I got this stove from my grandmother when I was a little girl. You can see by the rust stains in the big pot that I played with it with water. I spent hours with this little toy and my kids still play with it today. The door opens, all the little covers come off, and the shelves can be detached. The chimney is a little dented.
I believe these were made in the 40s and were either used as salesman's samples or marketed as toys. There are a lot of reproductions out on the market now, but this is the real deal, and it is very heavy.
When I opened up the oven door to pull a pan out, I could see that somebody had been cooking:
Yum! Want some?
For more Vintage Thingies Thursdays items, visit Confessions of an Apron Queen.
Thursday, July 24, 2008
Vintage Thingies Thursday: Cast Iron Stove
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24 people stopped folding laundry to write:
Oh, that is an amazing Vintage Thingie - what a treasure! And if you know any good button recipes, that is always a plus.
I nominated you for a Brillante award over at Kitchen Retro, BTW -
What a treasure you have there! The real deal! And I'd love some button soup. Thanks for offering.
Okay that little pan is so cute!
I love that little stove too!
I vintage love it!
How cute is that?
I would have loved to play with that stove as a child.
I'm sure it makes delicious button stew too.
That's the cutest heaviest toy I've ever seen! Love the buttons on bake.
Holy Cow, 3under2! I had the VERY SAME stove (from my Babby/Great Grandmother)...I feel confident my mom still has it. Seeing the image reminds me, do you have the little weird "burner lifter" fork piece?
Wish I'd had some buttons to cook...think I used beads and/or imagination.
As soon as I saw "Crescent" on the door of yours I FREAKED!
If you find yourself in VA, you bring yours and I'll track mine down! :)
WOW! This is great; and you still have the pots, too! How nice that it still contains a small snack, I believe I cooked something similar 40 years ago!
Please try to stop by my Beach Party tomorrow, celebrating my 50th post!
What a wonderful keepsake you have..and love the buttons cooking!
You asked about the pattern I used on my Christmas quilt. It is one we have at the shop using 5 inch charms and a jelly roll. Really fast and easy.
Wonderful keepsake! It's just great that you kept it all together. I often find a couple of pans or have even had the stove--but never the whole set together!
I enjoyed!
Blessings to you!
Claudia o.
How adorable that is.
No soup for me today. but thanks
peace
#2
So cool! Would that be button soup?
OH! I have one of those too and I LOVED it as a girl! I let my girls play with it when they were little too and have held on to it for when Emma is older.
How lovely were the things of yesteryear???
Your stove is precious! I'd love to have the real McCoy, wouldn't you?
That is too cute! How great is it that your kids can now play with it too?
Thanks for my award!! Love all the vintage stuff. I can't believe you survived life with twins and a 2 year old. It gives me hope. Not a lot but a little.
Oh how cute! I always wanted one of those, I still do. Your so lucky.
That is adorable!
Wow, what a wonderful treasure!
Is this a stove salesman sample stove? It is wonderful!
Oh I just LOVE that! What a great treasure to play with growing up! And now another generation playing with it!
I love the buttons cooking in the oven! LOL
Thanks for stopping by my blog and trip to South Bend!
My grandparents were antique collectors and had a full-sized one of these, along with a full set of pots and pans and utensils. It was awesome. So great to see old things like that still in use and bringing something to people's lives.
I love that stove! My grandmother had one in her living room and all 27 grandchildren cherished it...I have NO idea who inherited it...Hmm, maybe a reproduction version wouldn't be so bad!
Blessings, E
My two year old loves to "cook"! I'm sure your little kitchen was well used. It looks like it would be a lot of fun.
If this is one of the originals it was used as a salesman's sample and I believe it is probably older than you the 1940s. Think several decades back.
I believe they are really valuable. At least by my standards. But I'm sure the memories are even more valuable!
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