Where On This Planet Do Wall Coat Racks Come From?

Posted by | Filed under Home Improvement | Nov 5, 2010 | 38 Comments

Made from high-quality wood, metal or perhaps plastic, a coat rack is often a frame that permits you to hang nearly anything from jackets to hats, coats, scarves, jeans, belts or dresses. Showcasing sloped pegs and a hanger bar, it provides the perfect space meant for keeping those items which will otherwise fill up your closet and look disorganized throughout the house.

Coat Rack is usually placed by the front door, to ensure that company can easily hang their coats and also caps without trouble. Versatility is among the best features of coat racks, and they come in lots of practical designs. One such will save you because it can potentially be attached to the wall by using screws or nails, and it can even be attached to the back of a closet door, providing an out-of-the-way place to hold articles of clothing that could usually clutter your house.

One other layout is called a free hanging coat rack, it’s well suited for hanging wet clothing, jackets, hats or perhaps towels. This type of coat rack includes pegs that constructed in circles and can be put just about anyplace you would like simply because it features a base which supports the body including parts may be quickly connected. Having storage space in the lower portion of the bench, the coat rack having benches is the elegant design that gives any owner an out-of-the-way place to keep items that may otherwise take up valuable space; though it seems to be complicated, the coat rack together with benches is very easy to put together as a result of clear instructions found in its packaging. Many coat rack companies provide their products both locally and around the globe: China, Taiwan, Turkey, Hong Kong, Ukraine, Singapore, Malaysia, Korea, Venezuela, Germany, Canada and the USA all create coat racks. Nations in Asia that are involved in the fabrication of coat rack items sell in their respective markets and also around the globe, allowing buyers access to their products around the world. Unlike the businesses which only import their top quality coat racks, a few, such as Go In GmbH, Might Hook, Inc, Sequel Corporations and some others make and design their products fully in the .
If you are searching for info with regards to a specific coat rack’s company along with specifics, you will be best off by using the internet, for a start. Any major internet search engine can easily offer links to different resources, provided you are straightforward and particular with the search phrases you enter. Generally, the directories available on the internet also can supply you with the data you seek. Local and Worldwide companies usually keep internet websites that allow shoppers quick access.

Alphabetically arranged directory guides are another really good means of finding the distinct companies of wall coat racks, considering that they list corporations in order, and may also sometimes consist of contact information and facts that include their address, phone number(s), office hours, and also a contact person. An additional way of searching for regarding the different corporations along with the products they have might be through other people. Buddies and acquaintances which own a coat rack can help you by telling you just what business they purchased their rack from, or just what retailer provided them with it. They can direct you to companies everywhere, possibly even those that import and export these types of wonderful products.

________

Thought Of The Day

Quality carpentry tools are the only kind I buy. For many reasons. I don’t like to buy my tools more than once. I don’t want to leave my job site in mid stream because my tool won’t work. I don’t want my projects to look awful. I don’t want to jeopardize my safety. I don’t want my clients to look at me with skepticism when I use generic tools. Need I go on Quality tools are better because they allow me to do my job easier and safer.
A carpenters tools can also be a source of pride. When customers see quality tools they know their carpenter is serious about his job and he is going to do the job right.

Interesting Destinations

http://www.thesitebox.com/Category/4508/hand-tools.aspx
Hand Tools for the Trade or DIY enthusiast. THESITEBOX.COM are distributors of a comprehensive range of high-quality tools & hand tools online.

http://www.draper.co.uk/
Draper Tools Limited is a family-run company supplying hand tools to industry since 1919. Located in Hampshire England for over forty years

http://www.toolstop.co.uk/hand-tools-b60
We hold a massive range of leading brand hand tools to satisfy the professional tradepersons needs for quality and reliability.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Power-Hand-Tools/bie=UTF8&node=84124031
Find a great range of products in the Power and Hand Tools Store at amazon.co.uk including drills screwdrivers jigsaws accessories from top brands such

http://www.draperhandtools.co.uk/
DraperHandTools.co.uk supplies over 10000 Draper Tools product lines from Builders Tools to Automotive Tools to Garden Tools all from the Draper Tools range

http://www.bulldoghandtools.co.uk/
Bulldog Hand Tools supply Childrens Junior Gardening ToolsShovelsSpadesForksHoesRakesRabbitingManureTrench ForkAlan Titchmarsh ToolsInsulated

Popular Questions

how to calculate angles in carpentry work
I want to learn how to calculate angles with carpentry work. for example say i wanted to build a bench inside a hexagonal gazebo that was connected all the way around how would you calculate the angles to cut. (I know off the top of my head that the angles of a hexagon are 120 degrees) but i want to know if you had to do something in a similar situation or build something from scratch how would you go about finding it definetely need a lot of explaining for this one.

In the example you posted it’s basic geometry. A circle has 360. A hexagon has 6 corners. 360 divided by 6= 60 for each corner. It works for any geometric shape. Try it with a square. You will get 90.

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38 Responses to “Where On This Planet Do Wall Coat Racks Come From?”

  • dosse says:

    Who’s to say that those from non-only families aren’t princesses? When I was in high school in the 90s, several girls from Hong Kong (boarding students) teased me because I bought an outfit from a store they considered “beneath them.”

     

  • milid prie says:

    Hey Joe your into the local politics.

     

  • keoh says:

    I am on a flight from Denmark to Canada at the moment and saw this. Fortunately the leg from Germany to Canada was only half full, so they put me in business class and I can sit in comfort.

    This is a personal flight, but I fly for business a lot and have worked an arrangement that I only fly business class or in a exit row seat. My doctor put together a note that said it is very unhealthy to have your knees locked up against the seat in front of your for hours at a time.

    It turns out I'm 190cm which is a bit under 6'3 in inches. I round down to 6'2 when someone asks. I guess women round down and guys round up.

     

  • paetz ser says:

    That disk sounds like it has a bad partition table or is going bad altogether. Put it into a Windows 2000/XP machine and see if you can format it. My guess is that you won't be able to which would indicate that the disk is failing.

     

  • alanchi wakaine says:

    I still haven't figured out a way to place my reply after a comment, unless I catch it quick before someone else has posted a comment …

    Moving on.

    Celeste, I really love your idea about a section on this Web site that would serve as a local clearinghouse to match solutions and needs. (Shelly is right. People like Andrea already do that on their own. If we share in the heavy lifting then the burdens will cease feeling so dang heavy.

    The reason I love Celeste's idea is that it's absolutely crucial to me that this Web site be an exciting, interactive, constructive, helpful, safe, civilized, kind and good place where we can freely share ideas and ways to make this place we call home a better place.

    P.S. Welcome, Joan – and others – who momentarily lost track of me after my sudden disappearance from the RS. I'm glad you found this blog. And I think you're right, I think it's going to be big. Ideas are sprouting faster than I can grab them.

     

  • escu says:

    Check out which explains that Lewis Carroll invented the term, (remember 'slithy'and 'mimsy'?) and also includes some interesting examples such as 'gerry mandering':

    From Wikipedia: “Examples of “portmanteau” … appeared in Lewis Carroll's book Through the Looking-Glass (1871),[1] in which Humpty Dumpty explains to Alice the coinage of the unusual words in Jabberwocky,[8] where “slithy” means “lithe and slimy” and “mimsy” is “flimsy and miserable”. Humpty Dumpty tries to justify his habit of changing the meaning of words and combining them in various ways by telling Alice,

    'When I use a word… it means just what I choose it to mean—neither more nor less.'
    'The question is,' said Alice, 'whether you CAN make words mean so many different things.'

    'The question is,' said Humpty Dumpty, 'which is to be master—that's all.'

    In his introduction to The Hunting of the Snark, Carroll uses “portmanteau” when discussing lexical selection:

    Humpty Dumpty's theory, of two meanings packed into one word like a portmanteau, seems to me the right explanation for all. For instance, take the two words “fuming” and “furious.” Make up your mind that you will say both words … you will say “frumious.”[8]
    The word “portmanteau” itself was converted by Carroll to describe the concept. “Portmanteau” comes from French porter, to carry + manteau, cloak (from Old French mantel, from Latin mantellum).[9] In then-contemporary English, a portmanteau was a suitcase. In modern French, a portemanteau (or porte-manteaux) is a clothes valet, a coat-tree or similar article of furniture for hanging up jackets, hats, umbrellas and the like.”

     

  • proffner white says:

    Congrats on the milestone, katiebird. I remember the Commitment when it began as your sig line at BT. You have been such an inspiration and I like the way you're drawing from different resources to keep the whole process fresh. I got lost for over an hour the other day in the Hacker's Diet links. Lots of great info, which you're breaking down here for everyone to learn/enjoy. Hope you're doing well on the personal front. Peace

     

  • morian says:

    Mini Singh:

    Raju may have got many awards, but he was up to no good here. He was upto no good when he bought India World for 500crore in cash, as there were allegations of massive kickback in that deal.

    And this deal is simply ridiculous. If it was such a fantastic deal, then why shave off the Cash buffers of a company now, when worldwide companies are bracing up for a bad year? Why not do that when the Land banks were truly valuable at Rs.1cr/acre?? Why was Maytas a private holding of Raju family when going was good, and now when real estate companies are in trouble they tried to lump it off Satyam shareholders at prices at which no one would buy properties any more?

    1cr/acre?? That's BS. If Raju & Family thinks 1cr/acre is such a good deal, then I have a few acres that I want to sell at that price, within 25km vicinity of Bangalore. I got these at 26Lakhs/acre at its peak, today I reckon i'd be lucky to get that rate!

    More importantly – Even if 1cr/acre was indeed the price – no one will want to sit on an expensive, non-liquid asset right now. They need all the cash to tide over the crisis, and also to buy real good-value companies to expand into newer IT markets.

    Taking example of GE isn't going to wash! GE did what they did after taking the consent from the entire shareholding segment, not in a clandestine manner.

     

  • bairnse says:

    like panckaes on a sunday morning

     

  • broux says:

    Some of the American Economy Problems that Velma should have known as a CFO!Bush Administration entered into 2 Wars costing $3B each per day, drained the country of money for its internal useage.The Financial Industry meltdown caused by young Ivy League educated people.World markets slowdown and meltdown. Lack of consumers spending worldwide.Companies selling off businesses to foreign markets, such as India.Employers refusal to hire even when they are making profits. Employers firing and laying off when they may not need to as in Velma case, being a Big Mouth. People educated yourself on some of the facts, then you will have a better understanding of this constrainting dilema affecting the American.

     

  • dumley trapitchut says:

    Well, at least she was taken away. I had a storage space like this in my room when I was living in NYC too. It always creeped me out and now I can’t stop thinking about it. GEE THANKS r/NOSLEEP!! Haha, seriously though what teh feck >_

     

  • ermann says:

    Jeremy,

    I am, myself training for a 1/2 marathon on Jan 10th in Sugarland,Tx. I have run 14 marathons and about
    7 or8 1/2s. If you need advice or encouragement,
    I'm your man. Sounds like you have a great support team, yourself. Look for a book call “Lore of Running”
    It is by Dr. Timothy Noakes. It is thick, but full
    of choice tidbits about running and marathoning and
    some history of the sport. One of its best features
    is that of injuries. Well worth the 15 ot 20 bucks
    it costs. E me anytime, Tom Woltz, Sr (in your mom's
    ss class, met you at funeral)

     

  • kethner alviraujo says:

    I wanna give you a two thumps up for this. Simply elegant design.

     

  • ignuss says:

    I’ve done this before, you want to drill out the screw holes to a standard dowel size. Then, using a hardwood dowel from the hardware store, coat the surface of the dowel with good quality wood glue and insert into the drilled out holes. Then you can saw/chisel off the dowel flush with the surface of the door frame. Then to make sure you get the position correct, put a little bit of paint on the end of the deadbolt, shut the door and turn the deadbolt. This will mark where you need to put the strike plate.

     

  • hesick says:

    Hi Rob, thanks for the suggestions on the charcoal sticks, I've tried none of the ones you've mentioned and would be happy to find a few good ones. I did have one exception that the Incense from India line used to have (I think the last time I checked they'd stopped carrying it) called White Sandalwood. It was at the time one of the highest end Indian incenses I'd tried, with a really great, premium sandalwood oil. The sticks were very skinny which probably reduced the negatives of the charcoal quite a bit.

    Really want to check out the Shroff line too. I was really impressed with the Ramakrishnanda incenses when they came out, so if the Shroffs are remotely in the same ballpark, I'm going to have to give them a try.

    And yeah, I'm freaked over Kobunboku, it's one of the few non-aloeswood incenses I continue to think about a lot, it's just so good for the price. In fact I'm finding myself more and more inclined to Baieido sandalwood based incenses, there's something really great about the quality of wood they use. It's definitely one of the first incenses I think of in working on our “Starter Incense” project. It may very well be the best bargain for its price, although I'd have to say both Kai Un Koh and Kokonoe Koh are also incredible bargains.

     

  • kach says:

    It’s not a matter of teaching 8th-graders, it’s a matter of teaching 8th grade. It’s horribly inefficient to teach a classroom of kids, who have different strengths & weaknesses (intelligence, motivation, etc), different levels of understanding, and different resources (notably, parents willing to contribute their experience and effort to educate their kids).

     

  • lock sar says:

    Michael J. Jackson was SO HOT HERE..AND AMAZING!!!!!!!!!!!OH MY GOD…HE WAS SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSOOOO

     

  • paurasico gart says:

    Ha! I just got a new phone and the default internet search engine is Bing. I want Google, damn it!

     

  • carley says:

    As you were saying, I totally agree that twitter is a great way that you can share your thoughts with others and hear their thoughts as well. I love using twitter as an encouragement to others, or at least as a resource to inform others about different things that are going on, or different resources that they can use. I have used twitter before and use it for all of the different reasons that you listed. I think that it will be very beneficial throughout college and as we get ready to graduate and try and find a job. As technology advances, we must advance with it, or we will be left in the dust.

     

  • day says:

    I see this is marked July of 2008, when the economy was really starting to reflect the downturn in real estate and other markets. How has this affected this project. Also I have found it difficult to find information on this project. Is there a website or a realtor or a contact person who would be willing to talk to me about purchasing into this project.

     

  • then and says:

    this is awesome.
    i have had alot of stuff moved over the years, and if
    i see one more styrofoam peanut im going to scream.

    last month i received 3 large boxes.
    after i unpacked the contents i had enough peanut to fill 4 large plastic bags.

    now they sit in the garage taking up valuable space collecting dust.
    everytime i go to my car i just cringe.
    best,melissa

     

  • tollmano says:

    Hi Joe,

    Whether you'll find substantial savings with shopping for cameras in Hong Kong depends on where you come from. Many people coming from European countries and some Asian countries will find prices in Hong Kong cheaper than in their home countries. But some countries may sell cameras at comparable prices to those in Hong Kong, or may even be cheaper than in Hong Kong.

    So you really have to know the price in your country and then you can compare to the price in Hong Kong to see if it will be worthwhile for you to buy in Hong Kong.

     

  • rettis says:

    Tough call on the coat racks but I vote green. :-) Although it's like a 51-49 split…I'm really not very decisive lately.

     

  • cic says:

    There were coat racks all over that inn, apartment, and offices because it would be incorrect and insensitive in the extreme to not provide rack space for their visitors. What did you think I meant, NiceDeb?

    Thanks for having my back Ed. NiceDeb's mind is in the gutter.

     

  • hanosaski wen says:

    Excitable is the most obvious one. No other word I can think of has that exact shade of meaning.

     

  • wyson says:

    You commented to Richard Drake that “The goal of the fossil fuel lobby is to stop climate legislation by denying the science of AGW”. Looking at where their funding is going, eg BP to CRU, it has to be more complicated than that. In fact, I would go so far as to say that you have fallen for a lazy bit of abuse put out by the likes of desmogblog. Here’s a business perspective, as I am a businessman, not a scientist:

    Guilty as charged — I know that it is far more nuanced than I have often portrayed. Yes, the bottom line is to maximize shareholder value but that can be defined differently and not every CEO and Board always acts in the best interests of shareholders. Maximizing shareholder value can mean different things to different corporations (and execs in the same corp) such that some may be interested in long-term solutions involving developing renewables to replace revenues lost when FFs become too costly to extract, whereas others want to take the money and run. Still others see their interests as in direct opposition to any form of regulation of their industry. Not all businessmen will see eye to eye on every issue facing them. Also, some of the apparent support for global warming legislation is an effort to control the agenda to their own particular view of “best interest” and for some its pure PR. A mix of all the above may also apply.

     

  • cann kanagh says:

    David Brooks neglects to mention that while we are considering spending even more of our treasure on the ill and elderly if Medicare goes on autopilot, other Western countries figure out how to provide better results in healthcare while spending less, or dramatically less. Switzerland and France spend 30% less than we do, while Germany, Canada, the UK spend 50% less than us. Mostly, though not entirely, through a top-down effort to reduce spending while improving cost-effectiveness and results.

     

  • melen says:

    I’m with Emily (et al.) – FIX THE DAMN CLOCK ALREADY! It’s shameful and very frustrating, esp. given that the station is actually a pretty elegant design, if grossly ill-maintained, and not all that old. The shattered limestone facings around it and lack of adequate bicycle parking are also major needs. Why can’t we have anything nice?! (lol).

     

  • born says:

    If you are a real estate professional, be really careful in dealing with KoRes Corp. in Weston Florida. Tulio Rodriguez & Monica Cataluna-Shand are shysters and look for anyway to steal ones customers. They attempt to steal your client by requesting their contact information and later contact them behind your back to get them to deal with them directly.

     

  • trou says:

    +)

     

  • her says:

    I can’t agree that no person or property is harmed by spam. A lot of resources have needed to be spent to reduce the spam that lands in my inbox. Someone paid for that, and most of us are probably happy that this effort has been made. There is, of course, the time lost in dealing the spam that does make it through the filters. There’s also storage space that gets wasted in the process.

     

  • kelduardt kacher says:

    if 'save the planet' is the thing – so the logic is

    less humans = good

    That means no sex in the celebration. For if humans are the problem the less of them the better. This is what your average animal rights loony (i include the rspca) thinks deep down that the world should be run (? and ruined?) by millions of domestic cats.

    I leave you with this thought

     

  • roff franterach says:

    AIRDICK ERIC FOLLY,JUST WONDERING WHATS UR LONG TERM PLAN WHEN THE NEW SCHOOLS OUT FOR YOU? SOUNDS LIKE YA MIGHT HAVE A KILLER BUSINESS PLAN ALL FIGURED OUT… PLEASE HELP THIS OLD COAT RACK FART WITH HIS MIDLIFE CORE CRISIS.JUST A GUESS ON MY PART… ARE YOU ONE OF THOSE RARE BIRD NEW SCHOOL JUGGALO “EDGEMAN”?

     

  • man morine says:

    RT

     

  • elich whitchclin says:

    I looked at cabinet making for computers a few years ago. The required skill and cost of wood working quickly dissuaded me.

    I did however get a very good idea. Old Radios, the 'tombstone' types from the early 1900's are about the same size as an ATX computer case. They can also be found cheap, and the wood usually looks good. Antiques stores are a good place to start. Make sure you don't plug in the Radio unless you have a fire extinguisher ready. 80 year old tubes and dust don't mix.

    The computer worked very well, except for very weird grounding issues that I could never rectify to my satisfaction. It turns out that maybe there is a reason for computers to me metal.

    There are some companies that make very high end wooden keyboards out of rare and very high quality wood. They cost a fortune, and I never wanted one that bad.

     

  • mourtner says:

    If there is anything that's really disturbing in all this it's the fact that it's getting the kind of play that it is under false pretenses.

    It has been at the top of national newscasts, on the front page of newspapers and given headline space on major internet search engines. Why? It's there under the guise of changing journalism, but the real answer is simple — race.

    You have an African-American admitting he's uncomfortable in some circumstances around Muslims, simply for what they are or appear to be. And he's doing so in conversation with one of the great race-baiters of all time — Bill O'Reilly. He reeled them in on The View and he reeled them in again with Juan Williams. I'm waiting for O'Reilly to bait his next white guest into admitting that he or she is uncomfortable walking down the street at dusk and being approached by three “hip-hop dressed” African-American teens. “Would you cross the street?” O'Reilly will likely ask. What would you answer?

    The smoke screen is that it has anything at all to do with journalism or the First Amendment or freedom of the press or fair and balanced reporting. The core issues here are as old as time — race and money.]]>

     

  • sawchult says:

    he plays Raizo in Ninja Assassin.

     

  • fredah says:

    Celebrity Foods so I am always looking for additional way and new favorite ways to cook my meals. I will let you know how this turns out for me….thank you!]]>

     


 

 

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