Old Stuff – Lubbock, TX

On a road trip to Santa Fe, NM and Colorado, our first night stop over in route was in Lubbock, TX.  Lubbock is not along the shortest route to our final destinations, but I decided a new route was desirable, having often repeated the same route in that direction.

After checking into our motel, we had a little time to kill before dinner.  Looking around for something to do, my wife found a number of her favorite type places to visit, antique malls.  So we picked one that was only a few miles away and was still open, but closing soon.

Compur-Rapid

I found a number of old cameras to inspect and photograph with my iPhone.

Optimo
flexaret

It is amazing how many different makes, models and designs there were in the earlier days of photography.

Lazy $4 & $7 Cash Register

In my high school days and on into college years, I worked in an old style drug store in a small town.  The store had only two cash registers, both manual types, similar to, but more basic than those in the images in this post, one small one and one larger one.

Manual Powered
45
Dollars and Cents
Cracked
Just Bottles, no Medications

This particular antique store had old style drugstore furnishings, including many glass display counters and behind the counter shelves with sliding glass doors, similar to those in the store in which I worked.  I only recently learned that the reason for such furnishings were that people were not trusted to have access to the products and open style shelving is a relatively recent development, first introduced in Piggly Wiggly grocery stores in the early 1900.

Sulfa Drugs
Nembutal
Old Wine

These bottles still contain liquid, although they are no longer full.  I’m guessing the wine is no longer good, even though it is well aged.

Old Wine

Many other beverage types and brands are always found in these old stuff stores.  Coffee seems to be one of the favorites.

Free Hosiery
Fresh
Coffee Tins
Yellow & Blue?

Those stripes look black to me.  Maybe it is navy blue?

Everything with Diana Lynn

Tobacco related items are also popular.  I did not recall Diana Lynn, which prompted me to do a brief internet research.  I’m thankful that the internet allows for such easy research on almost any topic from almost anywhere.  No library browsing required.  If not for this old advertising poster, I might never have known anything about Diana Lynn.

Sewing with the Jones’

My wife recently purchased an old Singer sewing machine.  It is the same model as her mom used, so the purchase was based upon nostalgia.  The machine works, but I replaced one of the electric cords, since the original one looked hazardous.  I had to refinish an old cabinet for the machine, too.  But not the original cabinet that the machine came in, since that one was not acceptable to my wife.  Now we have an extra sewing machine in our garage that was in the refinished cabinet.  Contact me if you are in the market for a sewing machine, no reasonable offer will be refused.  Heck, I’ll even give it away to anyone that will take it away.

Some items in this store were subject to censorship.

Censored 1
Censored 2

This is enough to drive one to drink.

Let’s have a Banquet

But here is an ice box to keep our beer cold:

Ice Box

I hope to have regained my sanity before the next post.

Ken

Old Stuff – Antiques

One of my wife’s favorite pastimes is browsing in antique stores and malls.  I frequently accompany her on these visits, occupying my time shooting photos, usually with an iPhone, of items or displays that I find interesting and/or nostalgic.

Fuzzy Blue Ducks – A large plates decorated with ducks in a pond
Is it Real or Is it Memorex?

I recall seeing the Memorex magnetic recording tape commercials many years ago, but I do not recall Memorex brand radios, which seems strange, since Memorex came into existence in 1961, while I was in high school.  I had a Westinghouse clock radio in my bedroom then, not Memorex.

Duaflex II

Having photography as a hobby, I’m always drawn to displays of old cameras.

Time Machine

The vendor of the booth in which this odd electronic device is displayed has an elaborate description of its ability to transport one in space and time.  I see no Flux Capacitor, but there are numerous potentiometers in its Circulator panel.

Mighty Rapid Kodak Rex Champ

Cameras, comic books and yams.  What can be better?

Readyset Special

Remember when cameras were manufactured in the U.S.?

Brownie D

Six-20 Camera, as opposed to Brownie Scouts or Fudge Brownies.

Lucky Strike

Not sure what makes these “Lucky”, but it was a popular brand for years.

Polaroid 150
Sieves

Sieves used for sorting some materiel by diameter, probably have/had numerous application in industries.  Maybe these even were even used for particle size distribution analysis of data that I used in my job, prior to retirement.

Lamps

Colorful lamp shades hark back to the early days of popular home electric lighting.

Blue Crystal

Rows of colorful glassware always catch my eye,

Formerly New Technology

as do rows and shelves filled with old cameras.  Such displays remind me of how fast technology advances.  This image (and all others in this post) were made with a device that is obsolete, even though it is only a few years old.

DAK

Not Dak Prescot, but seen in Dallas.

Agfa-Anastigmat

From Wikipedia: “An anastigmat or anastigmatic lens is a photographic lens completely corrected for the three main optical aberrations: spherical aberration, coma, and astigmatism. Early lenses often included the word Anastigmat in their name to advertise this new feature”.

I learned something new from this old camera.

All the best,

Ken

Indiana, Fall 2020, Odds and Ends, Part 2

This is a continuation of my iPhone photography in Indiana Antique Stores in October, 2020.

Pile of Cameras, iPhone Photos

I think the camera in the middle is an Argus brand.  I had an Argus C3 that I acquired, when I was in high school.  I do not know what happened to that camera.

Antique Dinner Plates, iPhone Photo
Old Glasses, Monochrome iPhone Photo

There are always lots of old jars, bottles, dishes and glassware in the antique malls.  Sometimes the displays make interesting photograph subjects, sometimes not.

Old Glasses, Monochrome, iPhone Photo
An antique lard bucket, iPhone Photo

Lard was a common cooking item up until not so many years ago and I suppose some people may still use it.  It was a common item in my childhood home.

Mild and Satisfying?, iPhone Photo
Old Scythes and Hand Saw, iPhone Photo

One of those tools looks out of place.  I even have a rusting Sears Craftsman handsaw in my garage, that I’ve not used for many years.  It does not have the carvings on the wood handle that this older one has.

Antique Bottles, iPhone Photo

More bottles and jars.

Antique Jars, iPhone Photo
An old Automobile Service Station Jar, iPhone Photo

Was this bottle used to contain gasoline or motor oil?

Old Blue Jars, iPhone Photo
Antique Wood Spoke Ford Automobile Wheel, iPhone Photo

This wheel was still attached to an old automobile or truck in the backyard of an antique store in a Indiana small town.  The blue bottles in the photo above the wheel photo were in the same outdoor space near the automobile.

Back Lighted Antique Jars, iPhone Photo
Back Lighted Antique Jars, iPhone Photo
Canning Jars, Monochrome, iPhone Photo

That’s it for the antiques and this wraps up photographs from our fall trip to Indiana.

Ken