Search
- Portable Furnace, 1850 -

- 1850
- Collections - Artifact
Portable Furnace, 1850
- Photomontage of Heinz Glass Works Photos, 1909 - Photographs of the H.J. Heinz factory -- including buildings, employees, and the manufacturing process -- were often taken and then modified for advertising and publications. This advertising layout features several modified photographs of the Heinz glass factory. This arrangement of photos, featured in the catalog, "Home of the 57 Varieties," is a visual representation of the glass works of the H.J. Heinz Company.

- 1909
- Collections - Artifact
Photomontage of Heinz Glass Works Photos, 1909
Photographs of the H.J. Heinz factory -- including buildings, employees, and the manufacturing process -- were often taken and then modified for advertising and publications. This advertising layout features several modified photographs of the Heinz glass factory. This arrangement of photos, featured in the catalog, "Home of the 57 Varieties," is a visual representation of the glass works of the H.J. Heinz Company.
- Detroit Electric Furnace Company Advertisement, "Detroit Electric Furnaces SELL POWER," June 6, 1925 -

- June 06, 1925
- Collections - Artifact
Detroit Electric Furnace Company Advertisement, "Detroit Electric Furnaces SELL POWER," June 6, 1925
- Advertising Broadside, "Bartletts Patent Hot Air Furnace," 1857 -

- 1857
- Collections - Artifact
Advertising Broadside, "Bartletts Patent Hot Air Furnace," 1857
- H.J. Caulkins & Company Catalog, "Revelation Kilns," 1913-1937 - Horace J. Caulkins' Detroit-based company began producing the Revelation line of china kilns in the 1890s, when a china painting craze swept the nation. Caulkins partnered with china painter Mary Chase Perry to help promote Revelation kilns, and the pair founded Detroit's renowned Pewabic Pottery in 1903. The pottery sold Revelation kilns and replacement parts well into the 20th century.

- 1913-1937
- Collections - Artifact
H.J. Caulkins & Company Catalog, "Revelation Kilns," 1913-1937
Horace J. Caulkins' Detroit-based company began producing the Revelation line of china kilns in the 1890s, when a china painting craze swept the nation. Caulkins partnered with china painter Mary Chase Perry to help promote Revelation kilns, and the pair founded Detroit's renowned Pewabic Pottery in 1903. The pottery sold Revelation kilns and replacement parts well into the 20th century.