When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: antique brass hinges screwfix pulls and handles images of men women

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Drawer pull - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drawer_pull

    Bail handle drawer pulls. A drawer pull (wire pull or simply pull) is a handle to pull a drawer out of a chest of drawers, cabinet or other furniture piece. [1] [2]A highboy full of drawer pulls, backed by eschutcheon plates Drawer pull in the shape of a double-headed eagle, Petit appartement de la reine, Palace of Versailles

  3. Art in bronze and brass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_in_bronze_and_brass

    Nude athletes serve as handles for all kinds of lids and vessels, draped women support mirror-disks around which love-gods fly, and similar figures crown tall shafts of candelabra. Handle-bases are modelled as satyr-masks, palmettes and sphinxes. This is Greek ornament of the 6th and later centuries.

  4. Door handle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Door_handle

    The most common types of door handle are the lever handle and the doorknob. Door handles can be made out of a plethora of materials. Examples include brass, porcelain, cut glass, wood, and bronze. [1] Door handles have been in existence for at least 5000 years, and its design has evolved since, with more advanced mechanism, types, and designs made.

  5. Door furniture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Door_furniture

    Doors generally have at least one fixed handle, usually accompanied with a latch (see below). A typical "handle set" is composed of the exterior handle, escutcheon, an independent deadbolt, and the interior package (knob or lever). On some doors the latch is incorporated into a hinged handle that releases when pulled on. See also:

  6. Four Candles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_Candles

    Harrington's hardware shop in Broadstairs, Kent, part of the inspiration for the Four Candles sketch. Four Candles is a sketch from the BBC comedy show The Two Ronnies, written by Ronnie Barker under the pseudonym of Gerald Wiley and first broadcast on 18 September 1976. [1]

  7. Tintype - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tintype

    Tintype portrait in a paper mat, taken at Pease's Nantasket Tintype Gallery, circa 1900. There are two historic tintype processes: wet and dry. In the wet process, a collodion emulsion containing suspended silver halide crystals had to be formed on the plate just before it was exposed in the camera while still wet.