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Steve Pope wrote: > > Blinky the Shark > wrote: > > >This is a screen capture from a film I'm watching -- "The Third Man", a > >1949 noir set in Austria right after WWII. A bird is being carved. What > >is the rod that my arrow is pointing to, that sticks perpendicularly out > >of the fork. I've not seen this before. But, of course, I do live under > >the sea (not far from an octopus's garden). > > >http://blinkynet.net/stuff/fork.jpg > > Looks to me like a hilt to prevent the fork from going in too far, > when you shove it into a greasy bird. But I've also never seen > this before. > > Great movie BTW. Especially the zither. > > Steve We had a fork like that when I was a child. Always took it for granted that that was how such a thing was supposed to be :) |
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In article .net>,
Blinky the Shark > wrote: > This (inset) seems awkward, but it's apparently done enough to warrant > plenty of knifes being made that way. One step at a time for me. I've never used tinypic before. I'll get into the short URL stuff later. <http://i26.tinypic.com/288rqxe.jpg> for the set and <http://i25.tinypic.com/6qi4aq.jpg> to see what I think the widget is used for. Look at the shadow. But thanks for starting the thread. I was never interested enough to concern myself with it before now. leo |
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On Fri 25 Apr 2008 09:41:21p, Leonard Blaisdell told us...
> In article .net>, > Blinky the Shark > wrote: > >> This (inset) seems awkward, but it's apparently done enough to warrant >> plenty of knifes being made that way. > > One step at a time for me. I've never used tinypic before. I'll get into > the short URL stuff later. > <http://i26.tinypic.com/288rqxe.jpg> for the set and > <http://i25.tinypic.com/6qi4aq.jpg> to see what I think the widget is > used for. Look at the shadow. > But thanks for starting the thread. I was never interested enough to > concern myself with it before now. > > leo > That's a beautiful set, Leo. -- Wayne Boatwright ------------------------------------------- Friday, 04(IV)/25(XXV)/08(MMVIII) ------------------------------------------- Countdown till Memorial Day 4wks 2dys 1hrs 10mins ------------------------------------------- Useless Invention: Cordless plumb line. ------------------------------------------- |
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In article 4>,
Wayne Boatwright > wrote: > That's a beautiful set, Leo. Thanks Wayne. There have been over a hundred earthquakes west of us in the Mogul-Verdi area for weeks. I felt none. One minute ago, I felt one. I'll bet it's a paltry five. I haven't felt one here since 1965. I was going to comment on the carving set but am distracted now. Not fearful, just distracted. leo |
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On Fri 25 Apr 2008 11:51:48p, Leonard Blaisdell told us...
> In article 4>, > Wayne Boatwright > wrote: > >> That's a beautiful set, Leo. > > Thanks Wayne. There have been over a hundred earthquakes west of us in > the Mogul-Verdi area for weeks. I felt none. One minute ago, I felt one. > I'll bet it's a paltry five. I haven't felt one here since 1965. I was > going to comment on the carving set but am distracted now. Not fearful, > just distracted. > > leo > I would be distracted, too, Leo. Hope you don't feel any more of them! -- Wayne Boatwright ------------------------------------------- Saturday, 04(IV)/26(XXVI)/08(MMVIII) ------------------------------------------- Countdown till Memorial Day 4wks 1dys 23hrs 50mins ------------------------------------------- 'Is', vt, 'is confused with' ------------------------------------------- |
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On Sat, 26 Apr 2008 00:06:45 GMT, Leonard Blaisdell
> wrote: >In article >, > Gloria P > wrote: > >> Not quite. My late mother-in-law had a bone-handled carving set with a >> fork that had that rod. It is a "rest" to prevent the fork tines from >> touching the tableclolth and getting it dirty if it slid off the >> platter. On MIL's fork the rod swiveled down so it wouldn't be in the >> way when you were carving. > >I'm posting very late and too often. I just tried swiveling the 'guard' >into position and using it as a rest for dirty tines above the table. It >worked great. In all my life, I've never ran a knife up a fork to cut >myself. > >leo i was thinking this also. what in the world would you be carving (and with what technique) to have this happen? your pal, blake |
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blake murphy wrote:
> On Sat, 26 Apr 2008 00:06:45 GMT, Leonard Blaisdell > > wrote: > >>In article >, >> Gloria P > wrote: >> >>> Not quite. My late mother-in-law had a bone-handled carving set with a >>> fork that had that rod. It is a "rest" to prevent the fork tines from >>> touching the tableclolth and getting it dirty if it slid off the >>> platter. On MIL's fork the rod swiveled down so it wouldn't be in the >>> way when you were carving. >> >>I'm posting very late and too often. I just tried swiveling the 'guard' >>into position and using it as a rest for dirty tines above the table. It >>worked great. In all my life, I've never ran a knife up a fork to cut >>myself. >> >>leo > > i was thinking this also. what in the world would you be carving (and > with what technique) to have this happen? That's been illustrated in a photo I've already linked twice. -- Blinky Killing all posts from Google Groups The Usenet Improvement Project: http://improve-usenet.org Blinky: http://blinkynet.net |
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