apartment therapy changing the world, one room at a time


Guess The Cleaning Tool?

With spring cleaning on the brain, we thought we see if you could guess what this cleaning tool is...

 
 

carpetbeater05.jpg

It's a carpet beater. Pre-vacuum, carpets and rugs were laid over a wall or washing line and beaten to shake out the dust. In the U.K., early ads for Hoover vacuums extolled the machine's ability to beats-as-it-sweeps-as-it-cleans.

The second photograph is of a Finnish carpet beater, the design of which was first produced in the 1800's. Carpet beaters are, in fact, still used in Finland. If you'd rather admire the design than beat your carpets, like the collector above, carpet beaters are relatively inexpensive on ebay or from antique dealers.

1 photograph by Leo Reynolds of a carpet beater from Time and Tide, Museum of Great Yarmouth Life
Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, England, UK
2 Finnish carpet beater from Kiosk, $39
3 Victorian carpet beaters
4 Spank, carpet beater from Alessi, $32
5 collection of carpet beaters from Country Living

Tags

cleaning, rugs & carpets, history

Related Links

Share

Comments (27)

It's a rug beater. We had this when I was growing up; I always found them really beautiful, so thanks for reminding me!

posted by visualingual on April 20th 2009 at 5:10pm
view visualingual's profile

yeah, it's a rug beater. I have no idea why I know that though, didn't grow up with them.

posted by travislessness on April 20th 2009 at 5:11pm
view travislessness's profile

it also looks a lot like a tool to clean your futon.

posted by erinalter on April 20th 2009 at 5:12pm
view erinalter's profile

I have one like this, plastic, for my mat and sofa -- I was surprised to see friends from overseas didn't know about it.

posted by tulpoeid on April 20th 2009 at 5:15pm
view tulpoeid's profile

These fascinated me as a kid.

posted by Daniel Poitiers on April 20th 2009 at 5:15pm
view Daniel Poitiers's profile

These were very common up until a few decades ago, my grandmother owned one just like the top photo. Some residential buildings in my town built in the '20 to '60 have special poles to hang and beat the carpet in the courtyards. Imagine an age before everyone had a vacuum. They call it "spring cleaning" for a reason - you only swept the floors in the winter!

posted by ivanai on April 20th 2009 at 5:23pm
view ivanai's profile

My mom still does this. Ha. And we live in Suburbia (S. FL). The neighbors look at her weird, but it's what she's always done -- even in communist Germany, and it's what she'll keep doing until she can't anymore. :) Gotta love that European heritage.

posted by nickel525 on April 20th 2009 at 5:41pm
view nickel525's profile

a carpet beater. I actually got smacked on the butt with this when I was bad. An- d no - not in an abusive way -just enough to know I did something really wrong :)

posted by ck_1804 on April 20th 2009 at 5:42pm
view ck_1804's profile

rug whacker.
butt whacker.

posted by moonbeam on April 20th 2009 at 5:52pm
view moonbeam's profile

nickel525, I could see this being of use *especially* in communist Germany...beating a carpet with one of these things can get rid of a LOT of frustration. Take it from a ex-pat German in California, who has actually been looking for one of these. ;)

posted by ponytailed_informant on April 20th 2009 at 6:08pm
view ponytailed_informant's profile

ck_1804-
I can't believe you got spanked with one of these! Too funny!
-AmyA

posted by Amy A on April 20th 2009 at 6:11pm
view Amy A's profile

I have one of these, I found it at a Trash and Treasure Meet. I have it hanging on the wall, it's a beautiful piece.

posted by HereOrOverThere on April 20th 2009 at 6:48pm
view HereOrOverThere's profile

Looks exactly like the German rug beater my mom had (and yes, she smacked me with it a couple of times when the yardstick was out of reach).

posted by LBhirise on April 20th 2009 at 7:22pm
view LBhirise's profile

We had a lot of these at the family farm.

posted by cassielynn on April 20th 2009 at 8:04pm
view cassielynn's profile

like everyone said before, its a rug beater

too easy

posted by iroh on April 20th 2009 at 8:22pm
view iroh's profile

Echoing, yes, rug beater. :) Found everywhere in Finland, and houses and apartment all have racks to hang the rugs. The apartments have them on the balcony. Contrary to the "spring cleaning" thought, Finns will take the rugs out and beat them all winter. Mattress pads as well, because at that point it's cold enough to kill the bugs. :P

posted by pikku.sukka on April 20th 2009 at 8:23pm
view pikku.sukka's profile

my Mom still has one of these ;-) When I was a kid, it was my job to take out the runner and together with my brother beat the crap out of it ;-) In front of blocks of flats in Poland you will find everywhere special poles for it... that was the place to hang out with your friends btw ;-)

It's still popular, even if people regularly use vacuum cleaners, to take the carpets once in a while for a really good beating :)

posted by Offtza on April 20th 2009 at 8:26pm
view Offtza's profile

if you're on west 17th street, pop into aaronson's floor and rug store they have a collection on display along with vintage vacuums.

posted by patrickmc on April 20th 2009 at 9:21pm
view patrickmc's profile

rug spanker

posted by VeryDelishVeg on April 20th 2009 at 9:33pm
view VeryDelishVeg's profile

Ha, I thought "what do you mean, guess? doesn't everyone know what this is?" My parents (and 99% of the society they live in) would die laughing at the thought of hanging their carpet beater as wall decor.

posted by wally3 on April 20th 2009 at 9:45pm
view wally3's profile

Looks like the Dutch one my Oma had

posted by bkk on April 21st 2009 at 1:46am
view bkk's profile

I was looking for one a couple of years ago and couldn't find one cheap enough, so I settled on a 50 cent tennis racket at a garage sale. Does the same job, though :)

posted by kav122 on April 21st 2009 at 2:06am
view kav122's profile

I immediately recognized it as a rug beater. I have an old one - a prop from a long-ago school production of "Oklahoma" - though it gets very little practical or theatrical use these days.

posted by Stiletto on April 21st 2009 at 3:58am
view Stiletto's profile

They actually dont look like carpet cleaners or anything. More of a manual egg beater. ehehe




Jeanne

posted by jeanne211 on April 21st 2009 at 4:45am
view jeanne211's profile

In Hungary everyone has these too. Also, behind blocks of flats there's always a metal pole, like imagine a swingset without the swings. It's for hanging the rugs on while beating them.

posted by Emika on April 21st 2009 at 6:20am
view Emika's profile

It is indeed a rug beater.

posted by suzy8track on April 21st 2009 at 1:23pm
view suzy8track's profile

My childhood Playmobil Victorian dollhouse had a mini plastic one. Gosh I loved that house!

posted by rhiana on April 21st 2009 at 3:21pm
view rhiana's profile

Feeds

RSS icon New York

+ City Feeds