Showing posts with label dont. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dont. Show all posts

Monday, February 10, 2014

Duplicate and I Like It But Dont Love It Tools For Sale

Up for sale are a few of my duplicate tools, as well as a couple of tools that I like, but dont love.

Below is a "Gallery" photo of all the tools I have for sale with a link above and below it. Click on either of those links as they will take you to the Tools For Sale page.

Go to Full Tool Listings
Go to Full Tool Listings

I have posted individual listings for each tool on my own server because Blogger has limited space when it comes to imaging. Each tool has enough photos to let you know what condition it is in, plus a written description.

Each tool listing displays the price I want to sell the tool for. They may not be the prices you wish to pay for them, but then they never are. I have also listed what I paid for the tool originally. Some I have listed for less than what I paid, some more, and some the same, but I didnt include what I paid for shipping so either way, Im not going to win on any of this. Heres the point Im trying to make; I dont mind getting wet selling these tools, but I already had a bath today. If I cant sell the tool for what I have listed it for, Id rather keep it.

If you want one of these tools, email me using the supplied link for each tool and I will mark the listing as sold. The first email committing to purchase a specific tool is the winner. I will reply the following day with the total cost of the tool plus my cost for shipping, as well as the cost for additional shipping if required. Please use the links supplied. Your email window should open with the tool you want already listed in the subject field, along with the tools sale number.

I expect payment within 48 hours after sending you the invoice. I truly want to sell these tools within my lifetime, so I think this gate is fair to both. If I dont receive payment, Ill pull the sold notice on the tool and try again. Your ears may burn for a few days, but I wont be sending the "boys" after you.

As far as payment options, you can pay me whichever, however or whatever way you want, as long as it is through PayPal. Once PayPal notifies me that I have received payment, the purchase will be shipped the following day.

Not going into the vintage tool business disclaimer:
  • To clear up any questions, I am not going into the vintage tool business, I have no plans to go into the vintage tool business, and trust me, I never want to go into the vintage tool business. The tools offered here are ones that were intended for my own collection when I purchased them, and over time I found I either do not want them, or have found another that suits my needs better.
Fine-Print Stuff:
  • Delivery:
    • Anywhere in the world. 
  • Packaging:
    • No charge for packing materials
  • Shipping Service Used:
    • Canadian Post Office "Expedited Parcel"
    • lowest price available that facilitates tracking
    • Includes $100 in shipping insurance
    • Typically 6 to 10 days for shipments to the U.S.
    • Faster service available at additional charge
  • Example Shipping Price:
    • 12" by 12" by 3" parcel weighing 2 pounds
    • Sent to Illinois, U.S.
    • Cost: $20.63
  • Shipping Quotes:
    • Before commitment to purchase - ask and you shall receive
    • After commitment to purchase - stated on invoice
  • Actual Shipping Costs Upon Shipment:
    • If I under-quoted the shipping charges - I will eat the difference
    • If I over-quoted the shipping charges - Ill include a money order for the difference in the shipment
  • Multiple Items:
    • No problem
  • Shipping Insurance:
    • No shipments without insurance for the full purchased value
    • Expedited Parcel includes $100 with of insurance
    • Insurance on values over $100 is purchased at $1.50 per $100
  • Returns:
    • If I send you the wrong tool, I will refund your money including shipping
    • If it is proven that the tool is not in the same condition as it was represented to be in the listing, I will refund your money including shipping
    • If you change your mind, decide you dont like the tool, or get hell from your wife because you bought it, Im afraid you are on your own
  • Payment Options:
    • One - PayPal only
  • Currency:
    • Whichever is cheaper
    • With the way the currency is fluctuating these days, one day the US Dollar is high and the next, its the CAN Dollar so pick which currency works results in the cheapest cost to you
Go to Full Tool Listings

Peace,

Mitchell
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Dont Trust Mortality

That one post that I made when I announced I was bowing out for the summer to tend to my tomatoes has really come back to bite me on the ass a few times since. Damn!

What I said at the time was, "Im going to do my impersonation of Vito Corleone and tend to my tomatoes, sans the heart attack, I hope." Kick my butt if you ever see Ive used a similar style of comment.

I started to have bouts of lightheadedness and dizziness a couple of months ago and immediately called the doctor and made an appointment to have a physical. The day before my appointment, it appears I passed out while I was out walking the dog. I just woke up flat on my back in the middle of the sidewalk with no idea how I got there. I got myself home and my wife immediately drove me to the closest emergency hospital. 

As it turns out, the electrical controls in my heart have slowly been short circuiting over the past few months and as a result, my body has been considerably shortchanged when it comes to oxygen. When your oxygen content gets too low for things to work properly, things shut down. This isnt the most serious issue in the world of medicine, but I can tell you that one of its major downsides is the lack of warning. Scares the bejeebers out of you, I can assure you.

When I hit emergency, they immediately hooked me up to a ECG monitor and whisked me up to the Cardiac Care Unit. The next day they informed me they were going to install a pacemaker and that was that. Thirty hours after I arrived I had a new little friend tucked under my skin just below my left shoulder blade and that was that. 

Oh, ya. The doctor also told me that I hit my head on the sidewalk when I passed out and it took four staples to close the gash. I dont believe her - not in the least. That crack in my skull was made by my mortality that had dropped by to introduce itself. To get my attention, the little bugger hauled off and kicked me in the head when I was already down. Im sure of it.

Peace,

Mitchell
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Monday, January 27, 2014

Mother In Laws You Gotta Love Em dont you


Take every mother-in-law joke you ever heard, the good, the bad and the ugly, and wrap them all up in a 4’ 2” package, throw a piece of ribbon around it and you will have my mother-in-law.

My mother-in-law is one tough cookie. She survived loosing her mother at 6-years of age, being orphaned at 10-years of age, loosing all her brothers, sisters, nieces and nephews, as well as aunts, uncles and cousins after being transported to Auschwitz at 16-years of age in a cattle car, jumping off of trains getting out of Europe after the war to ensure her future sons wouldn’t become part of the Russian Army at 20-years of age and she survived raising my wife for the rest of her life. God bless her for it and I love her to death because of it, but damn, she can become one angry bull when anyone doesn’t do what she wants.

My father-in-law was the family’s forth generation to enter the painting profession, his family’s business doing everything from fresco ceilings to exterior house painting. In Europe, to become a painter back then meant a five-year apprenticeship learning to do everything from making your own paint to graining. Having lost all but one brother and his sister to the camps, his family home and business destroyed, he didn’t argue when his new wife told him she wanted to leave for places yet decided. When he finally hit Canada, he had a second shock; the profession he held near and dear wasn’t respected here the way it was in Europe, something he still doesn’t understand to this day. Past destroyed and pride wounded, he picked up his brushes and rollers and went to work with the rest of the painters. While he never gained the same stature he had at home, he worked himself up the chain and started to earn a fair living for his family.

By their tenth anniversary of arriving in Canada, the old man was making enough money to allow his wife to start decorating…well…everything.

Now I’m not saying she did it single-handedly, but if you ask any of the old fabric hawkers, they will tell you that there was a worldwide shortage of green velvet material back in the mid-1960’s, and it caused quite a commotion. That was the same year my mother-in-law started decorating her home.

In her livingroom sits a couch that, she proudly likes to tell anyone who will listen, is the first king-sized pullout bed ever made. Now a king-sized mattress is roughly 80” square. You then have to have room for the mechanism and then the arms are added outside of that. So while she is proud as punch of that couch, the reality is, the damned thing is 2” shy of 8’. It has to be the biggest couch I have ever seen. As with all manufactured products built prior to the late 70’s, this manufacturer didn’t skimp on the gauge of the steel, so the damn thing is as heavy as it is long, probably weighing in at 250-pounds, if it weighs an ounce.

Added to the 3 ½-square miles of green velvet fabric that covers this thing is a low-back easy chair, a matching love seat and six diningroom chairs, all, you guessed it, covered in green velvet. But it doesn’t stop there.

When I first came on the scene, the walls were covered with embossed wallpaper that reminded me of the doilies that my grandmother had on all the arms and backs of her chairs. If the design wasn’t bad enough, it was done in some sort of short, green fuzz that, to my mother-in-law’s eyes, looked like green velvet. This, of course, using those same eyes, made this paper a perfect match for the furniture. I’ll tell you, I am lucky I suddenly became comatose during that first visit, because if I hadn’t, I would have run screaming from the place and would have never got to marry my wife, who, I will mention, hates anything made of velvet  - in any colour - with a passion – thank bloody God!

Married to a painter, my mother-in-law wasn’t shy about serving him up a busman’s holiday, insisting that he repaint often. The first time around for the “green” rooms, off they went to order more of the same paper. The old girl was dashed when they told her that the paper was no longer in production. My father-in-law, bless his heart, took it on himself to carefully steam the paper from the walls, cleaned all the glue off the back of each piece, rolled each one up and when the painting was done, re-hung it. He did this, not once for her, but twice. The second time he damaged enough paper that there wasn’t enough to do both rooms and hallway, so the hallway got painted an “almost matching” green. He still says the paper was getting brittle with age, but I think the crafty old bugger tore the stuff on purpose because he was tired of looking at it.

The beloved paper might be gone, but the sea of green velvet still exists. When they moved into their new abode she drove me nuts pushing me to try and arrange that furniture in the in the same arrangement that they had been living with for these last forty-three years. Because the layout of the new wasn’t anywhere near the layout of the old, it was impossible to do exactly, but I got it as close as I could.

Now you would think she would be happy, wouldn’t you. Here she is, 70-years older than she ever expected to be, living in a nice condo high over the city, in reasonably good health and surrounded by her furniture and nick-knacks. Nope.

The other day I noticed that her livingroom drapes were closed all the time so I asked her about it. She told me she couldn’t open them. I thought there was something wrong with the rod, so I went to look and found nothing, the drapes moved, as they should, and as I’m a glutton for punishment, I went back to her and reported this. She told me that she could open and close them herself, just fine thank you very much, but she couldn’t open them because then she would see the drapery rod.

Now this took me off guard, seriously off guard. The rod was new, and was an exact match to the old one in the old place. I know this because I had purchased and hung it myself; taking this upon myself because I felt the 40-odd year old one was yellowed and worn. I then honestly thought she was joking, and even chuckled. Oh, boy. Wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong thing to do. Her eyes flashed black and this small, frail, four-foot nothing woman suddenly appeared to tower over me.

Seeing that I had royally pissed her off, I tried logic, asking why, after forty-odd years she suddenly didn’t like the look of the rod. I think you can categorize that as mistake number two. I spent the next ten minutes trying to convince her I didn’t think she was crazy as it was obvious, now that I took a second look at it, that this new rod was completely different than the old. It wasn’t. It was the same style and worked exactly the same way, but I had a much better chance of convincing her that it was my mistake than I did convincing her they were the same. I left shortly afterwards defeated.

For the rest of that afternoon I thought about what I could do for the old bird so she would open her drapes again and get some sunshine in their lives. Whatever it was, it had to be something I could make as, if I did that, I knew all would be forgiven.

I did get an idea, but there was a catch. It involved bending some small pieces of wood.

I had steamed a lot of wood when I replaced the bottom of my boat; so bending wood wasn’t new to me. My problem is that I didn’t have a steam box or a place to use it if I did, so just before dinner than night, I tried something else; something I had read about, but never tried.

I filled my wife’s stockpot almost to the top with water, added a little rock salt and set it on the stove to come to a boil. I went into the office and dug out some scraps of oak; 3/8” by 1 5/8” by 12”. When I had trimmed them equal, I threw them into the pot. I then returned to the office to make a mold.

I let the wood cook for about an hour, pulled them both out, and with my wife doing the deed with the clamps; we clamped them both together around the mold.

Once I had devised a mount that would take my mother-in-law’s abuse, here’s what I came up with…


I have them finished with four coats of varnish, ready to install tomorrow. They will mount under the windowsill and will allow the two panels of drapes to be connected in the middle and be “swaged” to each side.

This is how it will mount and work…


I know this isn’t a faithful reproduction of George Washington’s potty-chair to you guys, but to me, it is huge. If there is one thing I hate more than green velvet, it’s “swaged” anything, especially drapes. After these get installed, every time I walk into that room I’ll have to face those droopy drapes and know that I did it, with protest, but I still swaged those damned drapes.

Awe, well. Its Christmas, and these just might bring a smile, and hopefully a little sunshine, onto the old girl’s face.

And with that, I wish all of you nothing but health, happiness and good fortune throughout this coming new year.

Peace,

Mitchell
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