Spoon Rare
Posted in Uncategorized on 06/15/2006 06:48 am by admin
Spoon Rare
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Match Ice Tea Spoon
This Match no-nonsense flatware celebrates classic Oneida design elements. Dramatic flutes and a scalloped tip decorate Dublin's fan-shaped handle. A graceful addition is to your tabletop. This is slightly smaller than a regular teaspoon. It is not available in most modern services. This Match spoon is usually identical to a youth spoon. As the name suggests it is for the before dinner tea or coffee. China manufactures used to manufacture tea and coffee and demitasse sized cups.
This Match spoon is about the same size and shape as a teaspoon. The bowl may be slightly smaller and more ornate than a regular teaspoon. If the bowl does not differ from a teaspoon in any way other than that it has cut out serration's consider the possibility that this is a modified item. Normally, fruit spoons have a sharp pointed tip or a slightly serrated tip.
This Match spoon for ice cream is often modified from teaspoons. Genuine ice cream spoons are most often found in services that were introduced about the turn of the century. There was no automated refrigeration then. Ice cream was a rare treat that deserved a special spoon. Today many collectors want to acquire ice cream spoons.
The Match Place spoon, Oval soup and Dessert spoon usually refer to the same item in modern flatware services. In older services, these terms can actually refer to slightly different sizes of very similar items. All of these are basically a larger version of the teaspoon. In older services, measure this piece carefully to be sure that you are ordering the correct size of spoon. Usually only found in 19 Century Patterns. This is a very small spoon used for taking salt from a salt dish to the food. You will not usually find these in silver plate or Stainless. Silverplate can not survive the exposure to salt. Please purchase on online www.etabletop.com
About the Author
Representing Match Flatware in the website www.etabletop.com
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Spoon $16.19 Meet Spoon. He's always been a happy little utensil. But lately, he feels like life as a spoon just isn't cutting it. He thinks Fork, Knife, and The Chopsticks all have it so much better than him. But do they? And what do "they "think about Spoon? A book for all ages, "Spoon" serves as a gentle reminder to celebrate what makes us each special. |
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The Spoon $21.37 Tom Jensen is getting old and becoming obsolete at his youth driven corporation. As things go downhill, he remembers a former life, a life before he joined the rat race. This was a life of simple pleasures and relevance. It was spent with his artist wife and their dear friends, Mike and Stephanie Monroe. He also recalls reading with fascination about a school in the mountains where powerful executives escaped to learn to carve a simple wooden spoon.With little to lose, he enrolls at a folk art institute in the Sierra Nevada mountains. There he reaffirms his forgotten values, and vows to find the Monroes again. |
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Sun & Spoon $3.95 It's been only two months since Spoon Gilmore's grandmother died, but already he's worried that he'll forget her. He needs to own something special But Spoon's little sister, Joanie, won't give him time alone to think, even when they go to their grandfather's house. What happens there will stay with readers long after they finish Sun & Spoon. Kevin Henkes's innate understanding of childhood illuminates his work with a rare glow. |
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Portrait in a Spoon $20.54 By turns comic and poignant, the poems in Portrait in a Spoon explore the uses and abuses of language as it intersects the uses and abuses of power. Taking George Eliot's observation that even Milton, looking at himself in a spoon, would have to "submit to have the facial angle of a bumpkin," James Cummins investigates the question of identity-the illusions we sustain, the passions we conceal, and the stories that surround both.In his previous collection, The Whole Truth, Cummins rewrote to absurd and magisterial ends the Perry Mason saga. In this much-awaited second volume of poems, he again trains his eye on culture-high and low, popular and elite-to explore and explode the myths and mythos of making. He finds the spoon that encloses and discloses, like John Ashbery's mirror, distorts as it explains. It has its analogue in the closed forms that he masterfully employs here: the epigram, sonnet, villanelle, and sestina. Through them he informs, measures, and sustains cascades of deep (and sometimes menacing) feeling. |
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Spoon River Anthology $23.03 This is a collection of poems that describe the fictional town called Spoon River. Charles Aidman adapted Spoon River Anthology into a theater production in the 1960s that is still widely performed today. |
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The Silver Spoon $44.92 "The Silver Spoon," the most influential and bestselling Italian cookbook of the last 50 years, is now availle in a new updated and revised edition. This bible of authentic Italian home cooking features over 2,000 revised recipes and is illustrated with 400 brand new, full-color photographs. A comprehensive and lively book, its uniquely stylish and user-friendly format makes it accessible and a pleasure to read. The new updated edition features new introductory material covering such topics as how to compose a traditional Italian meal, typical food traditions of the different regions, and how to set an Italian tle. It also contains a new section of menus by celebrity chefs cooking traditional Italian food including Mario Batali, Lidia Bastianich, Tony Mantuano, and Rich Torrisi and Mario Carbone. , br>"Il cucchiaio d'argento" was originally published in Italy in 1950 by the famous Italian design and architectural magazine "Domus," and became an instant classic. A select group of cooking experts were commissioned to collect hundreds of traditional Italian home cooking recipes and make them availle for the first time to a wider modern audience. In the process, they updated ingredients, quantities and methods to suit contemporary tastes and customs, at the same time preserving the memory of ancient recipes for future generations. Divided into eleven color-coded chapters by course, "The Silver Spoon" is a feat of design as well as content. Chapters include: Sauces, Marinades and Flavored Butters, Antipasti, Appetizers and Pizzas, First Courses, Eggs, Vegetles, Fish and Shellfish, Meat, Poultry, Game, Cheese, and Desserts. It covers everything from coveted authentic sauces and marinades to irresistible dishes such as "Penne Rigate with Artichokes, Ricotta and Spinach Gnocchi, Tuscan Minestrone, Meatballs in Brandy, Bresaola with Corn Salad, Pizza Napoletana, Fried Mozzarella Sandwiches" and "Carpaccio Cipriani." |
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Spoon Fishing for Steelhead $15.62 One of the most effective ways to hook steelhead (as well as salmon) is with a spoon. Bill Herzog covers spoon fishing techniques for the full year, going into finishes, sizes, weights, shapes, water temperature differences, winter and summer fish differences, commercial and custom spoons, spoon parts suppliers, and reading water. Scores of color photos printed on thick, glossy, quality paper enhance the learning experience along with many line drawings, graphs and illustrations. If you like to fish for steelhead and salmon you will find the information in this book to be invaluable -- regardless of how you fish. This is a very revealing, post-graduate fishing technique book sure to please |
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The Spoon in the Bathroom Wall $3.95 The Bloggins School boiler room isn't glamorous, but it's home-steamy-home for Martha Snapdragon, the janitor's daughter. This school is anything but normal: There are misbehaving dragons, dastardly dealings between the principal and the school bully, and a giant bejeweled spoon stuck in the bathroom wall Martha thinks it's time for some big changes, but a mere fourth grader has no chance of budging the school hierarchy--or a giant spoon for that matter. Or does she? Tony Johnston's funny, magical spoof of the legend of "The Sword in the Stone" is full of big laughs and conveys some poignant truths about teaching, leadership, and the responsibilities we have to one another. |
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And the Dish Ran Away with the Spoon $17.54 Every night the rhyme gets read. Every night Dish and Spoon run away. And every night they return--until tonight Where can Dish and Spoon be? The rhyme can't go on without them, so Cat, Cow, and Dog set out to search for their missing friends. But where to start? Should they go north? East? Northeast? They'll just have to read Fork's map, ask directions, and try not to get lost in Little Boy Blue's haystack or under Miss Muffet's tuffet or in Big Bad Wolf's kitchen--"FEE, FI, FO . . ." Oh no. Could that be the giant? |
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The Adventures of the Dish and the Spoon $3.95 Mini Grey's spin on the nursery rhyme classic "Hey diddle, diddle, the cat and the fiddle" is a love story of sorts that starts when "the dish ran away with the spoon." In the midst of the Great Depression, Dish and Spoon become rich and famous vaudeville stars--until their taste for the high life puts them in debt to a gang of sharp and shady characters (depicted as evil knives). The cinematic presentation--with a touch of Bonnie and Clyde, a dash of "The Perils of Pauline"--proves that crime doesn't pay and love conquers all. A visual treat with new details to discover again and again, here is absurd good fun for the whole family. |
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The Silver Spoon .. $18.04 This is an EXACT reproduction of a book published before 1923. This IS NOT an OCR'd book with strange characters, introduced typographical errors, and jumbled words. This book may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We believe this work is culturally important, and despite the imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book. |
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A Spoon of God $19.12 I am the fourth child in my family, I have two brothers and one sister, and I am the baby girl. I was born at Cook County Hospital in 1955. I like to take you back for a moment - It all started when my mother was declared to had been a iSection patient. In the 50's and even earlier women weren't allow to have more then two or three children at the most due to the risk and the safety of the mother and child. The meaning of a iSection delivery is when a mother could not deliver her child naturally; therefore, it took a Surgeon to bring the child into the world. When my mother had her third child which was my brother, the hospital informed her about the risk she would undergo, if she would to conceive a fourth time, so my mother agreed to have all of her reproduction organs removed. Here's where the blessing of God took place. I cannot tell you what had happen, whether the Surgeon and all who were in the operating room went to sleep or God in His supereminence power saw it was appropriate for me to be born, with such distinction. However or whatever took place I am here today to say "Thank you Father God in Jesus name." I am sure many of you may say to your self "could this happen," "is it possible for this to have taking place in a prominent hospital such as the County Hospital," but I assure you, it happen and I am not disappointed. I am so grateful to God for allowing me to be born. I have been blessed with three children of my own, and God is still on the throne of my life. Amen |
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A Silver Spoon $20.18 Gene Thull grew up during the Great Depression of the '30s, and even though he lived on the "other" side of the tracks, they were happy years. Gene learned to fly in a forty-horsepower Taylor Cub during the summer of 1941. Then, after graduating from high school in 1942, he enlisted in the Marine Corps, where he flew the F4U Corsair fighter for the balance of WW II. After the war, he flew many different types of aircraft in all phases of civil aviation, ending up with flying for a major airline for thirty-three years. |
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The Legend of Jimmy Spoon $15.1 Twelve-year-old Jimmy Spoon yearns for a life of adventure. So when two Shoshoni boys offer him a horse, Jimmy sneaks away from his family in Salt Lake City to follow the boys. When Jimmy arrives at the Shoshoni camp, he discovers that he is expected to stay--as a member of the tribe Inspired by the memoirs of a white man who actually lived with Chief Washakie's tribe as a boy in the mid-1800s, "The Legend of Jimmy Spoon" is a compelling coming-of-age adventure. |
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Spoon River Anthology [Facsimile Edition] $29.11 A collection of unusual free-form poems that collectively describe the life of the fictional town of Spoon River. Includes all 212 characters, providing 244 epitaphs of dead citizens, delivered by the dead themselves. |
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Shlemazel and the Remarkable Spoon of Pohost $3.95 Lazy Shlemazel is convinced he has no luck. But Moshke the tinker promises him that his luck will change if he sets to work using the "amazing, remarkable spoon of Pohost." Shlemazel gets busy--tilling the poretz's field, helping the miller, and baking cakes with pretty Chaya Massel. Although "luck" remains elusive, what Shlemazel does find is even better. Lively Chagall-like illustrations capture the spirit of this traditional Jewish tale, a funny and thought-provoking look at how we make our own luck. Author's note, glossary. |
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Long Spoon Lane $3.95 Anne Perry's bestselling Victorian novels offer readers an elixir as addictively rich as Devonshire cream or English ale-enticing millions into a literary world almost as real as the original. While flower sellers, costermongers, shopkeepers, and hansom drivers ply their trades, the London police watch over all. Or so people believe. . . . Early one morning, Thomas Pitt, dauntless mainstay of the Special Branch, is summoned to Long Spoon Lane, where anarchists are plotting an attack. Bombs explode, destroying the homes of many poor people. After a chase, two of the culprits are captured and the leader is shot . . . but by whom? As Pitt delves into the case, he finds that there is more to the terrorism than the destructive gestures of misguided idealists. The police are running a lucrative protection racket, and clues suggest that Inspector Wetron of Bow Street is the mastermind. As the shadowy leader of the Inner Circle, Wetron is using his influence with the press to whip up fears of more attacks-and to rush a bill through Parliament that would severely curtail civil liberties. This would make him the most powerful man in the country. To defeat Wetron, Pitt finds that he must run in harness with his old enemy, Sir Charles Voisey, and the unlikely allies are joined by Pitt's clever wife, Charlotte, and her great aunt, Lady Vespasia Cumming-Gould. Can they prevail? As they strive to prevent future destruction, nothing less than the fate of the British Empire hangs in precarious balance. From the first sentence to the last, "Long Spoon Lane" is a miracle of suspense, of plot and counterplot, bluff and counterbluff, in a take-no-prisoners battle between good and evil. It is possibly the very best of all the wonderful Charlotte and Thomas Pitt novels. "From the Hardcover edition." |
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Spoon River Anthology (Dodo Press) $18.61 Edgar Lee Masters (1868-1950) was an American poet, biographer and dramatist. He is the author of Spoon River Anthology (1915), The New Star Chamber and Other Essays (1904), Songs and Satires (1916), The Great Valley (1916), The Serpent in the Wilderness: An Obscure Tale (1933), The Spleen, Mark Twain: A Portrait (1938), Lincoln: The Man (1931), and Illinois Poems (1941). In all, he published twelve plays, twentyone books of poetry, six novels and six biographies, including those of Abraham Lincoln, Mark Twain, Vachel Lindsay, and Walt Whitman. In 1880 his family moved to Lewistown, Illinois, where he attended high school and had his first publication in the Chicago Daily News. The culture around Lewistown, in addition to the town's cemetery at Oak Hill, and the nearby Spoon River were the inspirations for many of his works, most notably Spoon River Anthology, his most famous and acclaimed work. It gained a huge popularity, but shattered his position as a respectable member of establishment. His other works include Toward the Gulf (1918), Mitch Miller (1920) and Children of the Market Place (1922). |
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By the Great Horn Spoon $8.49 In this moving tale of love and adventure, Jack's aunt is forced to sell her beloved mansion to meet her debts. She is still unable to raise enough money to pay her creditors, and Jack goes to California in search of gold in order to help her. Text copyright 2004 Lectorum Publications, Inc. |


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