We want to hear about what you collect and why. Email Cindy Hval at dchval@juno.com or call Kimberly Lusk at (509) 459-5457. A wooden box in Harold Young’s workshop holds the genesis of his collection ...
Thousands of handcrafted antique tools that a retired woodworking teacher spent decades collecting but never used are worth more than $35,000. Roy Turnage, 88, spent years adding to his haul that ...
A treasure trove of thousands of antique tools a retired woodwork teacher crammed into every nook and cranny of his home could fetch more than £30,000 at auction. Roy Turnage has spent decades adding ...
In 2007, Paul Zlotoff bought 180 acres in South Hero with an RV park, a marina, a defunct convenience store and a farmhouse that belonged to a member of the Allen family — yes, those Allens. The site, ...
A treasure trove of antique tools a retired woodwork teacher crammed into Tesco bags and every corner of his home has earned him more than £35,000 at auction. Roy Turnage has spent decades adding to ...
Linemen flipped through a book of antique photographs and examined tools from the yesteryear at the 2007 International Lineman's Rodeo Expo in October. Jason Townsend, the man behind the memorabilia, ...
M.S. Rau Antiques is selling an antique craftsman's tool cabinet, a "compendium of woodworking tools comprises 210 antique and vintage specimens stored within a marvelous, custom-crafted wall cabinet, ...
A store in Northcote has built a global following by bringing back handmade tools built to last. Its owners say they’re fighting against the “consumer-driven disposable life” — but some of the pieces ...
Merrill Sheets lives on a property called Bittersweet Farms in Delaware Township. The name is especially apropos right now. Sheets, known by friends as "Pinky," is a 76-year-old retired farmer who ...
What started out as a hobby by William "Bill" Thorniley that began on his 10th birthday in 1909, has since turned into one of the largest private collections of pre-1900 type in the United States. The ...
They’re called “trephines,” which seems innocent enough. From the Latin “trypan,” the origin literally means “to bore.” But to bore into what, you ask? In this case, skulls, to get to brains.