game. Schott was the first to render this an industrial certainty. 1884 Otto Schott, Ernst Abbe and Carl and Roderich Zeiss found the Schott & Associates Glass Technology Laboratory in Jena, Germany. Glastechnisches Laboratorium Schott & Gen was born. Production started in 1886. The following year, a crucial discovery was made: borosilicate, a heat and chemically resistant glass.By it’s 25th year anniversary, the company had grown from an experimental glass factory into an internationally renowned manufacturer of optical and industrial glasses. Soon to be added was fiolax, tube-shaped glass used for vials, ampoules and syringes thus allowing the company to play a significant role in supplying Europe's nascent pharmaceutical industry. During WW2 Company was taken over for military use, and in 1945 given to the Russians as East Germany - GDR. , US troops transfer the "brain trust" of Jenaer Glas to Mainz in West and In Jena , East Germany, in 1948 the company became a state-owned "property of the people." The West German company becomes Schott Glaswerk, while the people in Jena, GDR, shorten their name to Jenaer Glaswerk. When the Berlin Wall comes down in 1989 Germany is united once again and in 1991 the company is joined and the Jena factory is brought up-to-date by 1994.This 10ml clear glass, graduated cylinder for laboratory tests, set in a plastic pentagonal base, is made of borosilicate glass. It has a pouring lip. The wide pentagonal shaped base provides stability and makes the cylinder roll-resistant. agr / ? TRS 10/0.1 / B Tol + - 0.1 / ml in 20'C / GDR pharmacy, medications, medicines, glass manufacturing, glass works, early settlers, moorabbin, bentleigh, cheltenham, jenaer glaswerk schott & gen company, west germany, east germany, berlin wall, ww2 1939-45, schott otto, zeiss roderich, borosilicate glass, glass cylinders, laboratory glass -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Machine - Dioptric Apparatus, mid 19th century
... and a pioneer of British glass making technology. The Chance family... and a pioneer of British glass making technology. The Chance family ...Before the introduction of electricity, lighthouses had a clockwork mechanism that caused the lens to rotate with a light source inside that was either powered by Kerosene or Colza oil. The mechanism consisted of a large weight attached by a cable through the centre of the lighthouse to the top where the cable wrapped around a barrel, drum or wheels that controlled the speed of the lights rotation by a clockwork mechanism. The keeper would crank the clockwork mechanism, which would lift the weight ready for the next cycle similar to an old grandfather clock mechanism. Once the weight lifted to its apex at the bottom of the first landing, the keeper would let it fall, which would pull on the cable, which would, in turn, operate a series of gears activating the rotation of the Fresnel optical lens, which would then rotate to create the lighthouse’s unique light speed of rotation characteristic. Creating a specific characteristic required a way to regulate the speed of the rotation, and was important as sailors could identify a particular light by its speed and time between flashes. The weight had to fall at a certain rate to create the proper rotation speed of the lens and a regulator within the mechanism accomplished this. History: From 1851, Chance Brothers became a major lighthouse engineering company, producing optical components, machinery, and other equipment for lighthouses around the world. James Timmins Chance pioneered placing lighthouse lamps inside a cage surrounded by Fresnel lenses to increase the available light output these cages, are known as optics and they revolutionised lighthouse design. Another important innovation from Chance Brothers was the introduction of rotating optics, allowing adjacent lighthouses to be distinguished from each other by the number of times per revolution the light flashes. The noted English physicist and engineer, John Hopkins invented this system while employed at Chance Brothers. Chance Brothers and Company was a glass works and originally based in Spon Lane, Smethwick, West Midlands England. The company became a leading glass manufacturer and a pioneer of British glass making technology. The Chance family originated in Bromsgrove as farmers and craftsmen before setting up a business in Smethwick near Birmingham in 1824. They took advantage of the skilled workers, canals and many other industrial advances taking place in the West Midlands at the time. Robert Lucas Chance (1782–1865), known as 'Lucas', bought the British Crown Glass Company's works in Spon Lane in 1824. The company specialised in making crown window glass, the company ran into difficulty and its survival was guaranteed in 1832 by investment from Chance's brother, William (1788 – 1856). William owned an iron factoring business in Great Charles Street, Birmingham. After a previous partnership that Lucas had dissolved in 1836, Lucas and William Chance became partners in the business which was renamed, Chance Brothers and Company. Chance Brothers invented many innovative processes and became known as the greatest glass manufacturer in Britain. In 1848 under the supervision of Georges Bontemps, a French glass maker from Choosy-le-Roi, a new plant was set up to manufacture crown and flint glass for lighthouse optics, telescopes and cameras. Bontemps agreed to share his processes that up to then had been secret with the Chance Brothers and stayed in England to collaborate with them for six years. In 1900 a baronetcy was created for James Timmins Chance (1814–1902), a grandson of William Chance, who had started the family business in 1771 with his brother Robert. Roberts grandson, James became head of Chance Brothers until his retirement in 1889 when the company became a public company and its name changed to Chance Brothers & Co. Ltd. Additional information: Lighthouses are equipped with unique light characteristic or flashing pattern that sailors can use to identify specific lighthouses during the night. Lighthouses can achieve distinctive light characteristics in a few different ways. A lighthouse can flash, which is when brief periods of light interrupt longer moments of darkness. The light can occult, which is when brief periods of darkness interrupt longer moments of light. The light can be fixed, which is when the light never goes dark. A lighthouse can use a combination of flashing, oscillating, or being fixed in a variety of combinations and intervals to create individual light characteristics. It is a common misconception that a lighthouse's light source changes the intensity to create a light characteristic. The light source remains constant and the rotating Fresnel lens creates the various changes in appearance. Some Fresnel lenses have "bulls-eye" panels create beams of light that, when rotated between the light and the observer, make the light appear to flash. Conversely, some lenses have metal panels that, when rotated between the light and the observer, make the light appear to go dark. This Dioptric clockwork apparatus used to turn a lighthouse optical lens is very significant as it is integral to a lighthouses operation, we can also look at the social aspect of lighthouses as being traditionally rich with symbolism and conceptual meanings. Lighthouses illustrate social concepts such as danger, risk, adversity, challenge and vigilance but they also offers guidance, salvation and safety. The glowing lamp reminds sailors that security and home are well within reach, they also symbolize the way forward and help in navigating our way through rough waters not just on the oceans of the world but in our personal lives be it financial, personal, business or spiritual in nature. Nothing else speaks of safety and security in the face of adversity and challenge quite the way a lighthouse does. Revolving dioptric clockwork apparatus used to turn a Fresnel optical lighthouse lens. A cylindrical cast metal pillar and cabinet painted green with 3 glass doors enclosing the top section. Inside the pillar/cabinet is a large clockwork mechanism used to turn and regulate a lighthouse light by means of weights and a chain attached to same. One door has the name "Adams Mare" in metallic dots similar to "Braille" to the inside edge of door frame.shipwrecked-coast, flagstaff-hill, flagstaff-hill-maritime-museum, flagstaff hill, maritime-museum, shipwreck-coast, warrnambool, flagstaff-hill-maritime-village, revolving dioptric mechanism, dioptric mechanism for lighthouse, lighthouse clockwork timing mechanism, acetylene lighthouse light mechanism, 19th century lighthouse mechanism, kerosene light, fresnel lenses, colza oil, chance brothers