   
Antique Toilet
Welcome to
the Antique Toilet
website. Selecting the perfect antique toilets for your
rest room remodeling can be a difficult decision. Our old
style toilet information will help you.
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It's quite amazing to
think that the old fashioned antique toilet is a
real collectors item. Well it is, and there are many still
providing a fine service around the world. Antique toilts
certainly have a class about them that their modern
counterparts will never have. I currently live in an old house
with a vintage toilet in it and it works fantastically well.
It's probably 40 years old and is a relative youngter compared
to some of the antique toilet models that are
collected.
Here is a great article
from a vintage toilet expert which we hope you will
enjoy.
Vintage
Toilets
Antique Toilets
Are Collectible
By [http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=William_Rayment]William
Rayment
Yes, people do collect
toilets. To most people this seems a bit like collecting old
computers. Unless they are hooked up to something, they aren't
really functional and most aren't that pretty. Unless, yes, you
actually do make use of them. There are still people who keep
an outside toilet on their property just for the nostalgia and
to make a point of communing with nature in the most
fundamental way. There are also people who purchase antique
toilets and parts and decorate a whole room around the old
timey style.
There are on-line
auctions that deal specifically in the bowls and the tanks.
Some buyers like the idea that many of these older models
actually have a three gallon tank, which in many cases produces
a proficient flush, though at the expense of using almost twice
the water used by a modern toilet.
Most of early toilet
models did not have a seat with a lid. Rather the user sat
directly on the rim. However, the rim was made more in the
shape of a seat than in modern toilets. Collectors of toilets
range from manufacturers, such as Crapper & Co. in England,
to Museums to individuals interested in chamber pots and
technology. An immensely popular "Grossology" museum display
has been touring the country, revealing the importance of
modern devices that dispose of human waste.
The Crapper Co. in Great
Britain has a huge collection of "water closets" or "loos" that
were made early in the 1900s. Many are decorated with designs
worthy of porcelain plate. Some have interesting styling
including a fish forming the lower part of the bowl with the
upper part looking like water swirling down his
mouth.
Looking at these, it is
obvious that although technology of toilets has advanced, the
basics are still the same. The modern toilet as we know it
began its development in 1596 when it was invented by John
Harrington. Yet it was not used on a large scale for at least
180 years. JF Brondel introduced the valve type flush toilet in
1738. And it was not until the 1870s that the actual flush
toilet was invented. Where technology has advanced is in how
flushing is done. Since then flush valves, ball cocks, and trap
designs have all made flushing away human waste more clean and
more efficient.
Antique looking toilets
have become so popular that manufacturers are making "vintage
toilets" and the parts to maintain them. These have modern
flush mechanisms, but appear in an older style. Those looking
to collect older toilets or find one to decorate a bathroom,
are currently in luck, as there are a fair number of people
upgrading bathrooms and getting rid of the old toilets, for
little expense or free one can be acquired. They are constantly
available on Ebay, where on any given day one may find antique
glass floats, bowls, tanks, and hardware.
In essence, anything that
ages gracefully and in which people find an interest can become
an antique, even toilets.
W.J. Rayment created the
[http://www.toilethowto.com]Toilet How To website and is Editor
of the [http://www.cottagestyledecoratingguide.com/]Cottage
Style Decorating Guide. He has written books on home
improvement ( [http://www.homehumor.com]How Not To Build An
Addition) and cooking.
Article Source:
[http://EzineArticles.com/?Antique-Toilets-Are-Collectible&id=966201]
Antique Toilets Are Collectible
We hope this has given
you some idea of how to shop for vintage toilets and we are
sure that our site will help you find the best antique
toilet for your home.
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