In the photo you can see a crucial household item I just bought at an antique furniture store for $10. Can you guess what it is?
It is truly something no household can go without. I have no idea how I’ve manged to live for so many years and not have it.

I’m pretty sure I know what it is, but I’ll hold off on answering to give other folks a shot. What I want to know is, how will you get it to work? An essential component for its functioning is generally not available in the modern home.
LikeLike
This object is smaller than the one you are thinking of. 🙂
LikeLike
It looks like an antique sandwich maker. Or a coal warmer to put in a bed pan under your bed. I’m not sure how necessary the second is if you have working central heat AND a fireplace AND proper insulation AND you don’t live someplace exceedingly cold.
I wouldn’t have minded an antique sandwich maker or a coal warmer to put in a bed pan under my bed when I lived up north. One winter one of the two furnaces went out. It was very unpleasant.
LikeLike
\\ It looks like an antique sandwich maker.
+1 Or a hand mirror?
LikeLike
It looks like a ‘silent butler,’ which was for emptying (yuck) ashtrays back in the day, but I am guessing that its purpose now is more benign.
LikeLike
A covered butter dish?
LikeLike
I was thinking butter dish but it is not the right shape.
LikeLike
crumb sweeper?
LikeLike
Yes!!!! We’ve got ourselves a winner. It’s called a crumble catcher. And of course I had to get it when I saw that name.
LikeLike
I’m sure many restaurants have them. Crumb catchers are an absolutely necessary item if you eat lots of crusty bread. No more repurposing a dirty plate to sweep the crumbs off the table before cleaning up. Does it have a little broom inside?
LikeLike
I always saw one of those at an elderly relative’s house when I was a kid.
Thought it was a fancy ashtray…
LikeLike