Ad blocker detected: Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker on our website.
Ooooo, Waylander! Creative guess.
All my musings shot down by Pat's exclusion of the food-drink category. My imagination runs dry. [No relationship intended.]
Pat, another teensy clue?
Kit
.
Hello all, no it's not a pencil sharpener or electrical switch.
Found out it also goes by another name that was not listed in my book. Will accept either one.
Now this clue is just my opinion. I would think that despite the fact this is silver, a weathy person would be more likely to own it and would use it at home.
Handy item, spent years yelling myself hoarse 'til I got one. Now, just a quick press of a button and one of the staff appears, as if by magic, with the port decanter.
Miles,
A long wire would have extended from a hidden electric bell mechanism and passed through the narrow end into the bulbous section. Inside the bulbous section would be a pair of electrical contacts, pressing the button would join the contacts and complete the circuit. Same idea as a light switch.
Nice Jugendstil design to these, unlike anything I've seen from Neresheimer.
Here's the information from the book about the first piece.
"Electric bell-push designed in 1904 at the Konigliche Preussische Zeichenakademie, Hanau. Made by Neresheimer, Hanua."
The second bell-push was designed by Patriz Huber.