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The Lugzsonian - A Virtual Tour

elidas

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Much better but not 100%. Still tire out easy. Being fat and old doesn't help. I've also been trying to organize things. My success rate isn't good. I picked up a few things lately (including a k55) but nothing really special. I do have to send some photo's of a couple things I can't identify. A lot of my time has been spent helping clean out the old dealership I used work at. It had been pretty much picked through but I did end up with some cool stuff that I now have to integrate into the rest of my "artifacts". Things like a 4' 12' Bricklin sign take up some room! Your museum tour has been great.
 
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Private Lugnutz

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Much better but not 100%. Still tire out easy. Being fat and old doesn't help.
Since "humor is the best medicine", to steal a line from the best bathroom reading books ever published, I'm glad to hear it!

I do have to send some photo's of a couple things I can't identify.
Those are the best kinds of finds. I look forward to seeing them.

elidas said:
Your museum tour has been great.
Thanks. From "curator" to "curator", if you see something you like or that is in dire need of "integrating" into your collection as I continue through the tour, let me know. I'm sure you spotted the Eames set at the beginning of the tour. Inside the former barbershop display case.

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That empty spot where the brass pin is sticking up unused and forlorn is for a spark plug socket, but I would dearly love to put your ratchet adaptor there in the meantime! As you may recall from my research, it was apparently available in later versions of the set. You and I still have the only Eames tools on GJ as far as I can tell. Link to the Eames thread for anyone interested in reading more of that fascinating history here.
 

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elidas

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I consider myself an "accumulator". If I only just accumulated tools I'd be fine. I started with hit and miss engines. That morphed into lawn mowers. I have close to 300. One day at an estate sale I turned over a waffle iron and discovered it was made right here in Waterbury. I added Connecticut made appliances to the accumulation
. That was before I discovered that Connecticut made a LOT of appliances. Add 200+ waffle irons, toasters,coffee pots,oil lamps, etc and a few washing machines (made in nearby New Britain). Add a few tractors and mixers and now AMC,Bricklin and Jeep stuff. Don't forget my Scout. After a while you realize you have a lot of stuff
 

Farmer J.

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I've been enjoying the tour Lugz.
It think it looks so good because you don't collect chrome. Everything has a patina of 'old', and is comfortable in the setting of dark wood and lime mortar brickwork. A place for respite from the modern world of plastic, electronics and big red tool box stacks.
 
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Private Lugnutz

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I consider myself an "accumulator". If I only just accumulated tools I'd be fine. I started with hit and miss engines. That morphed into lawn mowers. I have close to 300. One day at an estate sale I turned over a waffle iron and discovered it was made right here in Waterbury. I added Connecticut made appliances to the accumulation
. That was before I discovered that Connecticut made a LOT of appliances. Add 200+ waffle irons, toasters,coffee pots,oil lamps, etc and a few washing machines (made in nearby New Britain). Add a few tractors and mixers and now AMC,Bricklin and Jeep stuff. Don't forget my Scout. After a while you realize you have a lot of stuff
Okay, then, from one "accumulator" to another, if you see something in my accumulation that you need for your accumulation, let me know, because I would sure like to put the Eames Ratchet Adaptor that's currently in your accumulation into the Eames Automotive Socket Set in my accumulation! :lol:

And it sounds to me like you need to open a thread for your place called "A Connecticut Made Appliances Yankee in King ****'s Court", or something like that. I would love to see all your stuff. What is the approximate square footage of the garages and shops etc your housing it in?

I've been enjoying the tour Lugz.
It think it looks so good because you don't collect chrome. Everything has a patina of 'old', and is comfortable in the setting of dark wood and lime mortar brickwork. A place for respite from the modern world of plastic, electronics and big red tool box stacks.
Thanks, J. Glad to hear it.
 

gpw_42

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Lugz, thanks for the tour! I just found the thread a few minutes ago. Always interesting to see others' hideaway, and when the things in it are well displayed, it's even better! I need to get a handle on my gear....

I also spied that 2016 DOE, nice pickup! I'm looking for one, but know well that one won't be available...
 
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Private Lugnutz

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Thanks, Steve. Stick around, there's more to see! :D

I think I may have gotten that DBE in a trade with mrbill, but I'm not sure.

EDIT: I hear you on the gear. Full admission. When I showed the west wall with the Bell, Air Corps, and Navy stuff, the reason I didn't open the GMTK box is because it was in a woeful state. I had put the tools away relatively clean, but everything in the bottom that was in contact with the box had started rusting. I resisted even touching that box - as you know, it is a OOAK verified survivor with those well-documented export regulation stencils. But I managed to de-rust it, clean it up, and touch it up delicately, with the preserved look maintained.

I feel much better about it now.
 
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Private Lugnutz

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Here it is...
 

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Private Lugnutz

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And here are the results of my self-imposed "Surprise Inspection"...

Gigs:

Poor Condition
- Walden midget box (see Pic 1)

Anachronisms
- postwar safety set screw hex keys (Upland, 5120-203-7064)
- postwar oval sash brush (Wooster, 8020-297-6657)
- postwar putty knife (Red Devil, “Union, N.J.” marking; should be "Irvington, N.J.")

Brand disloyalty
- 3/8" x 7/16" in my dwarf double offset DBE set is Blackhawk HeXo, not Duro-Chrome

Unaccounted for or missing
- All four (4) chisels!

Non-regulation
- Pornographic cigarette lighter (see Pic 2)

Questionable morals
- Placement of pornographic cigarette lighter next to Gideon’s chaplain-issue pocket bible (see Pic 2)

Punitive Reinforcement:

Leave denied. Night Watch duty for a week! :p
 

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d42jeep

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The GMTK stuff is coming along well. Len made these last year and I don’t know if he has any left but it’s not likely that you’ll find one in the wild.
-Don
P.S. The Walden box looks fine to me.
 

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Private Lugnutz

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...it’s not likely that you’ll find one in the wild.
O yee of little faith! :) I have found a few with scorers over the years. One will turn up eventually. But seeing Len's reproductions reminds me that I did have an idea to modify a corkscrew thingie I have around here somewhere.

EDIT:

P.S. The Walden box looks fine to me.
Maybe you could have a word with the little 1st Sergeant on my left shoulder. :)
 
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JoCoSawdust

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I feel like I'm watching a magician keep pulling things out of a hat. Lot's of great stuff in that space you have Lugz. I'm truly enjoying the tour.
 
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Private Lugnutz

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Len made these last year and I don’t know if he has any left...
...seeing Len's reproductions reminds me that I did have an idea to modify a corkscrew thingie I have around here somewhere.
Well, I didn't find the donor I wanted, but this will do...

Crude 5-minute Field Expedient Scorer Fabrication

Pic 1: Catalog figure of Nicholson File Card & Brush
Pic 2: Nicholson File Cleaner w/Missing Scorer
Pic 3: Random clip
Pic 4: Tools
Pic 5: Scorer
Pic 6: Done! :)
 

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tombell572

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I at first thought I would comment on what appeared to be a handbook on uses for spit in a desperate situation but quickly set the thought aside. I am glad it was explained and it all makes perfect sense now.

I'm still enjoying the tour and hope we're nowhere near the end. BTW, if you should ever decide the military BSA does not fit your collecting parameters, it could possibly find a home with its cousins on Long Island.

Tom B.
 
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Private Lugnutz

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I at first thought I would comment on what appeared to be a handbook on uses for spit in a desperate situation but quickly set the thought aside. I am glad it was explained and it all makes perfect sense now.
As it often happens in life, the placement of those instructions accidentally caused a funny excursion (and an early nostalgic memory I have not thought about in a long time!)

tombell572 said:
BTW, if you should ever decide the military BSA does not fit your collecting parameters, it could possibly find a home with its cousins on Long Island.
Okay. But there's a line. :)

I'm still enjoying the tour and hope we're nowhere near the end.

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:lol:
 

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duddly

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I've been enjoying the tour Lugz.
It think it looks so good because you don't collect chrome. Everything has a patina of 'old', and is comfortable in the setting of dark wood and lime mortar brickwork. A place for respite from the modern world of plastic, electronics and big red tool box stacks.

Well put Farmer J.! Lugz we are enjoying the tour! The space you have created continues to amaze. And your knowledge is always enlightening me on various threads.
 
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Private Lugnutz

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Well put Farmer J.! Lugz we are enjoying the tour! The space you have created continues to amaze. And your knowledge is always enlightening me on various threads.
Thanks Duds. Stay tuned. More to come when the tour resumes this week!

I have a "stitching pony" almost identical to that one. I guess they might have been factory made. I had not thought of it much.
Hi Chris. Here's a photo of a bunch of seamsters sitting on stitching ponies at the Rawlings factory in St Louis in the 1930's. You can see some baseballs in the foreground on the left. I am a high school and college (D3) baseball umpire, so I like the connection.
 

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Private Lugnutz

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You know when you're in an actual museum and you turn a corner and there is a wing or a section or a display roped or boarded off with a little sign that reads, "SORRY, THIS EXHIBIT IS TEMPORARILY CLOSED"? This next corner of the Lugzsonian probably deserves one now and probably will be under construction in 2021. Hopefully.
 

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Private Lugnutz

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This is the only area of the Lugzsonian I am disappointed in at this point. Not the contents, but "the furniture" - which is the sagging leftover frame of a cheap old rickety wooden cabinet I had in this corner for a long time. The sliding doors are long gone and it's propped up crudely with scrap wood and prayers. I have been scouring the flea markets every week hoping to run into something suitable to replace it. So far, no dice. See Pic 1.

The top shelf on the left is some of my antique and vintage oilers, fire extinguishers, and other things. See Pic 2.

The top right is an antique battery charger, a pair of antique welding boots and other welding or soldering gear, an old torch, some lube guns (not sure why they're not in the garage, where all my others are, along with a huge pump oiler...), antique and vintage valve grinders, and my Babbitt scrapers. See Pic 3.
 

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Private Lugnutz

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The bottom shelf is my "Old Stomping Grounds" display.

My Mack Trucks tools (bigass DOE wrench, rim wrenches, "S" wrenches, pliers and hammer) and my Bethlehem Spark Plug Company socket set collection. Opened in the front is my "Set D" (1/2-inch drive), which included a "Set A" (3/8-inch drive). Behind that are a a "Set C Special" (opened) and a "Set C" (7/16-inch drive), and all the way in the back is a "Set F" (3/4-inch drive). If you're not familiar with these tools, they were copper-plated and made by the same company who made spark plugs and other ignition equipment. See Pic 1.

My Bonney Forge and Tool Works collection and board. See Pic 2 & 3.
 

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Private Lugnutz

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Why do I consider it my "Old Stomping Grounds" shelf?

This is why...

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I was born and raised in Palmerton, Pennsylvania, just north of Allentown (home of Mack and Bonney - and also Horlacher Brewery - now gone, and A-Treat soda), Bethlehem (home of Bethlehem Spark Plug), and Nazareth (home of the raceway made famous by Mario Andretti, and the best and still hand-made guitars on the planet). There were probably fifty machine shops on that map at one time, and that's no exaggeration.

Palmerton sits at the foot of the Blue Mountain, with the Appalachian trail on top, near the Lehigh Gap, where the Lehigh river runs through it. The Lehigh was a decent whitewater river, with a few Class III, some Class II, and mainly Class I rapids. It also supplied some power to the west plant of the New Jersey Zinc Company, the Gulf & Western Company my grandfather worked for his whole life, at first on the track gang for the railroad that ran between plants, and for many years as the foreman. On the Long C thread I recently told a story of the model RR they gave him for his retirement. That pen and ink drawing of a PENNSY K-4 engine you may have noticed earlier in the thread was also presented to him the same day they erected the model RR set up in his attic.

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And I have his 30 year pin.

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He came to the US in 1914, at the age of 15, not speaking A SINGLE WORD of English. He said the signs on the busses outside of Ellis Island said, "HARD WORK, GOOD PAY" in seven different languages. He got on one and it took him to Palmerton. His future wife, my grandmother, was a maid at the boarding house he lived in. I don't mean to suggest this is special. I know well and good there are hundreds of thousands of stories just like it. Just saying, no matter how old I get, no matter how far I travel, that place and these people will always be a part of me.
 

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Private Lugnutz

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Thanks, Roob.

Speaking of heritage, I am not German, but there's a little Pennsylvania Dutch in everyone there. I like accessorizing displays with non-tools. Such as this special Horlacher can on top of my Bonney box from the summer of 1976! It shuttered its doors two years later. :mad:
 

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Private Lugnutz

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One of the things I always struggle with is where to put something. By type? Or by brand? And the difference between storage and display and the sad reality that you just can't see everything you collect all the time. Take the Bonney display, for example, again (see Pic 1). I have pulled some tools out of the box, obviously, but there are dozens inside. But I also have a Bonney engineer's wrench set, in pouch, in the barrister case (see Pic 2), and a Bonney tappet wrench set, in pouch, in the tappet wrenches stand (see Pic 3). And if I opened the miscellaneous ratchets drawer in the 41-C-15 cabinet, I bet I would find a few Bonney ratchets inside.
 

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Private Lugnutz

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I do enjoy functional groupings, though. Such as the antique hydrometer on top of the antique battery charger. I don't know if it's a matter of a sense of order, aesthetics, or both.
 

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softailgarage

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Lugz, I couldn't think of a better place for a vintage tool collection like yours. That beautiful house and basement should one day become a museum, this story has "America" written all over it, (sorta like a Burl Ives painting...er, uh, um, nevermind, you know what I mean). I enjoyed the third person narration also, reminded me of a guy on GJ that used to post everything in third person. I too remember those old guys that used to sit around in small groups, smoking, bitching and laughing, you don't see that anymore. My father was also a WWII vet, so I can appreciate the WWII collections. Thank you for the tour of your beautiful home and awesome basement.
 
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Private Lugnutz

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Kind words, softail. Thanks, and amen, brother.

This bit...
...this story has "America" written all over it,
...may be more literally true than you knew!

These walls on the way down to the basement record births, dog's names, off to college dates, historical current events, and utter nonsense, a tradition that my kids relished contributing to, going back many decades before we bought the house, much of it just pencil scrawls over the top of each other, most of which I would have to redact, but don't feel right about showing anyway out of respect for previous residents.
 

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Private Lugnutz

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Continuing the tour....!

This corner of the workbench gets a lot of use. The taller cabinet with the vintage chart advertising and the padlock on the left is for miscellaneous storage. The Dorman cabinet is where I keep all my orphan sockets, organized by brand. The wartime Art Steel Co machinists' chest on top of that is full of machinists' stuff. Starrett, Brown & Sharpe, and Lufkin each have their own drawer. It more rightly belongs at bench level somewhere, but horizontal space is limited, as you can tell, so there is a lot of stacking going on in the Lugzsonian.
 

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Private Lugnutz

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Nice to see that Patchez has already made the wall of fame. :thumbup:
Oh, Offspring #4 & 5 are fiercely defensive of Patchez with Offspring #1, 2, & 3, who never miss the opportunity to let them know how much better "their" dog, Domino, was, and never suffer any slights or biases. When the debate gets a little too hot, Mrs Lugz and I like to get both groups of siblings going by extolling the virtues of our first dog, Running Bear, which none of them knew. (I don't know about other families, but we argue about everything.)

Off to listen to "Run Maggie Run". :lol:
 
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Private Lugnutz

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Returning to tour guide mode, and moving down the workbench to the left, we have...

Billings wrench board #2, a New Britain high-speed drill cabinet that I use for my ignition wrench collection (see Pic 2), and a couple of beat-up but suitable portable display cases (see Pic 3).

I am using one of the cases for wrenches that are too rare, too unique, too oddball, or just too obscure to put with the other wrenches I am storing in the Wright Field chest or displaying in the Barrister by brand. See Pic 4.

I am using the other for all my specials, smalls, and bric-a-brac. See Pic 5.

These wrenches and these smalls/bric-a-brac used to be in cigar boxes or little cases or what have you inside the Rebuth Steel cabinet. It's soooo much better having them out on the bench than forgetting about them or having to dig them out and sort through them every time I needed to find one for whatever reason (to answer questions, to compare to a newly found wrench, etc).
 

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captain14

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Lugz,

A couple of comments for your museum grounds.

1. Stop looking for a wooden display case and it will Appear at a favorite flea market.

2. The wall and the historical comments- can anything be protected behind a nice piece of plexiglass?

Some of the FDNY firehouses have the final riding assignments of crews that responded on 911 like this. Riding assignments are usually posted on the board at the start of each shift/trick/tour (FD slang for the workday. Each department usually has a unique words that reflect their department rich history).
 

macgee

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Location
Sepulveda Pass, CA
As you walk in, you can see how there's a path around the L-shaped Shelving Island in the middle. That's the way I am going to take you around. Just to the right of that stitching pony is my quirky re-purposed tappet wrench stand (let’s see if anyone can guess what its original purposes was…), with complete sets in pouches (Bonney, Herbrand), complete sets waiting for me to find or possibly make pouches (Plomb), and partial sets or orphans (Vlchek, Craftsman, Duro-Chrome, others). It's sitting in front of that barbershop display case I picked up last year. All my antique and Roaring 20’s socket sets are either on the glass top, inside the case in the display area behind glass, or stored inside the case on shelves behind that smoked deckled glass, accessible from sliding doors in the back, where I can rotate them into the display area behind glass or the top.

Nice collection Lugz,

To round out your vintage socket set collection at the museum, I recommend keeping an eye out for a Starrett socket set. I think they stopped making them in the 30's

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OP
P

Private Lugnutz

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 30, 2012
Messages
30,473
Location
The Authentic Jersey Shore
Stop looking for a wooden display case and it will Appear at a favorite flea market.
Haha. Ain't that the truth, Captain Murphy!

captain14 said:
The wall and the historical comments- can anything be protected behind a nice piece of plexiglass?
Good idea. Some day, perhaps. But my family is still growing with grandkids, who may want to make their mark one day! :)

Nice collection Lugz,
To round out your vintage socket set collection at the museum, I recommend keeping an eye out for a Starrett socket set. I think they stopped making them in the 30's
Thanks, macgee. I would love to run into a Starrett set one day in the right circumstances. In the wild, such as the majority of my collection. Or a hot tip from a GJ friend on a good deal on CL or even eBay, such as a few of the sets I own.
 
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Private Lugnutz

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 30, 2012
Messages
30,473
Location
The Authentic Jersey Shore
As I said earlier in the thread, putting up these vintage, giant, 'Erector Set' style steel shelving units in the middle of what had been just an empty, wasted space, was really the key in transforming the Lugzsonian from just a clever, funny term mrbill gave my basement into something genuinely deserving the term, if only still half in jest.

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I liked the idea of the light brown wooden unfinished backing of the white pegboard (on the other side of this L shaped island) for a backdrop for the tools I envisioned keeping on the shelves, and the wide strip of cork toolbox drawer lining really pulls it all together for me.

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