Showing 237 items
matching mesh
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Working Heritage Crown Land Collection
Functional object, Mesh Grill
Small mesh grillarchaeology, historic building, former royal mint -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Accessory, Gilded mesh evening bag, 1920s
The Kew Historical Society's Fashion & Design collection includes a small and representative collection of reticules, purses and handbags, purchased, inherited or collected by members of the Society. These items date from the Nineteenth and Twentieth centuries, and conform to fashions and styles popular during the period of their use. Some of the items are handmade, while others are mass-produced commercial products. This handbag was donated by Dione McIntyre.The McIntyre Collection of clothing and clothing accessories forms one of the largest single donations to our Fashion & Design collection. It includes clothing and clothing accessories worn by four women in the Cohen and McIntyre families across three generations. The items worn by Melbourne architect, and Kew resident, Dione McIntyre date from the 1960s and 1970s, and include evening wear, day wear, hats and shoes. As Dione McIntyre often accompanied her husband, fellow architect Peter McIntyre, to formal events, there are a number of pieces of evening wear among the items. The McIntyre Collection also includes items worn by women of an earlier generation: by Lilian Cohen, Dione McIntyre's mother, and by her mother-in-law, the wife of the architect Robert McIntyre. At the other end of the chronological spectrum are a number of outfits belonging to, worn and donated by Annie McIntyre. These include outfits created by notable late 20th century Australian and/or international fashion designers. The McIntyre Collection is significant historically and artistically as it includes examples of design that demonstrate changing tastes in fashion over an 80-year period. The collection is also significant in that it includes the work of a large number of Melbourne designers from the 1960s to the 1990s. Evening purse of gilded mesh with brass frame and chain handle. The base of the bag features a mesh fringe. The clasp includes a faceted red glass gem.purses, fashion accessories, lilian cohen, mcintyre collection, evening wear -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Clothing (item) - USAF Survival Vest Large Sage Green Mesh Net. AF1535, USAF Survival Vest Large Sage Green Mesh Net. AF1535
CONT.NO. 7339 8415-177-4818 DPSC.DIR of MFG -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Clothing (Item) - USAF Green Mesh Net Survival Vest Medium
DLA100-90-c-0420.USAF drawing No.66D1596 -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Accessory, Silver Chain Mesh Purse, 1870-1900
Silver metalwork chain purses were made in tiny coils and formed into patterns in the early nineteenth century. This example is made of fine silver mesh.This item formed part of a large collection of items collected by Dorothy Rogers, a notable local historian and founding member of the Kew Historical Society.Hand-linked silver rings, with silver frame and clasp.purses, bags - handbags, fashion accessories, clothing accessories -
Federation University Art Collection
Painting - Abstract, Anne Saunders, 'Mesh' by Anne Saunders, 2001
Anne SAUNDERS (1955- ) Born Edinburgh, Scotland Arrived Australia 1977 Anne Saunders graduated from a Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art, Dundee, specialising in Illustration and Printmaking, and graduated with a Master of Arts (Fine Arts) by Research from La Trobe University Bendigoand in 1995. She is a former Senior Lecturer at the University of Ballarat Arts Academy (later Federation University), first appointed in 1987 as lecturer in Drawing and Printmaking, and in 1999 she was appointed Senior Lecturer in Drawing and Studio Co-ordinator. Anne Saunders retired from the University of Ballarat in 2010. This item is part of the Federation University Art Collection. The Art Collection features over 2000 works and was listed as a 'Ballarat Treasure' in 2007. Framed abstract painting.art, artwork, uinversity of ballarat, anne saunders, saunders -
Anglesea and District Historical Society
Purse
German silver (nickel silver) mesh purse. "Drawstring" top through hoops attached to body of purse. Decorative "nut" terminals on end of two chains (one each side of body). Single layer mesh lower edge border with 11 small balls suspended. Two holes in border.mesh, german silver, purse -
Hume City Civic Collection
Uniform - Army Helmet
This green bowl shaped steel helmet has a two piece liner and pad attached to the helmet by a single rivet. It has a canvas chin strap attached to the sides and a green cotton mesh attached to the helmet by a drawstring. These helmets were issued to troops during World War 1.A bowl shaped steel helmet with green mesh attached to helmet by drawstring.armed forces, defence forces, world war 1, soldiers -
City of Moorabbin Historical Society (Operating the Box Cottage Museum)
Kitchen Equipment, tin mesh, meat safe, c1900
This is a common small 'meat safe' used in most homes prior to the arrival of Refrigerators. Food, such as milk, butter, cooked meat would be stored for a short time in this safe. It would be suspended from the ceiling / roof in a cool place - Dairy - and the mesh sides allowed air circulation while providing protection from insects and vermin.A green, tin meat safe with mesh sides and a hinged door with a latch lock. early settlers, pioneers, food preservation, meat safe, kalgoolie safe, moorabbin, bentleigh, cheltenham, ormond, dairy products, diseases, vermin -
National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)
Equipment - Equipment, Army, Vest
Khaki mesh and cloth pilot's vest five pockets on front fastened with domes - various sizes, Two pockets on front fastened with zips. Vest is fasted with zipper down front, three pockets astened with domes on side of back, one large pocket on back with velcro fastenerVest - Survival mesh net. Size medium - Rest of label too faint to read. "Barber" written in black textavest, clothing -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Functional object - Basket
Item used in offices earlier part of the 20th century, waste baskets were sold in great numbers with many differing designs from the 1830s most from this time were made of willow or bamboo. Later wire mesh and pressed steel were used.An early example of a wire mesh industrial type of waste basket used in office situations.Basket metal waste paper with wire mesh joined to iron ring at top and flat round cork base.Noneflagstaff hill, warrnambool, shipwrecked-coast, flagstaff-hill, flagstaff-hill-maritime-museum, maritime-museum, shipwreck-coast, flagstaff-hill-maritime-village -
Sunshine and District Historical Society Incorporated
Base Plate, New H.V.McKAY FOOTBRIDGE, Circa 2013-2014
The steel mesh and crossbar sides of the new H.V.McKay footbridge are designed to replicate the appearance of the old crossbar gates which were at the old H.V.McKay works. The new bridge contains 111 of these plates attached to the centre of all crossbar sections which enclose both sides of the walkway of the bridge. The plate is a donated spare which was left over from the original manufactured plates that were attached to the new H.V.McKay footbridge. The plate is in our possession for safe keeping and for future reference.Stainless steel oval shaped plate with four holes for mounting to mesh sides of the walkway on the bridge. The plate has engraved lettering and lines intended to replicate a Sunshine Crossbar gate. H.V.McKAY SUNSHINE (The small c is underlined which can't be replicated on this data base)base plate, stainless steel plate, crossbar gates, regional rail link, hv mckay footbridge, h.v.mckay footbridge, sunshine -
Warrnambool and District Historical Society Inc.
Meat Safe, Household, Early 20th century
This meat safe has no known local provenance but it would be typical of the safes used in a domestic situation to house fresh meat. Usually the safe was hung in a house corridor or verandah or outside in a cool place where there was a breeze that passed through the mesh and kept the contents cool. The mesh also prevented flies and other insects from getting into the safe. Meat safes were widely used in Australian homes in the 19th century and early to mid 20th century, sometimes in conjunction with ice chests, until they were replaced by refrigerators. This item is retained for display purposes as an example of domestic food preservation in Australia 80 to 100 years ago.This is a metal box with a rectangular-shape base and a semi-circular top. All sides except the top and the bottom are made of fine metal mesh. The front is reinforced with metal strips and has a metal clip. The curved top is ridged and has a metal clip.The safe is somewhat rusted and damaged. Registered under Commonwealth Act Nos. 101-102-103 G.W.Rowleyfood preservation – australia, warrnambool, history of warrnambool -
Rutherglen Historical Society
Domestic object - Sieve
Owned and used by Mrs Daisy ParkinWire mesh sieve with a blue plastic handle, wire rests on rim. Wire mesh slightly crushedkitchenware -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Splint
Splint metal mesh for femur flagstaff hill, warrnambool, shipwrecked-coast, flagstaff-hill, flagstaff-hill-maritime-museum, maritime-museum, shipwreck-coast, flagstaff-hill-maritime-village -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Photograph, Central Park Gardens 1989 -- Coloured
Central Park Gardens photo of fountain garden bed with Farrer's Tyre & Brake Service in background. Easter March 1989. Photo taken by Geoff OatesColour photo of Central Park GardensCentral Park Gardens through wire mesh. Easter Monday March 27th 1989.stawell -
Tatura Irrigation & Wartime Camps Museum
Garlic Press, 1940's
Made and used by Internees at Camp 32 handled press with mesh bowl and solid metal plate attached to a handle. Used for pressing soap trough meshgarlic press, hoefer family, camp 3, tatura, ww2 camp 3, domestic, food, preparation -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Accessory - Evening Bag
Belonged to Annie Hall, mother of donor who lived in Blackburn Small, gold mesh evening bag, ball-clip clasp: gold coil-metal handle (genuine Regal mesh)park lane handbags -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Domestic object - Strainer
Take a stroll through the average beverage aisle in your supermarket, and you might get the impression that tea has always come in small boxes with disposable tea bags. But before those easy to come by boxes, there was the rich and intriguing history of the tea strainer, a beautiful little tool that has helped our ancestors enjoy loose leaf tea for hundreds of years. Enjoying loose-leaf tea, and becoming familiar with this tool, can help spark an appreciation for your tea strainer and infuser collection, or simply inspire you to grow one. Documentation of tea tools such as the tea strainer appear in ancient history, the earliest models were likely made of bamboo, and later evolved into stainless steel, sterling silver, china, porcelain, silicon, and linen. During the Tang Dynasty in China, a small book called “Classic of Tea” was written describing tea utensils, and they were made to help Buddhist monks keep living things (such as small bugs) out of the drinking water. However, using a tea tool to keep run away tea leaves out of a cup did not become a cited use of the strainer until the 17th century when Dutch merchants made tea more readily available to those outside of the Chinese dynasty. British royals then increased the popularity of tea as their preferred beverage, and it was not long before a newfound fanaticism for tea in Great Britain spread to the American colonies, as did a growing demand for products that could separate loose tea leaves from liquid with ease and flair. Why did people use a strainer to separate out tea leaves in Great Britain and not in China? While the method of serving tea from a teapot with the tea loose in the pot was a practice used in both countries, the reason China may not have required a tool to remove leaves from their cup likely had to do with the types of tea leaves they were producing. The British owned tea plantations, in countries such as India, produced finer black tea leaves that did not require as much space to expand inside of a tea pot, where as the leaves prepared on the Chinese plantations would expand far more in the pot, and were therefore less likely to land or be bothersome inside a tea cup. This common approach to serving tea with smaller tea leaves required a solution to avoid ending up with a cup, and mouth, full of tea leaves. The obvious solution was a strainer basket. In the Victorian era, tea strainer baskets, similar to those still used in tea parlors today, were made to sit on top of the cup to capture the leaves when pouring the tea from a tea pot into the individual cups. Another solution was a tea-removing device called a mote spoon. Mote spoons act as search and rescue spoons to remove tea leaves from individual teacups. The tea would be brewed loose in the teapot, so any tea that ended up in the cup could be removed with a long handled spoon with holes in the spoon to remove rogue tea leaves and keep the steeped water in the cup. The handle also helped keep the teapot spout free of leaves and could help unclog any leaves trapped when pouring. Stainless steel tea strainers and tea infusers gained popularity in the late 19th century. Big name tea strainer producers, such as Tiffany and Gorham, could use fine silver to create quality, heavy, and sturdy strainers, for those who could afford it. There were many varieties of strainers at that time, but it was more likely that smaller designers who could not afford to mass-produce these quality strainers out of silver made them into unique shapes to attract consumers with lighter wallets. And borne was the tea strainer we are accustomed to today. Things took an unexpected turn for the tea strainer in the early 1900s when Thomas Sullivan, a tea merchant, shipped out tea samples in small silk bags. Customers did not realize that they were supposed to remove the tea from the bags, and instead boiled the tea, bag and all! The convenience of tossing out the leaves is obvious, and the popularity of tea bags is still seen today. Most premium bags of tea we are accustomed to today are frequently packaged loose for consumption, and when they are available in bags, the leaves are often crowded and do not have enough space to expand. While pyramid tea bags have become a more recent solution to this problem, due to the additional space at the top of the bag, enjoying a variety of quality tea is easier with a tea strainer in your arsenal. Besides, with the wide variety of strainers for your cup or pot in versatile materials such as mesh, silver, or a novelty silicone cartoon shape, loose tea can still reign supreme. Tea strainers sometimes do require more cleanup and measuring, but the experience and quality is always worth the effort. Besides, strainers also allow for mixing favorite tea blends together for an extra dose of delicious creativity! https://www.teamuse.com/article_170413.html The strainer provided the convenience of separating the tea leaves for disposal later.Metal strainer, bowl shaped, with mesh and twisted wire handle.Noneflagstaff hill, warrnambool, shipwrecked-coast, flagstaff-hill, flagstaff-hill-maritime-museum, maritime-museum, shipwreck-coast, flagstaff-hill-maritime-village, strainer -
Clunes Museum
Domestic object - SODA SYPHON
SODA SIPHON BOTTLE WITH MESH OUTERNilsoda, mixer, bottle -
Mont De Lancey
Table runner, 1910
Worked by Mrs. Paul Mudrack - 1910Rectangular, brown canvas mesh mounted on green velvet table runner with hand embroidered green, yellow, pink and white pattern on the mesh.tableware., table runners, table linen. -
Montmorency/Eltham RSL Sub Branch
Embroidered Mat, Framed
Cotton, Embroidered, Framed Mat commemorating the ANZAC Gallipoli landing. Frame has a paper note indicating origin of item: "Donated by Irene Fitzpatrick, this embroidery was sent to her Grandmother"DARDANELLES 1915 OUR HEROES (Embroidered into the cotton mesh) Also includes embroidered outline of a ship -
Bendigo Military Museum
Accessory - SWEAT RAG, 1962-75
Green mesh scarf, known as 'sweat rag'.uniforms-accessories, sweat rag -
Tatura Irrigation & Wartime Camps Museum
Strainer - food, 1940's
Made and used by internees at Camp 3Small metal and fine wire mesh strainerhoefer family, camp 3, tatura, ww2 camp 3, domestic, food, preparation -
Dandenong/Cranbourne RSL Sub Branch
Cap
Blue peak Cap Mesh rear topOn front of cap H.M.A.S. SUCCESS OR - 304 Picture of Ship Made in China Richard Stubbs name written on back of hat label. -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Accessory, Oroton, White Enamel & Brass Handbag, 1960s
The Kew Historical Society's Fashion & Design collection includes a small and representative collection of reticules, purses and handbags, purchased, inherited or collected by members of the Society. These items date from the Nineteenth and Twentieth centuries, and conform to fashions and styles popular during the period of their use. Some of the items are handmade, while others are mass-produced commercial products.White enamel mesh evening bag by Oroton.evening bags, fashion accessories, oroton, yvonne knight -
Warrnambool and District Historical Society Inc.
Sign - Artefact, State Savings Bank Trustees, Warrnambool, State Saving Bank sign, Early to mid 20th century
This sign was probably attached to a building or placed in a window and was most likely to have been at the Timor Street, Warrnambool State Savings Bank building. The State Savings Bank had its origins in the Port Phillip Savings Bank established in Melbourne in 1841 and in 1853 it became known as the Commissioners’ Savings Banks in the Colony of Victoria. A Warrnambool Savings Bank branch was established in 1859 in temporary premises and in 1860 it moved to a new building in Liebig Street. In 1884 a new sandstone building was erected in Timor Street and the bank operated from there until 1957. In 1912 the Commissioners’ Savings Banks in Victoria became the State Savings Bank. From 1957 to 1990 the Warrnambool State Savings Bank (called the State Bank of Victoria, Warrnambool Branch after 1980) had premises in Liebig Street. In 1990 the State Bank was subsumed into the Commonwealth Bank of Australia.The Warrnambool State Savings Bank was a leading banking establishment in Warrnambool for 130 years and this sign is an important memento of that institution. This is a rectangular piece of fine brown metal mesh with an ornamental gold trim around the edges and gold lettering. The edges are somewhat ragged and bent and the mesh is a little stained. ‘State Savings Bank Warrnambool Branch’state savings bank, warrnambool, history of warrnambool -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Book - CHILDRENS BOOK COLLECTION
"Kittie" pocket size child's picture book. Published Ernest by E. Nister at Nuremburg (Bavaria). Mesh bookmark, with anchor and flowers, Hope the of the Soul printed on the mesh.books, children's, kittie -
Bendigo Military Museum
Accessory - CLOTH, post 1960
Item issued to Murray METHERALL 35455. Refer Cat No 590.2 for Service History.Cotton mesh, green cloth used as a sweat rag.military history - army, military equipment, sweat, rag, accessory -
Dutch Australian Heritage Centre Victoria
Skimmer (Indische schuimspaan), Handmade in Indonsia (very likely), 1940s
Used in Indonesian cookery. Brought to Australia by Dutch or Dutch-Indonesian migrants in the 1950s.Metal and wooden handle, attached to circular mesh scoop.kitchen utensil (indonesian)