Its a Bird, Its a Plane, Its… The French Antique Guessing Game Winners

 

 

A VICTORIAN SILVER PLATED METAL LEMON SQUEEZER

The answer to the French Antique Guessing Game is…..

It is a citrus press.

Lil squeezed the truth out first by naming it so, and finding it on Christie’s.

 

 

French Antique Citrus Press

 

At the French brocante I saw the citrus press (without the fancy bottom part) for $250. I did not buy it. At Christie’s it cost over $700.

Sounds like Champagne instead of lemon juice.

 

Turnbellset

Photo Source Hewn and Hammered

 

Dear Readers,

 

Your guesses and clever ideas to these French antique Guessing Games always amaze and amuse me.

Many of you guessed it was a door bell, 

 

 

Antique breast pump
Photo Source Curious Science

 

Some guessed it was a breast pump. Ouch.

I used one when I was nursing Sacha and had to go to the hospital. I remember thinking one had to reallllllllllllllllly want to breast feed to do that everyday. I did pump, but luckily I could breastfeed him in the hospital the day after surgery.

 

Pigs_fly_1

 

Photo Source Jean Porter

 

I cracked up when I read a flying pig… the citrus squeezer looks like it !

 

Servant's bell
Photo Source The Victorian Iron Monger

 

Many guessed that it was a servant’s bell. I loved the descriptions of romance many of you added to the bell theory as well.

 

Antique EGG CODDLER
Photo Source The Silver Collection

 

Other then your enthusiasm and entertaining guesses I love searching up images for the guesses you come up with:

Door bells, breast pumps, servants bell, flying pigs… egg coddlers.

I never even heard of an egg coddler! After seeing it I could understand why many of you thought the citrus press was an egg coddler.

 

Antique silver sugar holder
Photo Source

A sugar caster… was another guess, though wrong too.

 

Icing dispenser
Photo Source South Perth Antiques

 

And it wasn’t an icing disenser like this.

 

Antique coffee grinder
Photo Source Antique Dutch

 

Many of you thought it was a coffee grinder.

Sorry.

But isn’t this one chic? Makes me want to like coffee.

 

Dream-catcher-silver-trollbead-5925-0-1343948691000

Photo Source Dream Catcher

 

 

The Original Creative winner is
Massilianana with her comment…

“It is a device for Les Bad Dreams : you seen, it is a very refined object with two budding legs to allow it to stand discretely yet elegantly on your night table. You leave it open, you sleep and in case you have a bad dream, the silver device captures it. In the morning, all you have to do is to screw the device very tightly then you open it and what do you get ? A very flat and transparent disc that you can dispose of by throwing it away through your opened window, the wind will catch it and send it far far away ! “

Thank you for playing!

Lil and Massilianana please send me your address for a gift!

 

 



Comments

7 responses to “Its a Bird, Its a Plane, Its… The French Antique Guessing Game Winners”

  1. Massilianana

    Oh mon Dieu ! Thank you ! Muito obrigada ! Merci ! Happy you liked my little story 🙂

  2. Massilianana’s answer was just perfect and so creative. I really must find my creative thinking cap the next time you have a guessing game.

  3. Merisi in Vienna

    Fabulous!
    Now I know what this contraption reminded me of:
    Alessi’s citrus squeezer, “Juicy Salif” by Philippe Starck!
    http://www.alessi.com/en/2/110/kitchen-accessories/psjs-juicy-salif-citrus-squeezer

  4. Merisi in Vienna

    Alessi’s homepage explains that Starck’s lemon squeezer “was sketched in its essentials by Starck during a holiday by the sea in Italy, on a pizzeria napkin”. Who knows what inspired him! 😉

  5. peggy braswell

    Massilianana, congratulations! Loved your story + congratulations to Lil ..Happy Thursday from rainy ca. xxpeggybraswelldesign.com

  6. Massilianana

    Thanks guys that ‘s very sweet of you 🙂
    I’ve had this Stark lemon squeezer : it was totally useless ! Very difficult to hold steady and it was “leaking” . I…threw it away !

  7. Merisi in Vienna

    Congratulations, Massilianana,
    and thanks for the Starck information.
    Thank goodness my fondness for that design never grew beyond that!

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