Just recovered from an attic, MRS. WINSLOW's _ SOOTHING SYRUP, 5", blow-pipe pontil scar, orange peel effect with seemingly millions of tiny seed bubbles. The rust color on the lip is inside the glass (rusty lip tool?), common but nice piece, got a good deal on it.
Federal Bureau of Governmental Redundancy Reduction Agency
That lip coloration really bothered me, and after closer examination, I see that it is some "stuff" stuck inside the inward-rolled lip of the bottle. The gaffer did not pinch the fold over tightly, so stuff can get in there. I think I'll try to burn it out with a CLR treatment.
Federal Bureau of Governmental Redundancy Reduction Agency
Awesome bottle. I have six of the but none are O.P. I found a teal green O.P. bottle in the river that has algae in the rolled lip that I haven't been able to get out. It's beautifull bottle except for that so if the CLR works please let me know.
P.S. it's probally some of the dryed up opium medicine that's in the lip of your bottle.
Use CLR or pool acid or whatever, almost nothing will hurt the glass. (The exception is hydroflouric acid which is the active ingredient in "Whink," the stain-remover.)
Use a rubber stopple from the hardware store (about 39 cents), and set the vial upside down for a month or so.
Some of these rolled lips might respond better if you could pull a vacuum on them while soaking.
Let us know how it works.
“A man should keep his little brain attic stocked with all the furniture that he is likely to use, and the rest he can put away in the lumber room of his library, where he can get it if he wants it.”
--Sherlock Holmes (Arthur Conan Doyle) in "The Sign of Four"
Okay, a little CLR and mechanical scraping with a 0.008" diameter stainless steel wire (from a plumbers brush, bent just right) and I am done with it. There is a tiny bit left but it's difficult to see. Wolverine, if your staining is algae, clorox should blast it out easily. Harry, I was lucky on this one, the space was wide enough all around to get a wire into. I can see in some cases this would be almost impossible to clean, if the rolled lip was tight.
Federal Bureau of Governmental Redundancy Reduction Agency
.I thought about taking a piece of thin copper wire and try to remove it. I went to the river to look for bottles so I didn't get around to it and now after seeing your post I'm going to try it. Your bottle turned out awesome Thanks for the tip.
P.S. I posted a few bottles on the Michigan site. I don't know how to put a link on this site to post them. I'm going to post bottles on their every week for a while but my next few aren't going to be sometime next week because some nice person gave my computer a virus. My computer is being worked on and I'm using my kids notebook for now. It's not the caliber of bottles you guys are finding but I like them.
Great bottle, that's the older version. Here's an old ad that I found. They call it the "Baby Killer", lotta morphine was put in that little bottle.
Carl
It's kinda difficult to understand how our great nation was built up by a populace so doped up on readily available opiates. Kinda reminds me of today's youth culture. Knowing the ingredients of this wonderful remedy makes that ad especially disturbing.
Aw heck! Who am I tryin' to kid? I could use a shot of that crap right about now.
Federal Bureau of Governmental Redundancy Reduction Agency
It's kinda difficult to understand how our great nation was built up by a populace so doped up on readily available opiates. Kinda reminds me of today's youth culture. Knowing the ingredients of this wonderful remedy makes that ad especially disturbing.
Aw heck! Who am I tryin' to kid? I could use a shot of that crap right about now.
Morphine, alcohol, and ammonia, (I believe). Shot of that in the old morning coffee
Mrs. Charlotte N. Winslow, mother-in-law of Jeramiah Curtis, a devoted female physician and nurse studied teething among infants. She compounded a formula for a soothing syrup for children, the ingredients of which consisted of sulphate of morphia, sodium carbonate, spirits of foeniculi, and aqua ammonia. Not surprisingly, this medicine not only "soothed" the child, but relieved the pain of teething or other ailments. First marketed in 1849 as "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup", the popularity of this medicine climbed to incredible heights under the management of Jeramiah Curtis and Benjamin Perkins, and spawned many imitators.