Box of rubber washers for hot water bottles - 1939/1940 -...
Box of rubber washers for hot water bottles
In its original cardboard box
1939/1940
New Old Stock
Mineraline by Dr C. Baud
Antique tin pharmacy box
Powder or talcum powder for children's toiletries
Mineraline by Dr C. Baud
Antique tin pharmacy box
Powder or talcum powder for children's toiletries
Large reserve model
Empty - Very oxidized, graphics damaged
Diameter: 4cm Height: 15cm
Box of rubber washers for hot water bottles
In its original cardboard box
1939/1940
New Old Stock
Antique Guyon bladder syringe in bakelite
Beginning of XXth century
Buckthorns syrup
Antique pharmacy bottle
Apothecary vial
Antipyrina Knorr
Named after its German discoverer: Ludwig Knorr
Pharmacy jar - Herbalism - Apothecary bottle
Late 19th century
The Apothecary’s Little Drawer
Small antique wooden apothecary’s drawer that can be used as a storage box – Trade drawer
Handcrafted using traditional methods, with dovetail joints and a turned wooden handle
Width: 26cm - Length: 15.5cm - Height: 5.5cm
All the drawers are different, with stains and varying signs of age on each one
Sold empty, without accessories
Pyridoxine hydrochloride - Vitamin B6
Antique pharmacy bottle
EMPTY
Toothpaste - Antique apothecary
Porcelain pot with illustrated plastic lid
Antiseptic
Early 20th century - Caution the lid is cracked
Antique brown glass bottle
Huile camphrée
Apothecary - Pharmacy
BYLA - Antique Pharmacy bottle in amber glass
Salamander - Pharmacy corkscrew in bronze
XIXth century
Small antique engraved glass bell
I believe these are antique glass pieces that were originally intended to be placed on a stand.
Repurpose them as small bells to showcase your small objects, such as a small skull, as shown here.
Sold individually
EMPTY
Protective laboratory bell jar - High form with knob in blown glass
Period: 1900 - Pharmacy - Apothecary
Used by the pharmacist to cover precision instruments or isolate preparations undergoing analysis
Aconit leaves - POISON
Antique pharmacy bottle - Wide-mouth apothecary jar.
19th-century mouth-blown glass
Red POISON label
Signaling to the pharmacist that it is imperative to keep apart the other substances in the cabinet of toxic substances, the famous poison cabinet.
A fascinating testimony to pharmacology
It comes from an old cellar-laboratory in a Parisian pharmacy. The bottles had not moved since the late 1950s on the shelves. The cellar had served as a laboratory for medical analyses and a laboratory for magistral preparations of the pharmacy from 1900 until around 1950.
Clastic Mannequin - Dr. Auzoux's anatomical skinned
Mineraline by Dr C. Baud
Antique tin pharmacy box
Powder or talcum powder for children's toiletries