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  2. List of American cast-iron cookware manufacturers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_American_cast-iron...

    The company manufactured porcelain enameled pots, pans, plates, cups and other kitchenware by coating cast iron with ceramic glaze, and Vollrath received a patent on "speckled" enameled glaze for household utensils in 1889. By the 1920s the Vollrath Company was producing a catalog of more than 800 products.

  3. Farberware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farberware

    By 1995, Farberware was among the largest producers of stainless steel cookware in the United States, reporting an "anemic annual earnings of $1 million on sales of $125 million for the fiscal year". Syratech was a $169-million company at the time and paid higher wages than those offered in China or Malaysia.

  4. Sam Farber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sam_Farber

    Sam Farber was born on November 16, 1924, in New York City, though he was raised in nearby Yonkers, New York, [2] the son of Rose (née Winograd) and Louis Farber. [3] His father founded the Sheffield Silver Company and Farber Brothers, which sold serving ware; and served as the president of the Jewish Community Center of Yonkers. [3]

  5. Pre-19th-century trade catalogs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Pre-19th-century_trade_catalogs

    Drawing of a brick wall with iron gates, from a 1790 catalog. Trade catalogs, originating in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries primarily in Europe, are print catalogs which advertise products and ideas in words, illustrations, or both. [1] They included decor, ironwork, [2] furniture, and kitchenware. [3]

  6. Spiegel (US retailer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiegel_(US_retailer)

    Spiegel Spring/Summer 1958 Catalog. Spiegel was an American direct marketing retailer founded in 1865 by Joseph Spiegel.Spiegel published a catalog, like its competitors Sears, Aldens, and Montgomery Ward, which advertised various brands of apparel, accessories, and footwear, as well as housewares, toys, tools, firearms, and electronics.

  7. Google Catalogs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Catalogs

    This was a free Google service. Catalog search was a major digitization project for Google, as thousands of merchant catalogs were scanned and made accessible to the public. Users were able to flip through pages of catalogs from a variety of industries, except those that focus on liquor, tobacco, firearms, or similar products. [4]

  8. Online public access catalog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Online_public_access_catalog

    These and other early online catalog systems tended to closely reflect the card catalogs that they were intended to replace. [2] Using a dedicated terminal or telnet client, users could search a handful of pre-coordinate indexes and browse the resulting display in much the same way they had previously navigated the card catalog.

  9. PDF - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PDF

    Tagged PDF is not required in situations where a PDF file is intended only for print. Since the feature is optional, and since the rules for tagged PDF were relatively vague in ISO 32000-1, support for tagged PDF among consuming devices, including assistive technology (AT), is uneven as of 2021. [ 33 ]