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Antiques! => Antique Questions Forum => Topic started by: phil57 on July 17, 2013, 01:27:42 PM
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I have one just like this. Its an 1890's industrial wallpaper cutter. I looked everywhere that I could think of on the web and only found 2 that were sold and will not give you the price. Then I found you guys. I hope somebody knows. Thank You.
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yours i believe....$500+++++++++++++
https://svpply.com/item/537481/Vintage_Industrial_Wallpaper_Cutter
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Thanks for the reply that sounds great...more than I would have thought...I have much to learn.
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Its an 1890's industrial wallpaper cutter.
Is your device actually marked or labeled as being a "wallpaper cutter" ..... because I can't imagine why anyone would have need of/for such a device.
Wallpaper is purchased in rolls and a sharp knife or razor blade works just fine for doing any "cutting" of it.
Anyway, I have never seen a wallpaper cutter that looked like that ...... but I have seen an old roller shade cutting machine that looked similar to your device.
Here is a newer motorized version of a roller shade cutting machine, to wit:
(http://www.dwfcontract.com/Portals/76244/images/new%20shade%20cutter.jpg)
The above pictured cutter ..... plus a different version of an old cutter is commented about in his blog, to wit:
http://www.dwfcontract.com/Drapery--Window-Covering-Blog/bid/84998/I-was-cutting-Roller-Shades-at-10-years-old (http://www.dwfcontract.com/Drapery--Window-Covering-Blog/bid/84998/I-was-cutting-Roller-Shades-at-10-years-old)
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Last month I attended an auction consisting of the contents of an old hardware store. One of the items was a "wallpaper cutting counter", solid oak, about 6' in length x about 3' wide. It featured cubicles in the base for storage of the wallpaper rolls. There was a brass tag on the counter, indicating the manufacturer and patent date for "Improved Wallpaper ? ? ? ?". Mounted at one end was a trimmer, quite similar to the one being discussed, and the one pictured in the link below:
http://www.paintstoreonline.com/museum.html (http://www.paintstoreonline.com/museum.html)
The selling price for the complete unit at the auction was...$285
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Its an 1890's industrial wallpaper cutter.
Is your device actually marked or labeled as being a "wallpaper cutter" ..... because I can't imagine why anyone would have need of/for such a device.
Wallpaper is purchased in rolls and a sharp knife or razor blade works just fine for doing any "cutting" of it.
Anyway, I have never seen a wallpaper cutter that looked like that ...... but I have seen an old roller shade cutting machine that looked similar to your device.
Here is a newer motorized version of a roller shade cutting machine, to wit:
(http://www.dwfcontract.com/Portals/76244/images/new%20shade%20cutter.jpg)
The above pictured cutter ..... plus a different version of an old cutter is commented about in his blog, to wit:
http://www.dwfcontract.com/Drapery--Window-Covering-Blog/bid/84998/I-was-cutting-Roller-Shades-at-10-years-old (http://www.dwfcontract.com/Drapery--Window-Covering-Blog/bid/84998/I-was-cutting-Roller-Shades-at-10-years-old)
i,m gonna re-name you Doubtful Dinah!!...it is what it says it is.... ;D
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Mounted at one end was a trimmer,
Now that is what was confusing me, .... the trimmer or cutter at one end. ??? ???
Now I have seen a roll-down shade being trimmed off so that it would fit the window. The retailer would have 1 standard size shde, say 36", and if you needed a new shade that was less than 36" he would "trim" it off ...... just like cutting a piece of water/gas pipe.
But now I have hung several dozens of rolls of wallpaper in my days ...... and the most tedious part about "paper-hanging" ... is the making sure that both the "edges" of the paper and the "pattern" on the paper ...... line-up exactly.
Thus said, I just can't imagine someone "trimming off" the edge(s) of rolls of wallpaper ....... and then expecting to "line-up" the pattern when pasting it to the wall.
Now a solid color paper, no problem. But pre-1940, big flowers, etc. and multi-colored paper was the norm for "brightening" up their abodes.
I think brightly colored wallpaper was like "printed" linoleum, "white" paint and the repo-Tiffeny glass (Carnival), .... the poor folks could live like the rich dudes. ;D ;D
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methinks you are missing the point..cogar...say for instance..there are 20 rolls of patterned wallpaper,.that were oversized .if all of these rolls were put through the trimmer/cutter,and cut to the same width....then the pattern would have to match,
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The one in question looks like it was for cutting lengths not trimming width !! Even years ago wallpaper had no border to remove or at least none that I have ever seen !! There is a border at the beginning of a roll and sometimes at the end but not the width !! I don`t care how sharp the knife was you can`t trim the width of a roll and make it fit !! There would be rough edges if you did !! And that doesn`t work with wallpaper !!
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i,ve noticed of late..that we have been making mountains out of molehills....this cutter...as it was first mooted...is what it is,its a machine for cutting paper....pure and simple....nothing more nothing less...but when its viewed through umpteen different pair of eyes...we have all tried to disprove...that it is a cutting machine...or trimming machine....this i may add is what i found after googling, and what Rauville found after googling.....more often than not..the simplest answer is usually the correct answer....
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The one in question looks like it was for cutting lengths not trimming width !!
Thanks for that "clue", Mart, I wasa previously thinking late 20th Century but may have now figured it out.
At sometime pre-40', 30', 20' or 1900, ... whenever, ...... wallpaper, like most all retail goods, ..... was not purchased pre-packaged "by-the-roll".
It must surely have been sold "by-the-foot" like other dry goods.
And ps Bigwull, ...... don't give up your day job to become a wallpaper hanger. ;D ;D ;D
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The one in question looks like it was for cutting lengths not trimming width !!
Thanks for that "clue", Mart, I wasa previously thinking late 20th Century but may have now figured it out.
At sometime pre-40', 30', 20' or 1900, ... whenever, ...... wallpaper, like most all retail goods, ..... was not purchased pre-packaged "by-the-roll".
It must surely have been sold "by-the-foot" like other dry goods.
And ps Bigwull, ...... don't give up your day job to become a wallpaper hanger. ;D ;D ;D
Avril is the wallpaper hanger in this house....me...i just sit an point her in the right direction..... ;D ;
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They were referred to as "Trimmers"...even back in the day. ;)
http://www.liveauctioneers.com/item/3415494 (http://www.liveauctioneers.com/item/3415494)
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They were referred to as "Trimmers"...even back in the day.
::) ::) ::) Now Rauville, you know that you can not attest to that being a fact.
I don't really care what that auction website called it ...... because it make no logical sense to call it a "wallpaper trimmer".
Rauville, I am pretty sure that the confusion of its purpose ..... is the result of a misunderstanding about the 'nameplate' affixed to it.
It specifically states, to wit: MFG WALL PAPER TRIMMERS ..... which means they were manufacturers of wall paper trimmers, ...... but it doesn't mean that particular item was a "trimmer" for trimming wallpaper.
Just because a foundry's nameplate states: ... MFG of Cast Iron Heating Stoves ..... doesn't mean they didn't manufacture cast iron pots and skillets ....... or that a pot or skillet with their logo on it was ..... actually a stove.
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They were referred to as "Trimmers"...even back in the day.
::) ::) ::) Now Rauville, you know that you can not attest to that being a fact.
I don't really care what that auction website called it ...... because it make no logical sense to call it a "wallpaper trimmer".
Rauville, I am pretty sure that the confusion of its purpose ..... is the result of a misunderstanding about the 'nameplate' affixed to it.
It specifically states, to wit: MFG WALL PAPER TRIMMERS ..... which means they were manufacturers of wall paper trimmers, ...... but it doesn't mean that particular item was a "trimmer" for trimming wallpaper.
Just because a foundry's nameplate states: ... MFG of Cast Iron Heating Stoves ..... doesn't mean they didn't manufacture cast iron pots and skillets ....... or that a pot or skillet with their logo on it was ..... actually a stove.
there you go again..trying to baffle us with cogar gobbledygook....it does,nt work....it is what it says on the tin..... ;D
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(http://www.truebeer.com/assets/images/stella-artois-glass-set-1.jpg)
it is what it says on the tin.....
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Mmm!!...i hate to be the one to tell you cogar...but...these are made of glass....perhaps you should consider ..seeking some help......either that...or stay off the sauce... ;D