Featured Picnic Basket

Discussion in 'Antique Discussion' started by Desertau, Sep 30, 2024 at 2:37 AM.

  1. Desertau

    Desertau Well-Known Member

    I think that’s what this is, if not picnic then some sort of basket to transport food? The age too and value if any I’m not sure of? IMG_2024-09-29-233428.jpeg IMG_2024-09-29-233500.jpeg IMG_2024-09-29-233515.jpeg
     
  2. Kronos

    Kronos Well-Known Member

    Google Lens shows a bunch of similar, identified as Chinese Food Baskets or Wedding Baskets.
     
  3. komokwa

    komokwa The Truth is out there...!

    yup......... with prices all over the board !
     
  4. Any Jewelry

    Any Jewelry Well-Known Member

    Wicker tiffin (stacked food carrier), and I also found them as wedding tiffins.
    Several sites say they are made in Fujian. I don't know if that is true.
     
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  5. 2manybooks

    2manybooks Well-Known Member

    A similar one in the collection of the Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, documented as having been collected c.1925 in Hing-hwa, Fujian, China. (Note the similar metal hoop on top.) -
    upload_2024-9-30_10-49-44.png

    Smaller stacking baskets were used for carrying food for a variety of occasions, but larger ones may have been used as betrothal/dowry/wedding baskets holding gifts from the bride's family to the groom's family. These were usually made in pairs, to be transported hung on a shoulder pole.

    They are a traditional form that has been made for generations.

    https://www.michaelbackmanltd.com/archived_objects/straits-chinese-wedding-basket-2/
     
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  6. Rayo56

    Rayo56 Well-Known Member

    Do you have a pungi? :)

    [​IMG]
     
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  7. Desertau

    Desertau Well-Known Member

    No, but I really need one of those for my precious… ha, lol. Seriously, that cobra looks all business.

    I meet his relatives every once in a while one day in the Arizona desert it was late afternoon I was detecting around this bit of sage brush and I kept hearing the sound of garden rain birds, that’s what it sounded with my headphones on rain bird sprinklers off in the distance. I pulled the headphones off and quickly looking down realized there was a big pissed off green Mohave Rattler coiled at my feet. When I saw what it was I made an Olympic long jump backwards in less than a millisecond these things are deadly, it left me jumpy the rest of the afternoon.

    Crotalus scutulatus is known commonly as the Mohave Rattlesnake.[3][4] Other common English names include Mojave Rattlesnake[5][6] and, referring specifically to the nominate (northern) subspecies: Northern Mohave Rattlesnake[4] and Mojave Green Rattlesnake

    Venom
    History
    For decades, the bite of C. scutulatus has been considered to be extraordinarily deadly, often described as the (or “one of the”) deadliest or most dangerous rattlesnakes. For example: "the most lethal of the North American rattlesnake venoms";[24] "one of the most lethal venoms among the world's reptiles";[25] "an extremely dangerous snake";[5] "probably the most dangerous snake in the United States";[26] and “considered among the most venomous snakes on Earth”
     
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  8. Desertau

    Desertau Well-Known Member

    Well, thank you everyone looks like it’s a picnic, food, wedding basket, worth somewhere between a little bit and a little bit more or slightly more than that… lol, ain’t life great.
     
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  9. Desertau

    Desertau Well-Known Member

    I wanted to say thank you for the auction house link the catalogs look very interesting to browse and the basket featured is a remarkable example. If the baskets return to fashion then perhaps someday I could imagine vintage ones being in higher demand maybe with a little restoration over contemporary examples for some.
     
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  10. Any Jewelry

    Any Jewelry Well-Known Member

    I can top that.:playful: My bare foot next to an Australian Eastern brown snake, the world's second most venomous land snake. The first most venomous snake is also an Aussie.
    When we were teens in Australia, we usually walked barefoot in the bush. Usually that is fine, but on this day there had been a bushfire and this particular snake found itself on the sandy footpath, and my foot landed right next to its head. I think the snake was more scared than I was, but I was very lucky that day.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_brown_snake
     
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  11. Desertau

    Desertau Well-Known Member

    Wow, you were very lucky… maybe you charmed him into submission with beauty grace and style, or it just wasn’t your day at any rate you fortunately avoided his fangs (or hers). The link says walking slowly near they are less aggressive, but I’m going with the first thought.

    Mine was a big old snake comfortable in his skin saving his venom a young one I wouldn’t have been so lucky. but at least I had boots on although the snake guards were in the Jeep, but bare feet inches from an Australian Brown Snake takes the prize.

    Let’s see, giant spiders, Brown Snakes… Any Jewelry Dundee.
     
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  12. Any Jewelry

    Any Jewelry Well-Known Member

    :hilarious::hilarious:
     
  13. Rayo56

    Rayo56 Well-Known Member

    Well, not venomous but the Boa I had years ago was a sight to see crawling around the back yard.......almost 7 foot. Very tame and gentle. It was a female - the males get full of hormones and turn into biting bastards. 000_0015_1.JPG

    000_0004_7.JPG

    000_0014_1.JPG

    000_0006_5.JPG
     
  14. Desertau

    Desertau Well-Known Member

    What an incredibly beautiful snake and the dog and cat look pretty happy, they also look content around her too. Did the snake ever get playful or cuddly with the dog or cat.
     
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  15. komokwa

    komokwa The Truth is out there...!

    A Boa constrictor ..... cuddly
    now there's a thought !:eek:
     
  16. Rayo56

    Rayo56 Well-Known Member

    No, sometimes too close for comfort but no interactions.
     
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  17. Desertau

    Desertau Well-Known Member

    yep, but sometimes you see even in some reptiles more personality than you’d think. There was a YouTube video I just watched where a lady rescued a reptile just hatching from an egg not exactly knowing what it was , as it began to grow she realized it was a crocodile and it would come when called, followed her around and liked to cuddle, perhaps it just liked the warmth but this animal had bonded and looked surprising friendly, until I guess someday when it’s 300#s and decides to eat her? Really it’s just a hug…
     
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  18. Any Jewelry

    Any Jewelry Well-Known Member

    She is beautiful. Probably just looking for a place to lay her eggs. In your attic?:playful:
     
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  19. Rayo56

    Rayo56 Well-Known Member

    Boas give live birth - no eggs.
     
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  20. Any Jewelry

    Any Jewelry Well-Known Member

    Ah, thank you.:) A place to give birth then.
     
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