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Fireplaces
SKU: 2142
EUR18.96
White, Gray
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Napkin in “poor man’s suit”. Robust napkins for everyday and festive use.
Until the 1980s, Gysinge was a nursing home run by the county council. To create employment for the 60 or so mentally ill people who stayed at the home, there was, among other things, a weaving room. Many of the inmates spent a long time in the weaving room, which gave them a more meaningful existence – and the county council a cash injection.
At the home, real fabrics were woven, not therapy work in the modern, negative sense. For example, all the curtains, tablecloths and napkins were woven for the reopening of Gysinge Manor in the 1960s.
This fabric is a so-called sole weave (the pattern looks like a sole – but only appears after washing!), woven to order for a guesthouse in Järvsö in the 60s.
The weaving method is also called poor man’s cloth, a weaving method that produced a fabric that looks much more exclusive than it really is. The weaving method is very old and produces a highly absorbent and durable fabric. The fabric is most beautiful if you mangle it, then the shiny linen threads in the weft are emphasized, against the duller warp of cotton. The quality only becomes more beautiful the more you wear the fabric.
EUR17.61
The 18th century beaker-shaped drinking glasses are very rare. Occasionally, you can see a specimen at quality auctions in Stockholm. A few glasses are also preserved in Swedish museum collections.
The glasses are similar in shape to silver goblets from the same period. They have the same trumpet shape, they have the same folded mouth rim and the clearly marked heel is also similar to the foot of the silver goblets. There is no mistaking that beaker glasses are a more everyday version of silver goblets, even though glass goblets, like porcelain plates, were already a great luxury in the 18th century.
What is surprising, however, is that so few beaker glasses have survived, compared with, for example, wine glasses on feet. Perhaps this is because glass goblets were considered simpler than glasses on feet and were used more frequently, which meant they broke more often.
Our beakers are hand-blown and therefore as individual as the originals. The glass mass varies with uneven thickness, streaks, stripes and sometimes blisters. The dot mark under the heel shows where the glassblower’s pipe was located. The folded rim is also a typical 18th-century detail.
Available in three different sizes. A large one for beer or juice. A medium size for wine, water or milk. And a small nubb glass. All three glasses are suitable as vases. The first tussilion in the nubb glass, a bunch of white or blue anemones in the wine glass, or a bouquet of summer flowers in the beer glass.
EUR41.09
A Rolls-Royce for the garden is this jet nozzle in solid brass. It is attached to the garden hose – a suitable hose clamp is included – and allows you to adjust the water flow from a narrow jet to a shower. Light years from today’s plastic gardening items.
EUR46.50
Hand-turned flower pot with barrel of traditional variety. Red flower pot that was developed as a special product for Christmas a few years ago but is now part of the regular range.
Flowerpot production became an industry and mass production in Sweden around the turn of the century 1900. Before then, all pots were made by hand, as were the saucers. The profession was called pottery.
Typical of handmade pots is that you can see the potter’s hands in the ware. The imprints from the hand-turning process create low ridges on the surface and show through on the outside. A hand-turned pot is therefore not as smooth as a machine pot, it is more personal and has more life and variety.
A detail that also reveals the real craftsmanship is the soft, rounded rim at the top. It can certainly be made by machine, but it will never be as soft and individual as on a hand-turned pot.
EUR49.21
Roller blind fabric runner. Coarse linen fabric. Kyper technique.
This rustic fabric, woven especially for Gysinge, comes from a farm in Hälsingland and dates from the early 1800s.
The fabrics are shuttle-woven on old-fashioned looms, resulting in smooth, fine and strong selvedges that do not need to be hemmed or cut.
This fabric is a quality product that gets more and more beautiful the more you use it and wash it.
EUR51.47
The agave plant (Latin agave americana) is a classic outdoor plant for more lavish plantings in castles and mansions, for example.
True agave is a Mediterranean plant that in our climate requires greenhouses in winter. For this reason, it has also only been found on wealthier farms with orangeries or other means of frost-free winter storage.
Most often the agaves were planted in cast iron urns, mostly in pairs at the main entrance, or on the gate posts.
Alongside the genuine agaves, there have also been imitations in painted black plate.
Tin roofs do not grow too big. They can also withstand freezing temperatures. If they are skillfully painted, they can look so much like their predecessors that no one can tell the difference. There’s just one problem – over time, the metal rusts and the paint wears off.
Our developed agaves are therefore made of specially colored copper sheet. By using green-colored copper plate already during production, we have come extremely close to the appearance of the original plant.
The scarring starts when the plants are placed outdoors, and the resulting color changes make the “fake” agave look even more like the real thing over the years.
The tin roofs, which are a piece of qualified Swedish copper warehousing, are delivered ready assembled, just to stick into a pot with sand or soil, or directly into the bed.
EUR1 079.09
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