LaurieAnnie's photos with the keyword: shop

Carpenter Shop in Old Bethpage Village, August 202…

Carpenter Shop in Old Bethpage Village, August 202…

Small Bridal Shop in Palermo, March 2005

The Turog Bread Shop in the Museum of Welsh Life,…

Salt Water Taffy Shop on the Boardwalk in Atlantic…

26 Aug 2006 562
James Salt Water Taffy 1519 Boardwalk Atlantic City, NJ, 08401 www.jamescandy.com James Salt Water Taffy is one of the true originators of Salt Water Taffy and other seashore confections such as Macaroons, Fudge, Chocolate Seal Salt Water Taffy, Filled Centers Salt Water Taffy and Chocolate Dipped Salt Water Taffy Pops. With a family tradition of candy makers dating back to the 1800s, James Salt Water Taffy on the Boardwalk in Atlantic City, Stone Harbor, and Wildwood, New Jersey offers the best seashore candy anywhere in the world. Text from: www.actourism.org/display_members.php?id=54

Potter's Shop at Old Sturbridge Village, circa 19…

23 Jul 2006 675
Pottery Goshen, Connecticut, c. 1819 Moved to OSV, 1961 Kiln built by OSV, 1979 Earthenware production,, usually as a part-time activity, has been practiced in rural agricultural communities for thousands of years. Into the middle of the 19th century, the farmer-potter was a presence in the New England countryside. Hervey Brooks (1779-1873) came to the town of Goshen as a 16-year-old apprentice in 1795 and practiced the potter’s craft there until 1873. In restoring his pottery shop and re-creating a working version of his kiln, Old Sturbridge Village researchers have drawn on his detailed accounts from 1802-73 and undertaken extensive archaeological studies of the original site. As a potter, Brooks spent his early years working primarily for other craftsmen. He crafted some 26 different varieties and sizes of jugs, bowls, pitchers, and platters. After 1819 he worked for himself and began by producing such a backlog of wares that he did not fire a kiln again for eight years. Then, from 1828 on, Brooks regularly made and fired one kiln load of ware each year between June and November—most commonly producing milk pans, cooking pots, and jugs. Throughout his life he devoted most of his time to his own farm and labor for others, including haying, chopping and hauling wood, hoeing potatoes, grafting apple trees, shingling, splitting rails, and even some blacksmithing. Brooks sold some of his redware to country stores on contract, and he exchanged smaller lots with his neighbors for goods and services. However, increasing competition from tinware producers and local population decline gradually eroded Brooks’s market. Brooks hung on long after virtually all the rest of New England’s redware potters had given up the craft, burning his last kiln of ware in 1864. Excerpted from Old Sturbridge Village Visitor's Guide © 1993-2004, Old Sturbridge Inc. Text from the Old Sturbridge Village Web Site: www.osv.org/