logo image Custom lamps, lights, heaters & stoves

The appliances on this page are custom made by the collector,
from a wide variety of parts.

Creativity is evident in these pressure lights!

Here is one solution to the problem of what to do with those old parts!


Del Caley created "Francina" from an Akron lamp fount

with a 200A valve under a 242 burner and globe cage.

The light includes a Quick-Lite shade holder, an amber 200A globe,

an igniter, modern red glass shade,

and an old sink faucet handle adapted to the hub of the 200A wheel.

Del modified the tailpiece from the fount to complete the creation.


George Rocen started with a fluted Quick-Lite lamp fount

manufactured in Toronto, Canada in Sept. '36, stripped to brass and polished.

The handle is repainted to the original lamp.

Using two identical Coleman burner assemblies from the 30's,

George joined them with Coleman fittings to the fuel tube

and created a strap and shade hanger at the top to hold the modern shade.

Two R55 generators and alcohol cups complete the light.


Jeff Johnson made his "Vikingson Special" from a polished to brass

Coleman (Wichita) CQ fount and handle

and the upper portions of a Canadian Coleman 237 lantern.

He found a brass adapter on another old lamp

to join the lamp and lantern portions to one another.


Using the smaller copper fount from an early 1930's Tilley "Jacobean" ML96,

Jeff Johnson made a reproduction oak base

similar to one that has only been seen

as a figure in Tilley literature in 1940.

The champagne glass shade dates to the 1940's.


Another light in Rob Robert's collection,

Rob made his "Frankenstein Profane" light

to "keep good parts from going to waste."

This Sears-Coleman-Paulin or 5114/228 light

graces his patio by the grill.


A vase lamp sold by Montgomery Ward as Model 450F418,

and manufactured by the Akron Lamp & Mfg. Co.,

had a temporary residence in this coffee can

while Neil McRae was restoring the original vase that came with this lamp.

He put sand around the fount in the coffee can for stability

and was able to run the lamp - a genuine? coffee table lamp - as seen here.


Ludwig Gebauer built this alcohol lamp using the principles of the Tito Landi lamps.

As the fount is a marmalade jar, Ludwig has named this lamp Marme-Landi.

While it is not a true pressure light, the mixing tube above the air intake hole (middle image)

must be constructed to provide just enough heat

to allow the air and alcohol mix to gasify sufficiently.

Ludwig made the mantle (right) himself.


The base of this lamp is a Kitson Excelite, which Jeff Johnson,

the owner of this lamp, can date by an ad to 1923.

The fount is pressurized with a bicycle pump.

Jeff used a brass adapter above the handle

to connect the base to a Tilley table lamp.

Henry Plews has given this lamp the name "Kittey."


Jeff Johnson calls this floor lamp his Long Tall Tilley.

He refinished the base and stem of an electric oak lamp

and added lead weight to the underside of the base for added stability.

Jeff had the Tilley fount cradle and base made

so that it screws into the electric adapter at the top of the stem.

The lamp is a WWII vintage Tilley ML93 fitted with a white opal gas globe.


A difficult to solve fount problem on a Bialaddin T10

led to a new "marriage" with a Tilley TL106

now known as "Billey."

Billey is owned by friends of Linda Massey,

Eric Baillie and Jean Gillies,

all of whom worked on the lamp.


This larger copper Tilley ML93 fount from the mid to late 1930's

is now safely nested in an oak Veritas woodblock that was used for a wick lamp.

Jeff Johnson completed the new lamp with a Pyrex glass shade

from a gas light.


Joe Pagan created this custom series of Coleman 502s and a 501 stove (bottom, second from right)

in over a year's time using stoves that were in poor condition.

Randall Adams made most of the Coleman labels that Joe applied after they got their new paint jobs

to match several models of Coleman lanterns, especially Model 200A.

Upper, l-r: Gold Bond 502-704(a friend's designation), Xmas 502, Blackband 502 & Sears 72502 (Joe's designation; note the Sears knob).

Lower, l-r: burgundy 502, factory green 502, red 502, 243-501 and 275-502.

John Powers found this Tilley X246 lantern base

to which a previous owner had substituted a Tilley heater element

and fabricated a sheet metal box with 3 side layers

to direct the heat out of the front and top of the unit.

There may have been a grill fastened across the front at one time.

It runs well; the insulated portions barely get warm to the touch.

Gregor Hoeing married a European stove tank

to a Petromax lantern top with other parts from

a fondue set (the reflector) and a benzene (gasoline) blow torch.

Gregor can run this very bright light for 15 hours on a single fuel filling.

Gregor Hoeing made this Little Baby wall and table lamp from a Bat brand tripod stove

and Petromax 150 cp lantern top,

so it is his Model WTL 150 G.

This lamp runs for 12 hours on a single fuel filling.

The tank on this donut lamp was made by Gregor Hoeing

from rain downspouts

while the burner parts are primarily from a Tilley;

the globe is a Feuerhand.

This 300 cp lamp will run for 30-35 hours

and runs very silently.

Gregor Hoeing made this second donut lamp with

burner parts from a 500 cp Petromax.

Gregor preheats the lamp with a propane torch.

This very bright lamp runs for about 7 hours on kerosene.

Bob Meyer joined an Akron 103 lantern head

to a brand new Leacock 107ss fount

to create this unique outdoor bracket or wall lamp.

Person(s) unknown assembled this light for night fishing

in the many lakes in northern New York near Lake Ontario.

The assembly includes a hollow wire tank,

burners from a Quick-Lite and early 220 Coleman lanterns,

a street lamp shade and 236/237 Coleman ventilator.

This light is in Roger Haynal's collection.

Ludwig Gebauer made this lamp from parts including a Truma Brand German propane lamp.

Ludwig made the fount from two stainless steel bowls,

one is 28 cm diameter that forms the incurved base plate and the other is 20 cm diameter for the top.

The two bowls are sealed together with a bicycle inner tube and the center bolt/lamp post.

Ludwig constructed the pump (right on the fount) from parts.

The fuel valve is to the left on the top of the fount and the pressure release is in the middle rear.

The fuel line (right image) is calibrated in to 0, 0.1, 0.2, and 0.3 bar;

Ludwig operates the alcohol lamp at 0.2 bar

and made the mantle "from scratch."

The donut tank on this lamp was made by soldering 5 pieces of copper downspout together.

Ludwig Gebauer made the lamp body and reflector from an electric lamp

As his other lamps, Ludwig runs this on alcohol at low pressure,

between 0.2 and 0.3 bar; the fuel valve is below the manometer.

The tank is pressurized with the rubber bulb.

The lamp is fitted here with a 250 cp Luxor mantle.

The origin of this wall lantern is unknown

but many of the parts are Coleman.

Mel Taylor, whose collection this is in,

notes that the fount is 7" diameter, not the standard Coleman 8" wall fount,

and a brass coupler was used to connect the valve to the stem

once the stem was cut off and rethreaded.

 

Main updated Feb. 18, '12
Akron Lamp Co. lanterns updated Nov. 9, '11
Akron Lamp Co. lamps updated Oct. 13, '11
American Gas Machine lanterns - early models updated Dec. 17, '11
American Gas Machine lamps updated Jan. 22, '12
AGM lanterns - models beginning with the mid-1930's updated Mar. 15, '11
AGM, King Seeley, & Thermos stoves updated Feb. 18, '12
AGM, King Seeley, & Thermos lanterns - later models updated May 9, '11
Coleman Canada lamps updated Apr. 12, '11
Coleman Canada lanterns pre- 1945 updated Jan. 17, '12
Coleman US lamps before mid-1920's updated Sept. 24, '11
Coleman Canada lanterns 1946 - 1970 updated Feb. 14, '12
Coleman US lamps after mid 1920's updated Mar. 30, '11
Coleman Canada lanterns 1971 - 1993 updated Feb. 10, '12
Coleman hollow wire lighting updated Mar. 14, '11
Coleman US lanterns pre-1931 updated Feb. 10, '12
Coleman irons updated Mar. 26, '11
Coleman US lanterns 1931 - 1945 updated Feb. 8, '12
Coleman Canada stoves updated Nov. 29, '11
Coleman US lanterns 1946 - 1960 updated Apr. 2, '11
Coleman US stoves until early-1930's updated Nov. 9, '11
 Coleman US lanterns 1961 - 1980 updated Nov. 9, '11
Coleman US stoves mid-1930's - early-1950's updated Feb. 18, '12
 Coleman US lanterns 1981 - 2000 updated Aug. 8, '11
Coleman US stoves mid 1950's - present updated Nov. 29, '11
Coleman US lanterns 2001 - present updated Mar. 30, '11
Custom lamps, lights, heaters, and stoves updated Aug. 4, '11
Custom lanterns updated Dec. 14, '11
Heater etc. manufacturers A - K updated Feb. 10, '12
Ehrich & Graetz/AIDA & Petromax lanterns updated Apr. 25, '11
Heater etc. manufacturers L - Z updated Aug. 24, '10
Germany lantern manufacturers updated May 3, '11
Hollow wire lighting updated Jan 29, '12
International lantern manufacturers A - G updated Nov. 16, '11
International lamp manufacturers A - D updated Mar. 31, '11
 International lantern manufacturers H - P updated Feb. 15, '12
International lamp manufacturers E - O updated Jan. 27, '12
 International lantern manufacturers Q - S updated Dec. 15, '11
International lamp manufacturers P - Z updated Feb. 18, '12
 International lantern manufacturers T - Z updated Sept. 30, '11
Irons updated Sept. 23, '11
Propane lantern, stove, & heater manufacturers A - B updated Sept. 2, '10
Links updated Nov. 16, '11
Propane lantern, stove, & heater manufacturers C updated Feb. 16, '12
 Stove manufacturers A - H updated May 25, '11
Propane lantern, stove, & heater manufacturers D - M updated Sept. 2, '10
Stove manufacturers I - P updated Feb. 18, '12
Propane lantern, stove, & heater manufacturers N - Z updated Nov. 5, '11
Stove manufacturers Q - Z updated Feb. 6, '12
Pump manufacturers A - D updated Mar. 29, '11
Sweden lamp manufacturers updated Apr. 30, '11
Pump manufacturers E - Z updated Apr. 2, '11
Sweden stove manufacturers updated Feb. 2, '12
Sweden lantern manufacturers updated Nov. 9, '11
Tilley household lamps pre-1945 updated Nov. 13, '10
Tilley lanterns updated Jul. 14, '08
Tilley household lamps post-1945 updated June 6, '08
UK lantern manufacturers updated Jan 27, '12
Tilley industrial lamps & lanterns updated Apr. 12, '10
US lantern manufacturers A - I updated Apr. 2, '11
US lamp manufacturers A - F updated May 26, '11
US lantern manufacturers J - M updated Feb. 14, '12
US lamp manufacturers G - L updated Feb. 6, '12
US lantern manufacturers N - O updated Jan. 4, '12
US lamp manufacturers M - O updated Dec. 12, '11
US lantern manufacturers P - Z updated Dec. 1, '11
US lamp manufacturers P - Z updated Jan. 18, '12
Wrench & other lamp tool manufacturers A - F updated Aug. 8, '11
Wrench & other lamp tool manufacturers G - Z updated Feb. 2, '12

 

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and are not endorsed by North Central College.
The College accepts no responsibility for the content of these pages.
© 2000-2012 Terry Marsh
 tgmarsh@noctrl.edu