Showing 36 items
matching mortar and pestle
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Federation University Art Collection
Ceramic - Artwork-Ceramic, Johnstone, June, 'Large Carved Mortar and Pestle' June Johnstone, 2010
This item is part of the Federation University Art Collection. The Art Collection features over 1200 works and was listed as a 'Ballarat Treasure' in 2007.A ceramic mortar and pestle paying homage to the rock mortor and pestles used by Aboriginal people.art, artwork, june johnstone, ceramics, aboriginal -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Bottle, glass, Between 1889-1957
Rectangular clear blue tinted glass bottle with text and illustration of a mortar & pestle embossed on side.'W. G. STROVER' . Illustration of mortar & pestle. 'RATHDOWNE ST. NORTH CARLTON'. -
Arapiles Historical Society
Mortar & Pestle
House hold item, 219.1- mortar iron, 219.2- Pestle iron with wooden handlemortar, pestle -
Orbost & District Historical Society
mortar and pestle
Veterinary equipment. Although glass mortars and pestles are fragile, they are stain-resistant The substance to be ground is placed in the mortar and ground, crushed or mixed using the pestle. It would have been used to break up tablets. (identified by vet. Peter Honey) These items were found in an old walk-through dairy at Wombat Track near Orbost. These items are representative of items used in Orbost on dairy farms in the first half of 20th century.A mortar and pestle. The mortar (2397.1) is a shallow bowl. The pestle (2397.2) is a blunt club-shaped object, the end of which is used for crushing and grinding. Both are made of glass.veterinary-equipment mortar-pestle dairy farming -
Ballarat Base Hospital Trained Nurses League
Mortar & Pestle
Mortar & PestleCeramicmortar, pestle -
City of Moorabbin Historical Society (Operating the Box Cottage Museum)
Manufactured Glass, Pharmacy mortar & pestle, 20thC
The mortar is a bowl, typically made of hard wood, ceramic or stone. The pestle is a heavy club-shaped object, the end of which is used for crushing and grinding. The substance to be ground is placed in the mortar and ground, crushed or mixed with the pestle. The mortar and pestle is usually utilised when cooking and when crushing ingredients for a certain drug in pharmacies. For pharmaceutical use, the mortar and the head of the pestle are usually made of porcelain, while the handle of the pestle is made of wood. This is known as a Wedgwood mortar and pestle and originated in 1779. Glass mortars and pestles are fragile, but stain-resistant and suitable for use with liquids. However, they do not grind as finely as the ceramic type The mortar is a thick clear glass bowl and the pestle is a solid clear glass club-shaped tool for crushing tablets to a finer powder or mixing liquids by a pharmacist.pharmacy, mortar & pestle, medications, medicines, glass manufacturing, glass works, early settlers, moorabbin, bentleigh, cheltenham -
City of Moorabbin Historical Society (Operating the Box Cottage Museum)
Manufactured Glass, Pharmacy mortar and pestle, 20thC
The mortar is a bowl, typically made of hard wood, ceramic or stone. The pestle is a heavy club-shaped object, the end of which is used for crushing and grinding. The substance to be ground is placed in the mortar and ground, crushed or mixed with the pestle. The mortar and pestle is usually utilised when cooking and when crushing ingredients for a certain drug in pharmacies. For pharmaceutical use, the mortar and the head of the pestle are usually made of porcelain, while the handle of the pestle is made of wood. This is known as a Wedgwood mortar and pestle and originated in 1779Glass mortars and pestles are fragile, but stain-resistant and suitable for use with liquids. However, they do not grind as finely as the ceramic type The mortar is a thick clear glass bowl and the pestle is a solid clear glass club-shaped tool used by pharmacists for crushing tablets to a finer powder or mixing liquids pharmacy, mortar & pestle, medications, medicines, glass manufacturing, glass works, early settlers, moorabbin, bentleigh, cheltenham -
Tatura Irrigation & Wartime Camps Museum
Mortar and Pestle
Belonged to Eliza Dowell nee Clark, who came to Australia 1852. She bought the mortar and pestle with her and mixed concoctions for treating everyday ailments. Mrs Dowell and family came to Tatura in c 1880, where Mrs Dowell conducted a shop in Hogan Street.White clay/ceramic mortar and pestle.(2 pieces) -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Photograph, School of Mines Students 1907 with Mr W. W. Telford in the rear, second from the right
School of Mines Students 1907 with mortar and Pestle and Forge Tongs. Rear second from right is W.W. Telford.Black and white photograph of eight young males, four standing, four seated. Six of the men are holding tools of trade used in training - mortar and pestle, tongs etcOn the back: Stawell School of Mines Skene Street Stawell Rear, 2nd from right Mr. W.W. TELFORDstawell education -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Memorabilia - Realia, pre 1920's
Pestle & Mortarstawell, mining -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Mortar & Pestle
Ceramic mortar and pestle with pestle having a wooden handle. Mortar has piece broken away over pouring lip.flagstaff hill, warrnambool, shipwrecked-coast, flagstaff-hill, flagstaff-hill-maritime-museum, maritime-museum, shipwreck-coast, flagstaff-hill-maritime-village -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Domestic object - Mortar and Pestle
Ùsed for engineering purposes possibly mining.Brown painted solid metal mortar and a separate pestle.mining, crushing & milling, medicine, pharmacy -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Domestic object - Mortar and Pestle
Stoneware mortar and pestle used for grinding seeds, nuts, etcdomestic items, food preparation -
Dutch Australian Heritage Centre Victoria
Mortar and pestle (mortier en vijzel)
Brought by Dutch Indonesian migrants 4801 (a) Round wooden shallow mortar 4801 (b) Wooden pestle.dutch east indies, kitchen item -
Mission to Seafarers Victoria
Functional object - Small Glass Pestle
A small glass pestle which has an accompanying glass mortar. The striking end of the pestle is approximately twice as large than the end which is held.volum collection -
Mission to Seafarers Victoria
Functional object - Small Glass Mortar
A small glass mortar which has an accompanying glass pestle. The mortar has a small notched tip, rounded rim and flat base.volum collection -
Wodonga & District Historical Society Inc
Functional object - Apothecary Storage Jars, late 19th Century
J. R. Pope officially began operating his pharmacy at 102 High Street, Wodonga on 1 October 1967. The pharmacy was purchased from John T. McSwiney who had operated his business from the same site from 1901. Mr. McSwiney was born in Chiltern in 1875 and qualified as a pharmacist in 1896 when he was apprenticed to David James McEwen, father of future Prime Minister Sir John McEwen. By October 1901 Mr. McSwiney was running his own business in High Street where he practised until he sold the business to J. R. Pope exactly 66 years later. Although he went into semi-retirement John McSwiney was still working at the age of 92 and was considered to be Victoria’s – if not Australia’s oldest practising chemist. These jars were part of the transfer of the pharmacy and its equipment in 1967 but date back to the earlier years of John McSwiney’s pharmacy in the early 1900s. These jars come from a Wodonga business which operated for over 70 years.A set of 9 blue and white lidded apothecary jars with gilt lettering depicting latin names of the contents. Also a mortar and and two pestles. The mortar has a groove on the side for the smaller pestle to rest. There is also a blue glass jar.apothecary jars, pharmacies wodonga, pope pharmacy, mcswiney chemist -
Clunes Museum
Functional object - MORTAR & PESTLE
.1 PESTLE: BROKEN WOODEN HANDLE ,CLAY IS STAINED .2 MORTAR: POURING LIPWARRANTED ACID PROOF 8 STICKER MARKED : 118local history, medical and surgery, medical -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Tool - MORTAR AND PESTLE
White ceramic mortar and a pestle with wooden handle, makers markes unreadable, numbered 29 & 6medicine, pharmacy, mortar & pestle -
Churchill Island Heritage Farm
Photograph - Photograph of people at an activity table
Churchill Island Heritage Farm has a large photographic collection dating from the nineteenth century. This series shows more contemporary photographs taken from around Churchill Island with former Churchill Island employee, Sally O'Neil leading children in an activity, and was probably taken in 2001.Photograph of a woman using a mortar and pestle at an activity table surrounded by a group of children gathered in front of Rogers Cottage dormitorycatalogue number written on reverse in pencil photograph, churchill island, sally o'neill -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Domestic Object - MORTAR AND PESTLE
Black enamelled cast iron mortar and pestle with mark on base of the letter C surrounded by star of David. Useed for grinding things to powder.Clark & Co No3 5 inchmedicine, pharmacy, mortar & pestle, k100.1.2 -
Tatura Irrigation & Wartime Camps Museum
Photograph - copy, copy 1988
Items made by prisoners from wood scrounged from wood heap. Photographed at display of memorabilia at Templer Home for Aged, Bayswater, Victoria, in 1981.Colour photograph of wooden items - platters with pennies in centre, bowls, globe, egg, buckle, egg cups on tray, mortar and pestle, pipe and ash tray. Negative no. 20.internment camps, ww2, woodwork, handmade, tatura -
Tatura Irrigation & Wartime Camps Museum
Photograph - copy, 1988 copy
Items made by prisoners from wood scrounged from wood heap. Photographed at Exhibition of Camp Memorabilia displayed at Templer Home for Aged, Bayswater, Victoria, in 1981.Colour photograph of wooden items - platters with pennies in centre, bowls, globe (partly obscured), eggs, buckle, egg cups on tray, mortar and pestle, pipe and ash tray. Negative no: 0temple society, woodcrafts, pow, camp 3, internment camps -
Orbost & District Historical Society
dolly pot
A dolly pot is used to crush specimens and samples before panning. It works like a large mortar and pestle. A small cast iron dolly pot.dolly-pot gold-mining metal-trades -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Functional object - Cast Iron Dolly Pot
Cast iron dolly pots were used in the mining industry to crush ore specimens and samples into dust before panning. The principle is the same as a mortar and pestle.This item has two pieces both are made from cast iron and are rusted and a dark brown color. One is a tapering cylinder 16.5 centimetres wide a its top, the first two and a half centimetres down tapper to 13.5 diameter, the next nine centimetres tapper to 11 centimetres diameter. the last two and a half centimetres is a solid base that flares out to a 16.5 centimetre diameter, the inside of the bottom of the cylinder is a bowl shape. The other piece is a solid tapering shape, it's four and a half centimetres in diameter at one end which tappers to three centimetres in four centimetres of length, the next sixteen centimetres tapper to two centimetre diameter. There is a knob on top, one and a half centimetre high and two and a half centimetres wide.mortar and pestle, dolly pot, gold minning -
Mission to Seafarers Victoria
Container - Medium Wood Drawer
A lone drawer which sits in between two lightly smaller drawers on either side. This drawer features no sliding lid and no label. Stored within this drawer is a small mortar and pestle made of glass which are secured in place by a piece of wood, to which the pestle rests atop. This drawer is found in the front storage location of the parent item and bellow a row of small sized drawers.volum collection -
City of Moorabbin Historical Society (Operating the Box Cottage Museum)
Pharmacy , spatula spoon, 20thC
A Spatula is a flat, blunt, usually flexible instrument used for spreading plasters and for mixing ointments and masses. and to aid in mixing ingredients with a mortar and pestle. A Pharmacist using a Spatula usually involves the thorough mechanical mixing of the weighed bases on an ointment slab until a uniform preparation has been obtained. A metal spoon spatula used for mixing pastes in a pharmacy .pharmacy, medicines, ointments, mortar and pestle, pharmacy equipment. laboratories, moorabbin, bentleigh, cheltenham -
Donald History and Natural History Group operating the Donald Court House Museum
Aboriginal grinding stone (mortar)
This grinding stone (mortar) was used by Aboriginal people to grind or crush different materials such as berries and seeds for food production. In order to grind material, a smaller upper stone (the pestle) would have been used to grind material against this lower stone (the mortar). The stone was found by a farmer on land south of Donald in the 1950’s and was used as a door stop in the family home for many years. In the 1990's the stone was used by the farmer's grandaughter at her home at Swanwater West, to hold the lid down on an above ground swimming pool skimmer box. Stone -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Photograph - Historical, building, Lighthouse Keeper's Quarters Warrnambool, Ca. 1917
This photograph of the Warrnambool Lighthouse Keeper's Quarters was donated together with an accompanying letter written by John Lindsay on October 21st, 1997. The letter was addressed to Howard Nicholl, the Director of Flagstaff Hill at that time. The following information was gleaned from the contents of the letter and the labels attached to the photograph:- The photograph of the Cottage was taken in about 1917. The woman is Gertrude Shade, married to James Shade, who was the Warrnambool Town Council's Officer responsible for keeping records of Shipping activity entering and leaving the busy Port of Warrnambool. The couple and their children, Janet and William, were residents of the Assistant Lighthouse Keeper's Quarters at that time. The family is pictured in the garden on the west side of the building. A washhouse, these days referred to as a laundry, is behind the building and had already been removed when the Flagstaff Hill Planning Board had access to the site in 1972. The corrugated iron veranda was replaced in the 1980s with a smaller covered entry. Janet Shade married the man who lived across the road, Stewart Lindsay, in 1935. Stewart was employed by Nestle at the age of sixteen, working in the export department. He was acting Manager when the Manager became ill, supervising the loading of dairy products and biscuits into the holds of the waiting ships, where they were then exported to Indonesia. Many of the ships were registered in Liberia and the seamen were called 'lascar seamen, or Indian Sailors. Janet and Stewart had a son, John Stewart Lindsay, who was a Pharmacist, a member of the Warrnambool City Council, the Mayor of the City of Warrnambool, a former Director of Flagstaff Hill, and Chairman of the Flagstaff Hill Advisory Committee.This photograph has significance as a historical record of the Warrnambool Lighthouse Kerr'er's Quarters in 1917. The photograph connects the cottage to local families, to local industry, to the Port of Warrnambool, and to overseas exports from Warrnambool. Photograph from c. 1917 depicts the western side of the Warrnambool's Lighthouse keeper's Quarters constructed in bluestone, which was where the Assistant Lighthouse Keeper resided. The image shows the corrugated iron lean-to, and other rooms that were added to the original building after 1872, which were removed in the 1970s due to their poor condition. The members of the family pictured were residents at the time; Gertrude Shade (Mrs James Shade), her daughter Janet and her son William. Inscriptions are on the reverse and the accompanying envelope. Typed label "Gertrude Shade with William and Janet. Lighthouse Keeper's Cottage, Flagstaff Hill, Merri St Warrnambool" Stamp "John Stewart Lindsay, Pharmacist, --0 Thompson Street Warrnambool 3280" "HOWARD NICHOLL / FLAGSTAFF HILL / MERRI STREET" " KEEP OUT OF REACH OF CHILDREN / Lindsay's Pharmacy / 119 Liebig Street, Warrnambool / Tel. 5561 4310" [round symbol of mortar and pestle] Typed letter (from John Lindsay to Howard Nicholl, October 21 1997)flagstaff hill, warrnambool, maritime museum, shipwreck coast, great ocean road, lighthouse keeper's quarters, lighthouse keeper's cottage, gertrude shade, james shade, janet shade, john stewart lindsay, stewart lindsay, nestle, warrnambool exports, port of warrnambool, planning board, 1917, howard nicholl, william shade, export to indonesia, janet lindsay -
Federation University Art Collection
Ceramic, 'Shino Milk Jug' by Bridget Bodenham, 2007
Bridget BODENHAM Bridget Bodenham has a Diploma of Arts (Ceramics) from the University of Ballarat (now Federation University. In 2006 she received an Emerging Artist grant from the Australia Council for the Arts and was also part of Craft’s annual graduate survey exhibition, Fresh!. She works full time making ceramic serving ware, tableware, utensils and jewellery as well as planter pots and flower vases. The majority of her work is designed to be used and enjoyed. Bridget feels a connection to her surrounding bushland landscape and interprets the tones and textures in her work. She takes great care in creating each piece by hand and firing them up to three times in her large gas kiln. Each firing is totally unique resulting in one off pieces. Bridget Bodenham was a finalist in the Bombay Sapphire Design Discovery Award (2008) for a series of ceramic mortars and pestles, and received an Honourable Mention in the Mino International Ceramic Award, Japan. Bridget aims to create a sense of curiosity and reflection in form and function. She hopes her work delights and engages the owners hands and heart into everyday activities. The Federation University Art Collection features over 2000 works and was listed as a 'Ballarat Treasure' in 2007.Small, thrown ceramic vessel / jug with handle and lip. art, artwork, bridget bodenham, ceramics, alumni