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    A Food Safe

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Woodworking
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    • Dave RD Offline
      Dave R
      last edited by

      Food Safe nantes 19C.png

      A wall-hanging cabinet for keeping the bugs off of food. It's based on photos of one from western France dated to the 19th Century. I think the screen needs a different material than I used.

      Etaoin Shrdlu

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      (THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE)

      G28 X0.0 Y0.0 Z0.0

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      • cottyC Offline
        cotty
        last edited by

        If you put some candy in there, you should improve the security concept to make it child secure (But I'm not sure if the glass front will be considered to be torture) .
        πŸ˜‰

        my SketchUp gallery

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        • Dave RD Offline
          Dave R
          last edited by

          I agree Carsten. I was thinking it wouldn't keep food safe from kids or even some critters. The front and sides are wire screen to let the smells out, I suppose.

          Maybe it needs a lock. πŸ˜„

          Etaoin Shrdlu

          %

          (THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE)

          G28 X0.0 Y0.0 Z0.0

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          • TIGT Offline
            TIG Moderator
            last edited by

            Brings back memories...

            My grandmother had one of them in her pantry.
            It was called a 'meat-safe'.
            It was used for meat, butter, cream etc.
            That was when there were no fridges [==no electricity!] but proper pantries were small 'walk-in' rooms, made with solid insulated walls, marble shelves for coolness and a mesh-covered small open window on the north wall to ventilate/cool them and stop the sun.
            It hangs up on the wall to be less accessible to pesky critters.
            Its elevated position and mesh-screens on three sides allow a flow of cooling air over the contents without admitting blow-files.
            Ours also had a middle wire-grid shelf for 'double-decker' storage
            It'd also have a milk-cooler in it, overlaid with a damp cloth that would kept the milk cold by evaporation.

            TIG

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            • Dave RD Offline
              Dave R
              last edited by

              That kind of stuff worked pretty well, too, didn't it?

              Etaoin Shrdlu

              %

              (THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE)

              G28 X0.0 Y0.0 Z0.0

              M30

              %

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              • TIGT Offline
                TIG Moderator
                last edited by

                Sure did work OK.
                They improved my grandmother's Georgian farmhouse by building an outside toilet connected to a new sewer, when I was about six...
                Before that there was an 'earth-closet' at the end of the large garden - she grew great vegetables !

                TIG

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