shotdwn
Well-Known Member
Thank you for clarifying what you meant. My apologies on the first statement I made. I miss understood what you were saying. The Puritan is a neat bottle and does look good next to the Coke.
Thank you. Must be simplest patent ever, just one paragraphI have the same bottle as you do. Nice version of the Smile soda bottle.
I believe the bottle to be machine made. This bottle was patented in 1922, by Claude Johnstone.
Claude was the chemist for the Orange Smile Company, that was based out of St. Louis, Mo.
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Thank you, but seams don't go straight through to lip, see additional pics and addendum post.The dead giveaway that it's machine made is the fact that the seam goes all the way to the lip. An applied top bottle will never have a seam to the top of the lip. Typically these "deco" bottles with elaborate designs date from the 1920s or 30s. They continue to show up here and there for several decades afterwards but are almost never seen from before the 1910s, although some fairly elaborate molds were occasionally used in the late 19th century.
Yes, the seam does go to the top of the lip. That line up the side of the lip is a seam, and it goes to the top. The seam does not have to be continuously aligned up the side of the bottle in order to be a dead giveaway that it's an ABM bottle. If ANY seam goes to the top of the lip, it's an ABM bottle (unless it's a burst-top bottle or something like that, which yours clearly isn't). An applied top will never have a seam going through it because that's not how they were made. Applied crown tops aren't really rare because a lot were made in the UK, but they look nothing like yours. They look like this:Thank you, but seams don't go straight through to lip, see additional pics and addendum post.
While I agree that this was made using machines. I believe in the earliest days of machining there was still HANDWORK being done, which accounts for the seams in the body and the seams in lip not aligning. The body was made in one machine first and then transferred to a second machine to manufacture the lip. This is just my theory. I have examples like the one shown in your post and others where the seams do not align in the body of the bottle. Very odd. I have never been able to verify what causes the seams to be out of alignment. These type of MACHINED bottles still retain some indication that they were HANDLED to complete them and I believe this misalignment of the seams is the indication of this. I created a term that I use to identify this type of manufacturing, which is MOLDED CROWN in lieu of a MACHINE CROWN. It's just a term I made to help me identify these anomalies. If I were to describe this lip I would use my terminology to describe it as a Molded Crown. It is all very curious and I have seen no records to tell us about the earliest days of the Machine Made manufacturing process and techniques.Yes, the seam does go to the top of the lip. That line up the side of the lip is a seam, and it goes to the top. The seam does not have to be continuously aligned up the side of the bottle in order to be a dead giveaway that it's an ABM bottle. If ANY seam goes to the top of the lip, it's an ABM bottle (unless it's a burst-top bottle or something like that, which yours clearly isn't). An applied top will never have a seam going through it because that's not how they were made. Applied crown tops aren't really rare because a lot were made in the UK, but they look nothing like yours. They look like this:
Note the globby, uneven glass at the base of the crown. That's the sign that it was applied, not a smooth seam. A four-piece mold is something entirely unrelated but again will never have a seam through the lip because that's not how the lips were made. The fourth piece isn't the lip. An uneven base and bubbles in the glass don't mean anything in regards to whether or not it's ABM, the base was often uneven in that era and I've seen ABM bottles with a hundred times more bubbles than yours has.
And it does have a suction scar on the base. That's that circular seam-like line that runs around the outside of the embossing.
This got me looking into the ways that bottles are made in an Owens machine, and it looks like the formation of the lip and the formation of the body of the bottle are two different processes in the same machine, or at least were in the early days. From here: https://www.utoledo.edu/library/canaday/exhibits/oi/OIExhibit/5612.pdfWhile I agree that this was made using machines. I believe in the earliest days of machining there was still HANDWORK being done, which accounts for the seams in the body and the seams in lip not aligning. The body was made in one machine first and then transferred to a second machine to manufacture the lip. This is just my theory. I have examples like the one shown in your post and others where the seams do not align in the body of the bottle. Very odd. I have never been able to verify what causes the seams to be out of alignment. These type of MACHINED bottles still retain some indication that they were HANDLED to complete them and I believe this misalignment of the seams is the indication of this. I created a term that I use to identify this type of manufacturing, which is MOLDED CROWN in lieu of a MACHINE CROWN. It's just a term I made to help me identify these anomalies. If I were to describe this lip I would use my terminology to describe it as a Molded Crown. It is all very curious and I have seen no records to tell us about the earliest days of the Machine Made manufacturing process and techniques.
If we look at modern machine made bottles the seam is perfect top to bottom so there had to be some kind of HANDLING in the earliest days of the invention. Interesting.This got me looking into the ways that bottles are made in an Owens machine, and it looks like the formation of the lip and the formation of the body of the bottle are two different processes in the same machine, or at least were in the early days. From here: https://www.utoledo.edu/library/canaday/exhibits/oi/OIExhibit/5612.pdf
"The biggest challenge of all—a fully automated machine. The greatest obstacle was finding a way to gather the glass in the proper quantities. His ingenious solution, christened the “bicycle pump” because that is what it resembled both in form and function, gathered the glass by suction. Withdrawing the piston rod on the crude hand pump created a vacuum that sucked up a charge of glass into a mold which formed the neck of the bottle. Suspended by the neck, the gather was then placed in a body mold, where the return stroke of the plunger blew the glass into the proper shape."
What isn't totally clear to me is how much this process changed between the prototypes and the production machines. It's interesting that the glass is referred to as being sucked into a neck mold, since necks are typically not separate pieces on ABM bottles like lips are. What's also unclear to me is that if this is roughly the same process that was used on most Owens machines then it would explain why the lip seams are sometimes out of alignment, but wouldn't explain why they're typically in alignment in the first place - although that could simply be explained by it being the simplest way to open both the lip and body mold at the same time.
I was discussing the bottle lip posted by CanadianBottles not NYlakebottles. Different bottle.BUT, With this Bottle being made in 1922 or after it would not be in the Earliest Days of the Invention Since Owens Started Using the ABM Bottle in 1903 if I remember right. LEON.