Bi-Sublimated Iodine - Antique pharmacy jar - Apothecary...
Iode Bi-Sublimé - Bi-Sublimated Iodine
Antique 19th-century blown-glass pharmacy jar
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Antique glass eye
Real antique eye prosthesis
Antique glass eye
Real antique eye prosthesis (glass or resin) whose iris is hand-painted to resemble as closely as possible the remaining eye.
Different colours, shapes and sizes.
If you want a specific colour, blue, brown or green (rare) send us an email:
curiositas-cdc@outlook.com
Otherwise you will receive an eye of indifferent colour
The eye is sold alone
illustration photos
Iode Bi-Sublimé - Bi-Sublimated Iodine
Antique 19th-century blown-glass pharmacy jar
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Pyridoxine hydrochloride - Vitamin B6
Antique pharmacy bottle
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Antique brown glass bottle
Huile camphrée
Apothecary - Pharmacy
Anatomical chart by Paulet and Sarazin
From the Traité d'anatomie topographique (Treatise on topographical anatomy)
Published in 1867-1870
Chromolithography
You buy 1 plate, not the whole set
Antique glass eye - Semi-finished
Genuine antique ocular prosthesis
Color variations and irises of different sizes
The price is per unit, for one eye only
Glass needle tube - Sold individually
Various models and sizes - Variable length: Between 6cm and 8.5cm
With or without manufacturer’s label
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Antipyrina Knorr
Named after its German discoverer: Ludwig Knorr
Pharmacy jar - Herbalism - Apothecary bottle
Late 19th century
Copper Sulfate
Antique pharmacy bottle - Wide-mouth apothecary jar.
19th-century mouth-blown glass
There are still some beautiful blue crystals inside.
A fascinating artifact from the history of pharmacology
Buckthorns syrup
Antique pharmacy bottle
Apothecary vial
Mercurochrome
Antique pharmacy bottle - Apothecary
Mrs Bataille-Simon, First Class Pharmacist in Beaumont sur Sarthe - Tel 9
Dextrin powder - Starch - Pulvis Dextrinae
Antique pharmacy bottle
Blown glass
Unknown bottle from Coopération Pharmaceutique Française
Antique pharmacy bottle
Apothecary vial
Gardénal - Phenobarbital - Barbiturates
Phényléthylmalonylurée
Antique amber glass bottle, with a boxwood and cork stopper.
Label: DANGEROUS
Indicating to the pharmacist that it must be stored separately from other substances in the cabinet for toxic substances, the famous ‘poison cabinet’.
It comes from the former cellar-laboratory of a Parisian pharmacy. The bottles had not been moved from the shelves since the late 1950s. The cellar had served as a medical analysis laboratory and a laboratory for the pharmacy’s compounded preparations from 1900 until around 1950.
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Grams / Tablespoons - Graduated bottle
in French: Grammes / Cuillères à soupe
Antique medicine bottle
Apothecary
Rue Powder
Rue was an abortive plant
Antique pharmacy bottle - Poison - Toxic
Gelatine
Antique pharmacy bottle - Wide-mouth apothecary jar.
19th-century mouth-blown glass
There is still some product left inside
A fascinating artifact from the history of pharmacology
Antique glass eye
Real antique eye prosthesis