fletty
23rd February 2012, 03:55 PM
I had trouble (lost 3 drafts!) adding to the following older thread and so have started a new one
http://www.woodworkforums.com/f173/ye-olde-telephone-138141/
I am also restoring on olde phone and I have been working on it for EXACTLY the same time Wheelinround has been restoring the same lady's Hebridean spinning wheel! The lady who owns it is like others on this forum and remembers it in daily use in her family country home. When I went to last weekend's Sturt Workshop Hand Tool Extravaganza I called into an antique shop in Mittagong that had exactly the same phone for sale except it had a GHASTLY keypad set into the notepad shelf but it did have an original looking brass and timber handpiece. It sold for $975!
The restoration has come along well and other than a bit of cleaning and polishing, the main work was done by Howards Restora Finish which quickly removed many years of household smoke residue and other grime. This surprised me a little as the curved front is actually sheet steel painted with a timber grain pattern and labelled with a metallic ink transfer. A test label inside states that it passed test on 15th June, 1910! That makes it older than Claw Hama and possibly as old as Scribbly Gum!
I just need to fix a few other hooks and knobs and it is finished.
fletty
PS, there is a company that restores old phones and, I believe, supplies bits and pieces. contact details are www.pmgtechnology.com.au (http://www.pmgtechnology.com.au), I haven't used them myself and have no connection with them,
http://www.woodworkforums.com/f173/ye-olde-telephone-138141/
I am also restoring on olde phone and I have been working on it for EXACTLY the same time Wheelinround has been restoring the same lady's Hebridean spinning wheel! The lady who owns it is like others on this forum and remembers it in daily use in her family country home. When I went to last weekend's Sturt Workshop Hand Tool Extravaganza I called into an antique shop in Mittagong that had exactly the same phone for sale except it had a GHASTLY keypad set into the notepad shelf but it did have an original looking brass and timber handpiece. It sold for $975!
The restoration has come along well and other than a bit of cleaning and polishing, the main work was done by Howards Restora Finish which quickly removed many years of household smoke residue and other grime. This surprised me a little as the curved front is actually sheet steel painted with a timber grain pattern and labelled with a metallic ink transfer. A test label inside states that it passed test on 15th June, 1910! That makes it older than Claw Hama and possibly as old as Scribbly Gum!
I just need to fix a few other hooks and knobs and it is finished.
fletty
PS, there is a company that restores old phones and, I believe, supplies bits and pieces. contact details are www.pmgtechnology.com.au (http://www.pmgtechnology.com.au), I haven't used them myself and have no connection with them,