Thursday, 23 February 2012

Flat irons

     Below is a photo of my kitchen stove where I have two flat irons - they're for decoration and not for daily use.  I often marvel at the strength the house wife in the old days as she had to lift heavy cast iron pots, kettles and irons.
Below is a small Hand Iron. 
Below is a 20-pound Taylor's Iron with a twisted iron handle - heavy weight!!
Below is more information about IRONS from:
http://www.oldandinteresting.com/antique-irons-smoothers-mangles.aspx

Flat irons, sad irons
     Black smiths started forging simple flat irons in the late Middle Ages. Plain metal irons were heated by a fire or on a stove.  Earthenware and terracotta were also used, from the Middle East to France and the Netherlands.
     Flat irons were also called sad irons or smoothing irons.  Metal handles had to be gripped in a pad or thick rag.  Some irons had cool wooden handles and in 1870 a detachable handle was patented in the US.  This stayed cool while the metal bases were heated and the idea was widely imitated.  Cool handles stayed even cooler in "asbestos sad irons".   The sad is sad iron (or sadiron) is an old word for solid, and in some contexts this name suggests something bigger and heavier than a flat iron.  Goose or tailor"s goose was another iron name, and this came from the goose-neck curve in some handles.  In Scotland people spoke or gusing (goosing) irons.
     You'd need at least two irons on the go together for an effective system: one in use, and one re-heating.  Large households with servants had a special ironing-stove for this purpose.  Some were fitted with slots for several irons, and a water-jug on top.
     At home, ironing traditional fabrics without the benefit of electricity was a hot, arduous job.  Irons had to be kept immaculately clean, sand-papered and polished.  They must be kept away from burning fuel, and he regularly but lightly greased to avoid rusting.  Beeswax prevented irons sticking to starched cloth.  Constant care was needed over temperature.  Experience would help decide when the iron was hot enough, but not so hot that it would scorch the cloth.  A well-known test was spitting on the hot metal, but Charles Dickens described someone with a more genteel technique in The Old Curiosity Shop.  She held "the iron at an alarmingly short distance from her cheek, to test its temperature...."

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