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Coffee (rec.drink.coffee) Discussing coffee. This includes selection of brands, methods of making coffee, etc. Discussion about coffee in other forms (e.g. desserts) is acceptable. |
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Looking to identify this coffee urn
Ok you coffee lovers,
I am looking to identify and aquire a set of coffee urns / makers like the ones shown in the "Nighthawks" painting by Edward Hopper (follow link below_. Does anyone know who made them? I beleive these were manufactured in 1930's perhaps by Bunn. http://www.artic.edu/artaccess/AA_Mo...MOD_7_lg.shtml Bill Florac |
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Looking to identify this coffee urn
"charter" > wrote in
: > Ok you coffee lovers, > > I am looking to identify and aquire a set of coffee urns / makers like > the ones shown in the "Nighthawks" painting by Edward Hopper (follow > link below_. Does anyone know who made them? I beleive these were > manufactured in 1930's perhaps by Bunn. > > http://www.artic.edu/artaccess/AA_Mo...MOD_7_lg.shtml > > Bill Florac > > > > Wrong coffeehouse. We don't discuss coffee. We just argue and tell dirty jokes. Some of us are insane. Hope this helps. -- Steve Cowell Mid-life crisis in progress. Please excuse the mess. |
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Looking to identify this coffee urn
"charter" > wrote in
: > Ok you coffee lovers, > > I am looking to identify and aquire a set of coffee urns / makers like > the ones shown in the "Nighthawks" painting by Edward Hopper (follow > link below_. Does anyone know who made them? I beleive these were > manufactured in 1930's perhaps by Bunn. > > http://www.artic.edu/artaccess/AA_Mo...MOD_7_lg.shtml > > Bill Florac > > > > Wrong coffeehouse. We don't discuss coffee. We just argue and tell dirty jokes. Some of us are insane. Hope this helps. -- Steve Cowell Mid-life crisis in progress. Please excuse the mess. |
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Looking to identify this coffee urn
I've got one. Please e-mail me privately regarding your first born.
rg "charter" > wrote in message ... > Ok you coffee lovers, > > I am looking to identify and aquire a set of coffee urns / makers like the > ones shown in the "Nighthawks" painting by Edward Hopper (follow link > below_. Does anyone know who made them? I beleive these were manufactured > in 1930's perhaps by Bunn. > > http://www.artic.edu/artaccess/AA_Mo...MOD_7_lg.shtml > > Bill Florac > > > |
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Looking to identify this coffee urn
I've got one. Please e-mail me privately regarding your first born.
rg "charter" > wrote in message ... > Ok you coffee lovers, > > I am looking to identify and aquire a set of coffee urns / makers like the > ones shown in the "Nighthawks" painting by Edward Hopper (follow link > below_. Does anyone know who made them? I beleive these were manufactured > in 1930's perhaps by Bunn. > > http://www.artic.edu/artaccess/AA_Mo...MOD_7_lg.shtml > > Bill Florac > > > |
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Looking to identify this coffee urn
In article >,
charter > wrote: >I am looking to identify and aquire a set of coffee urns / makers like the >ones shown in the "Nighthawks" painting by Edward Hopper (follow link >below_. Does anyone know who made them? I beleive these were manufactured >in 1930's perhaps by Bunn. The urns were a pair that Hopper had in his studio, and which he drew rather frequently. In addition to mentions of them in various critical discussions of "Nighthawks" in print, you can find a brief mention of them at http://www.sun-times.com/artcentury/hopper.html. Since they appear in sketches over many years, it probably is safe to assume that they were in his possession when he died. So finding out their maker should be fairly straightforward, if somewhat time-consuming, and perhaps expensive. Hopper died on May 15, 1967, in his apartment and studio, Number 3 Washington Square North, where he had lived since 1913. He was survived, for ten months only, by his widow, Josephine Nivison Hopper ("Jo"), whom he had married in 1924 and who was his principal heir. She was, incidentally, the model for the woman in "Nighthawks," as she was for women in many of his paintings. They had no children. With this data in mind, it should be possible for you, or your representative, to retrieve and examine the inventory of his possessions that was prepared for the probate of his estate. In New York State, an 1823 law mandated that all probates come under the jurisdiction of the county surrogate's courts. Each surrogate's court has a comprehensive index to all probate records, including the unrecorded probate packets. All probate packets, or estate packets, for 1967 for Manhattan are at the New York County Surrogate Court, 31 Chambers Street, Room 402, New York, New York 10007; (212) 374-8233. The Surrogate Court has a good digital index of its records, so locating Hopper's packet should not be difficult. If there was a subsequent auction of his effects, the firm that conducted it, and the date and time of the auction, should be noted in an addendum in the probate packet. If the auction house's records are still available -- and in New York they should be -- you may be able to trace the actual urns themselves, perhaps through several purchasers since 1967. In this way, it is thinly possible that you could, probably for a vast sum, purchase the actual urns depicted in the painting. -- Regards, Frank Young 703-527-7684 Post Office Box 2793, Kensington, Maryland 20891 "Videmus nunc per speculum in aenigmate... Nunc cognosco ex parte" |
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Looking to identify this coffee urn
In article >,
charter > wrote: >I am looking to identify and aquire a set of coffee urns / makers like the >ones shown in the "Nighthawks" painting by Edward Hopper (follow link >below_. Does anyone know who made them? I beleive these were manufactured >in 1930's perhaps by Bunn. The urns were a pair that Hopper had in his studio, and which he drew rather frequently. In addition to mentions of them in various critical discussions of "Nighthawks" in print, you can find a brief mention of them at http://www.sun-times.com/artcentury/hopper.html. Since they appear in sketches over many years, it probably is safe to assume that they were in his possession when he died. So finding out their maker should be fairly straightforward, if somewhat time-consuming, and perhaps expensive. Hopper died on May 15, 1967, in his apartment and studio, Number 3 Washington Square North, where he had lived since 1913. He was survived, for ten months only, by his widow, Josephine Nivison Hopper ("Jo"), whom he had married in 1924 and who was his principal heir. She was, incidentally, the model for the woman in "Nighthawks," as she was for women in many of his paintings. They had no children. With this data in mind, it should be possible for you, or your representative, to retrieve and examine the inventory of his possessions that was prepared for the probate of his estate. In New York State, an 1823 law mandated that all probates come under the jurisdiction of the county surrogate's courts. Each surrogate's court has a comprehensive index to all probate records, including the unrecorded probate packets. All probate packets, or estate packets, for 1967 for Manhattan are at the New York County Surrogate Court, 31 Chambers Street, Room 402, New York, New York 10007; (212) 374-8233. The Surrogate Court has a good digital index of its records, so locating Hopper's packet should not be difficult. If there was a subsequent auction of his effects, the firm that conducted it, and the date and time of the auction, should be noted in an addendum in the probate packet. If the auction house's records are still available -- and in New York they should be -- you may be able to trace the actual urns themselves, perhaps through several purchasers since 1967. In this way, it is thinly possible that you could, probably for a vast sum, purchase the actual urns depicted in the painting. -- Regards, Frank Young 703-527-7684 Post Office Box 2793, Kensington, Maryland 20891 "Videmus nunc per speculum in aenigmate... Nunc cognosco ex parte" |
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Looking to identify this coffee urn
The Bibliographer wrote:
<snip> Fascinating post, thank you. -- -Andy S. |
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Looking to identify this coffee urn
The Bibliographer wrote:
<snip> Fascinating post, thank you. -- -Andy S. |
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Looking to identify this coffee urn
truth!! enjoyed it.
Andy Schecter wrote: > The Bibliographer wrote: > <snip> > > Fascinating post, thank you. |
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Looking to identify this coffee urn
truth!! enjoyed it.
Andy Schecter wrote: > The Bibliographer wrote: > <snip> > > Fascinating post, thank you. |
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Looking to identify this coffee urn
In a previous article, "charter" > said:
>Ok you coffee lovers, > >I am looking to identify and aquire a set of coffee urns / makers like the >ones shown in the "Nighthawks" painting by Edward Hopper (follow link >below_. Does anyone know who made them? I beleive these were manufactured >in 1930's perhaps by Bunn. > >http://www.artic.edu/artaccess/AA_Mo...MOD_7_lg.shtml Are you looking for vintage urns, exactly like the picture, or something similar? If you're looking for similar contemporary urns, Williams-Sonoma has something that might fit: http://tinyurl.com/25yrh Vicki -- Just to think I used to worry about things like that. Used to worry 'bout rich and skinny 'til I wound up poor and fat. -Delbert McClinton |
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Looking to identify this coffee urn
In a previous article, "charter" > said:
>Ok you coffee lovers, > >I am looking to identify and aquire a set of coffee urns / makers like the >ones shown in the "Nighthawks" painting by Edward Hopper (follow link >below_. Does anyone know who made them? I beleive these were manufactured >in 1930's perhaps by Bunn. > >http://www.artic.edu/artaccess/AA_Mo...MOD_7_lg.shtml Are you looking for vintage urns, exactly like the picture, or something similar? If you're looking for similar contemporary urns, Williams-Sonoma has something that might fit: http://tinyurl.com/25yrh Vicki -- Just to think I used to worry about things like that. Used to worry 'bout rich and skinny 'til I wound up poor and fat. -Delbert McClinton |
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Looking to identify this coffee urn
Nero Wolfe of the coffee urns. Posts like this make Usenet worth the time .
.. . Thanks. btreichel > wrote in news:TM6dnT9zgtjZEbjdRVn- : > truth!! enjoyed it. > > Andy Schecter wrote: >> The Bibliographer wrote: >> <snip> >> >> Fascinating post, thank you. > > |
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