Board, Sleeve

Object number2016.107.9 a,b
OriginMinneapolis, MN
MediumWood; Muslin; Foam; Adhesive; String
Credit LineGift of Nancy Del Bianco
DescriptionWooden ironing board for sleeves. Wood is unfinished. Two-sided with light tan fabric padding adhered to each side. The two padded arms are tapered and are connected with two rectangular columns of wood. White string wrapped around one of the interior wood columns. Maker's mark stamped on underside of one arm. Off-white muslin ironing board cover.DimensionsHeight x Width x Length (a): 6 × 4.125 × 18 in. (15.2 × 10.5 × 45.7 cm)
Height x Width x Length (b): 1.25 × 5.25 × 17.5 in. (3.2 × 13.3 × 44.5 cm)
MarksText stamped on underside of one arm inside a square "[female head] / Handy Ann / SLEEVE BOARD, MODEL 33 / NON-COLLAPSIBLE / [illegible] / MINNEAPOLIS 16, MINNESOTA".
Historical NotesPart of a collection from the Charlie the Tailor business related to the pressing and tailoring process. The donor’s father Charles Telesko was born in the Pittsburgh area, but when he was 4 or 5 the family returned to their native Czechoslovakia. He learned the tailoring trade growing up in Czechoslovakia. When WWII started, the family returned to Pittsburgh because they were citizens of the United States and they wanted to escape the war. After Pearl Harbor, Charlie was drafted and sent overseas. He was a tailor in the army during the war. When he returned he opened up a shop in Homestead for a few years before moving to Oakland. The shop in Oakland was on the site of The Original Hot Dog Shop in the Bouquet Cleaners shop near Forbes Field and Roberto Clemente was a client. He moved to the corner of Fifth Avenue and named the shop Charlie the Tailor where he specialized in men’s suits and cleanings. Their building was sold in 1974, so he moved onto Penn Avenue in Bloomfield across from what was St. Francis and is now Children’s Hospital. After his sudden death in 1978, his wife took over the business for the next twenty years.
Previous owner (died 1978)
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