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Hi;
I submit this photo for your consideration. Please describe exactly what we are looking at. DON -- Check out my web site at: www.home.earthlink.net/~dmign/index.htm |
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antradman wrote:
Hi; I submit this photo for your consideration. Please describe exactly what we are looking at. DON Looks like a doll house miniature. Bill |
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Thanks for the observation, Close but no cigar.
The piano is a transistor radio about 5"X6" and the cathedral is the approx. 3" high Hallmark Cards Christmas ornament that actually has radio program sounds including static as you as you turn the dial. Neat combination don't cha think? DON "Bill Cohn" billcohn1.comcast.net wrote in message . .. antradman wrote: Hi; I submit this photo for your consideration. Please describe exactly what we are looking at. DON Looks like a doll house miniature. Bill |
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the cathedral is the approx. 3" high Hallmark Cards Christmas ornament
that actually has radio program sounds including static as you as you turn the dial. The ornament is kind of cool, in a cheesy way. My wife got me one last year. I have a handful of other little plastic radios & TVs and it fits right in! Phil Nelson |
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The ornament is kind of cool, in a cheesy way
That's what I thought when my sister returned from Scotland with this piece. Cheesy, but look at the detail on the back: a battery labelled Eveready, and "aerial" and "earth" inscribed on the back cover where virtually no one would bother looking. Alan |
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Alan Douglas wrote: That's what I thought when my sister returned from Scotland with this piece. Cheesy, but look at the detail on the back: a battery labelled Eveready, and "aerial" and "earth" inscribed on the back cover where virtually no one would bother looking. That's cool Alan, I really like it, particularly the white cat. I had a cat that looked a lot like that with the addition of a few carefully placed black spots. Ron |
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Hi Phil;
Do you have pictures of that other stuff. I would like to see them. I guess that I am cool in a cheesy way too. DON "Phil Nelson" wrote in message ... the cathedral is the approx. 3" high Hallmark Cards Christmas ornament that actually has radio program sounds including static as you as you turn the dial. The ornament is kind of cool, in a cheesy way. My wife got me one last year. I have a handful of other little plastic radios & TVs and it fits right in! Phil Nelson |
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A;Alan:
HUH? I just checked mine and it doesn't have any inscription. Maybe that was just on the European version.Big disappointment. PS, Love your '20s radios series. DON "Alan Douglas" adouglasatgis.net wrote in message ... The ornament is kind of cool, in a cheesy way That's what I thought when my sister returned from Scotland with this piece. Cheesy, but look at the detail on the back: a battery labelled Eveready, and "aerial" and "earth" inscribed on the back cover where virtually no one would bother looking. Alan |
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OH WOW, If this is the one you have, mine is completely different. Here is a
close-up of mine and the back is just a door for the AAA batteries that powers it. DON "Alan Douglas" adouglasatgis.net wrote in message ... |
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Just think... 50 years from now, people will be hanging tiny reproductions
of iPods and cell phones on their Christmas trees in nostalgic reminiscence of "the good old days". |
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Do you have pictures of that other stuff.
Here ya go. Some of the little things match (or almost match) radios in my collection. The first picture is my Zenith R-514W clock radio with a planter that looks pretty close. The second photo shows my Farnsworth GT-051 with a handmade ceramic replica bank. A few years ago, I was contacted by radio station WFPL (89.3 FM in Louisville) with a request to use a radio to create ceramic replicas to give as premiums celebrating their 50th anniversary. I loaned them the Farnsworth to use as a model, and got one of the replicas in return. They made only 200 of those premium banks. Mine is number 127. The third photo shows my Emerson 511 with a plastic giveaway bank modeled after a similar Emerson set. I found the bank on eBay about 10 years after I restored the radio. The last photo shows assorted other mini radio and TV replicas. The Emerson TV with a clown in the screen is another giveaway bank. The Westinghouse TV with a baby in the screen is a pencil box, presumably another dealer item either to give away or display on the counter. The metal "TV Bank" at far right is another common giveaway item; the dealer's name would be printed on the back. Phil Nelson Phil's Old Radios http://antiqueradio.org/index.html |
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Hi,
My figurine doesn't do anything, and is too heavy to hang on a tree. Solid plaster, I imagine. Alan |
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OH WOW!
Here I go getting jealous again. DON "Phil Nelson" wrote in message ... Do you have pictures of that other stuff. Here ya go. Some of the little things match (or almost match) radios in my collection. The first picture is my Zenith R-514W clock radio with a planter that looks pretty close. The second photo shows my Farnsworth GT-051 with a handmade ceramic replica bank. A few years ago, I was contacted by radio station WFPL (89.3 FM in Louisville) with a request to use a radio to create ceramic replicas to give as premiums celebrating their 50th anniversary. I loaned them the Farnsworth to use as a model, and got one of the replicas in return. They made only 200 of those premium banks. Mine is number 127. The third photo shows my Emerson 511 with a plastic giveaway bank modeled after a similar Emerson set. I found the bank on eBay about 10 years after I restored the radio. The last photo shows assorted other mini radio and TV replicas. The Emerson TV with a clown in the screen is another giveaway bank. The Westinghouse TV with a baby in the screen is a pencil box, presumably another dealer item either to give away or display on the counter. The metal "TV Bank" at far right is another common giveaway item; the dealer's name would be printed on the back. Phil Nelson Phil's Old Radios http://antiqueradio.org/index.html |
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"Alan Douglas" adouglasatgis.net wrote in message ... The ornament is kind of cool, in a cheesy way That's what I thought when my sister returned from Scotland with this piece. Cheesy, but look at the detail on the back: a battery labelled Eveready, and "aerial" and "earth" inscribed on the back cover where virtually no one would bother looking. Alan No inscription on the ones in my possession either. None the less, they are a fascinating bit of technological magic! The stations tune like on a regular radio, there is even "splatter" when slightly off frequency, and the "static" on blank portions of the dial is pretty realistic. It certainly acts like a real radio would! Pete |
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"Uncle Peter" wrote None the less, they are a fascinating bit of technological magic! The stations tune like on a regular radio, there is even "splatter" when slightly off frequency, and the "static" on blank portions of the dial is pretty realistic. It certainly acts like a real radio would! Is this one with "WCOW- where we put the COW back in cowboy" which someone failed to correct to the simpler and accurate KOW? John H. |
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