Here’s a guest post that a reader sent in…The cold weather is here and we are now thinking of heating our homes. Some people collect rare coins, others collect baseball cards, I collect radiators. How crazy is that?! I bought my brownstone 10 years ago, it was built in 1910 and I remembered being really bothered by the plain radiators it had. This was the time when plain Edwardian style was in and the ornamental Victorian radiators were out. So I said the heck with it and started searching for interesting ornamental radiators, restoring them and installing them in our house. I remember thinking, “it’s a large functional object in my space, so it should be attractive”. The variety of style in the castings I find really interesting. Some of the designs look like stylized flames and clouds of steam. They breathe and hiss with such personality too. One of the earliest ones I have has a lace shelf on top and has a stamping on it that reads J.R. Reed’s Patent April 9. 1878. Another one has a floral design from the American Radiator Co. It has a humidifier that works really well. My cat loves to drink from it for some strange reason. Recently I found one of the rarest examples in a ghost town in PA. It sat in an old bar that hasn’t been in use for 70 years. This odd radiator has a built in warming oven that works much like a hot plate keeping food warm. It was made for fancy dining rooms at the turn of the century. It works surprisingly well, just yesterday it kept a cup of coffee warm at 110 degrees.


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  1. We were lucky enough to be blessed with all of our original ornate radiators in our Victorian home upstate. Our brownstone…eh, no. Frank and Richard or Kevin, or whatever, on Myrtle in Clinton Hill has a great selection of these radiators. I think we paid $11 per section, so less than $300 for an average sized radiator.I’m sure someone here can share the correct name of the place.

  2. I saved one of those radiators back a few years ago. It had been tossed onto the street in Brooklyn Heights. I still have it. It isn’t attached to the plumbing, but it looks great in our bedroom. They must be tough to collect though; these things weigh a ton!

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