Straight single foot lamp holder made of glazed porcelain. Intended for indoor wall/ceiling. Diameter of base approx. 70 mm. Base height 63 mm. Socket E27, max 100W, IP20.
Available in white and black.
EUR23.08
Porcelain lamp holder or foot lamp holder in the model that constituted the first indoor electric lighting in many Swedish homes. See for example the home of Carl Larsson. The porcelain lamp holders were usually placed in the middle of the ceiling in the room or on the wall above the door.
This model can be connected in parallel for lighting in basements and attics, for example. Intended for indoor ceiling and wall in dry areas.
Porcelain. Straight model. Height 56mm, diameter 65mm. 100W. E27. IP class 20. S-marked.
EUR20.36
One liter of extra pure (EEW, extra extra white) paraffin oil without polluting additives for a clear and fragrance-free flame. Lamp oil for kerosene lamps and lanterns. According to the manufacturer, also user-friendly for fragrance-sensitive or asthmatic people, thanks to the extremely small amount of fragrance released. From Karlskrona Lampfabrik.
EUR11.67
EUR249.33
EUR258.38
EUR240.28
EUR0.00
EUR9.96
EUR5.34
Screen stand made of lacquered iron wire with a bracket that prevents the screen from wobbling.
EUR26.70
Hand-blown, green lampshade in opal glass for cobbler lamps, elevator lamps, wall lamps, etc. The shade is deep and prevents the bulb from glaring, which is common in flat shades.
The light weight makes the shade particularly suitable for elevator lamps.
EUR47.06
Hand-blown, white lampshade in opal glass for cobbler lamps, elevator lamps, wall lamps, etc. The shade is deep and prevents the bulb from glaring, which is common in flat shades. The light weight makes the shade particularly suitable for elevator lamps.
EUR40.27
Hand-blown, green small lampshade in opal glass for cobbler lamps, elevator lamps, wall lamps, etc. The shade is deep and prevents the bulb from glaring, which is common in flat shades.
EUR43.44
Hand-blown white shade in opal glass for cobbler lamps, elevator lamps, wall lamps, etc. The shade is deep and prevents the bulb from glaring, which is common in flat shades.
The low weight makes the shade especially suitable for elevator lights.
EUR36.65
Agricultural architect Charles Emil Löfvenskiöld (1810-1888) dreamed of reforming the Swedish countryside. A new architecture characterized by both beauty and rationality would combat poverty and misery. Bright, spacious and well-planned houses for both humans and animals were the basis for a humane and prosperous society. Only when the practical was also beautiful was it truly functional.
The purpose of the publication Landtmannabyggnader, hufvudsakligen för mindre jordbruk from 1868 was to disseminate the new findings in affordable and educational booklets with clear drawings and explanatory texts. Today, the work is an architectural classic that has had a major impact on Swedish building culture.
This reproduction is supplemented by an appendix with drawings by Löfvenskiöld’s pupil and longtime collaborator Pehr August Pettersson (1841-1906). They were originally published in his Landtmannabyggnader: ritningar för alla omrÃ¥den inom landthushÃ¥llningen from 1891, a sequel and tribute to Löfvenskiöld’s classic work.
EUR49.32
EUR361.55
Colorless glazing oil for glazing wooden surfaces indoors and outdoors. Suitable, just as it is, for those who just want to freshen up old unpainted or painted surfaces. Perfect for diluting to the desired color and coverage with ordinary linseed oil paint, for veining and marbling. Can also be broken with dry pigments.
EUR33.94
Pedestal, planed carpentry late 19th century. Finished length 150 cm.
Our program of planed joinery from the second half of the 19th century is of a machine-planed variety that was common throughout the country. This model is known as ‘French carpentry’ and was in production until well into the 20th century. There were normally two variants, one more lavish for finer rooms, such as the hall, atrium and salon. These rooms included, for example, three-part cornices and three-part high plinths. For simpler rooms, such as kitchens, bedrooms and chambers, carpentry was used with smaller dimensions and less complicated profiles. However, some of the moldings, such as linings and breast moldings, tend to be the same, regardless of whether they are in finer or simpler rooms.
For simpler rooms:
Cornice, “gooseneck”, 22×95 mm/m
Door and window linings, 25×120 mm/m
Feed plinth, 25×1500 mm/m
Floor plinth, 21×145 mm/m