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Tile Saw Stand
1-1/2 HP Bridge Tile Saw with Stand #97360
FYI on Tile Saw Stand
Improve Your Dining Room With Libbey Glass
Breaking a goblet today is not the table-top tragedy it once was. When tableware was manufactured by hand, replacing a broken piece meant finding one that actually matched the rest, and that could be expensive and time consuming. Today, however, everyday tumblers or stemware are comparatively low-cost, and replacing a missing piece simply means a visit to the store. Libbey glass helped pioneer this kind cost control through mass production, and is still considered one of the significant producers.
Its history is interwoven with the American industrial revolution, back to a time when it was the New England Glass Company and the maker of many kinds of household items, such as water pitchers. An employee there held a patent on the production of glassware using red lead. In those days, holding the patent meant that no other company could use the exact same technology, which frustrated the competition.
Any kind of lead, of course, is toxic. Using it in the manufacturing process inevitably gave workers more exposure than necessary, and would not be permitted under today's employee safety and health laws. In those days, however, New England management liked the look this process gave its product, and hesitated to switch to a different process. Other makers, trying to find an acceptable process that did not use lead, came up the lime-soda formula. It was actually invented by a former worker, and radically changed the way silicon-based products were routinely made.
The method became standard, and is still used today in the manufacture of drinking containers, jars, bottles, and even in window panes. The New England Company refused to adopt it, however, until hard financial times and waning business forced its sale in the 1870s. Members of the Libbey family were involved in saving it from total oblivion, and it was afterward renamed for them.
Although the basic process had been upgraded and made safer, manufacturing was still very much a hands-on proposition, even well into the twentieth century. This state of affairs lasted until the Second World War ended, at which time things changed radically. Once raw materials were no longer scarce, production skyrocketed, and the modern era of boxed tumbler sets had begun.
The public grew to love the boxed "tumbler sets" made for everyday use. Sales of inexpensive pitchers, wine goblets, and more formal drinking and dining ware increased substantially. Better profit margins helped Libbey to expand. The new market dynamics meant that the best money was no longer in simply supplying restaurants and hotels, but in selling directly to the people.
With several locations within the United States and other western hemisphere countries, the company has a visible international presence in China today. There have been bumps in the economic road, and the current worldwide economic downturn has affected businesses everywhere. The company has endured, however, and continues to make container and dining products for cooking, baking and a host of other kitchen-related needs.
The modern Libby glass is a forward-looking company very much into the modern technology of recycling. It has implemented a policy of "lean manufacturing, " which seeks to reduce waste and increase production at the same time with products like water pitchers. Its production methods have evolved from using a poisonous lead based technology to one that utilizes many "green" ideas. It also created a program in 2007 that recycles such diverse materials as oil, water, office paper and cardboard waste, cast iron and steel, and even some computers.
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