Reader HappyCthulhu was so kind as to send me a link to this online auction (pickup only, though, so definitely more suited for locals) of a recently departed restaurant in Rosslyn, Virginia called Tom Sarris' Orleans House. I don't know anything about the establishment, but the auction is full of architectural elements and clever devices.
The neatest? A large recording clock. What it was used to record, I do not know, but the face is beautiful and the innards are full of brass rods, gears, and a reel for paper.
I thought this fern stand -- with chains on it! Was interesting, too.
Auction ends on February 8th, so you have plenty of time to dream, research, and bid.
Ah -- I think Happy found this via BoingBoing, so thanks all around.
I believe that Steampunk is more than just brass and watchparts. It's finding a way to combine the past and the future in an aesthetic pleasing yet still punkish way. It's living a life that looks old-fashioned, yet speaks to the future. It's taking the detritus of our modern technological society and remaking it into useful things. Join me as I search for items for my house that combine the scientific romanticism of the Victorians with our real present and imagined future.
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The recording clock is for tracking when employees arrive at work and leave for the day. Each employee is assigned a number on the large ring, when they punch in in the morning, they rotate the arm around to their number, push it in and it records the time on the paper roll inside the clock. Similarily for when they punch out. As I recall this one was built by IBM. There's a similar model on display at the maritime museum in Victoria, BC, Canada.
Ah, thank you WackyV. A "time clock" in other words. Very good to know -- this one is pretty, isn't it?
Indeed it is, it's even more beautiful in person.
Extremely cool. Thanks!
I came across your page trying to do more research on the Orleans House... funny, since I'm the one who submitted that link to BoingBoing. It's amazing how stuff gets around.
Anyway, I just wanted to offer a few pictures of the machine... they're part of a set I have of the restaurant. The last is a detail of the plaque on the front of the machine if anyone's trying to do forensics...
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