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Quadruple Sea Stone Wall Hook

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For the organized naturalist, this Quadruple Sea Stone Wall Hook from Uncommon Goods is just beachy. We like this for any entryway or, as the web site says, a sophisticated mudroom. To save on the $200 price tag, this is surely something our savvy readers can do themselves, too.

 
 

From Uncommmon Goods:

These long coat hangers feature sea stones taken from the shores of New Hampshire. The stones get their uniquely round shape from years spent in the ocean being tumbled with sand and waves. Each hook features copper hardware, a light-colored hardwood back, and a completely unique stone.

The stones are functional as well as beautiful - their round shapes won't deform coats or snag loose pieces of clothing as you walk by. For each stone "harvested" another rough quarry stone is "planted" in its place. In the same spirit, for each tree used for the backplates, ten times the number of trees are planted to conserve the future of our forests.

(via Book of Joe)

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pillows, decorative & office accessories

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Comments (14)

It looks like they've got some kind of posts attaching the rocks to the wood. I wonder if you'd need to try to drill holes into the rocks for the posts; probably glue wouldn't hold whatever you wanted to hang up. Of course, it would probably be okay to just glue rocks directly to the board.

posted by Joan A. on August 13th 2007 at 10:40am
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But I do agree with Boomer; the copy is just really silly.

posted by Joan A. on August 13th 2007 at 10:41am
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OK, I agree the marketing copy is a bit silly, but I still think these are cool looking. And yes, you could copy them, but do you really want to be searching for rocks and drilling holes in them? What a pain! (And besides, shouldn't we be against knocking off other people's designs anyway) I say if you like it, don't copy it, buy it!

posted by sarahlily on August 13th 2007 at 10:42am
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The NH coast is only a few miles long...so I think it is special!

posted by plus1 on August 13th 2007 at 11:00am
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A while back, Anthropologie had cabinet knobs made of natural rocks and whatnot. I don't know if they're still available, but if so you could just screw a few into a hunk of wood to approximate this. I remember thinking that the Anthro knobs were ridiculously priced (maybe $12 each?) but it would still come to a lot less than $200 or a trip to New Hampshire.

posted by Cassis on August 13th 2007 at 11:01am
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I've been planning for a couple of years to do something similar for knobs for my kitchen cabinets - epoxy the rocks to plain, cheap knobs. I could just do a few more and mount them on a strip of wood since I'll already be drilling holes in the cabinet doors.

Great idea - thanks!

posted by oceandreamer56 on August 13th 2007 at 11:01am
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Speaking in defense of marketing copywriters everywhere, I think there is something quaint, vivid and romantic about "from the shores of New Hampshire."

Y'all have no sense of adventure!!!

posted by patrick (the other one) on August 13th 2007 at 11:14am
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"Quadrubple"?????

Spell check, please!!

posted by Kathryn on August 13th 2007 at 12:03pm
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Maybe that's a play on "rubble" or something...

posted by lisa2 in austin on August 13th 2007 at 12:58pm
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I made knobs for my dresser a few years ago after I saw price tags of 30 per handle. They finished product looks great. I made 20 handles for under $20. Gorilla glue is the bomb!

posted by alishajune on August 13th 2007 at 1:39pm
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So, when it's YOUR specific rockography, it's not silly. Ok, I get it.

posted by patrick (the other one) on August 13th 2007 at 11:09pm
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Funny...this exact project is featured in the new issue of Real Simple! The instructions: "Using polyurthane-based glue (such as Gorilla Glue), attach a stone to the end of a wooden drawer knob, then screw each knob into a plank of wood. Mount the plank on the wall."

posted by Anna at D16 on August 14th 2007 at 4:26am
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For a rustic kitchen I once had (in a rustic cabin in a rustic woods) I made knobs like this for the kitchen cabinets (which were rustic, too--ancient planks from a barn). At that point in time I had a drill press. I drilled holes in the backs of the stones, glued in metal rods that were threaded at the other end, screwed them into the cabinets and screwed nuts on the inside. It looked so good I can't tell you.

But is gorilla glue really THAT strong? I've never used it for anything, but I'd certainly use it if it was that good. I've always used pain-in-the-neck epoxy where strong adhesion was needed. A simpler substitute would be terrific.

posted by Aulaire on August 14th 2007 at 4:55am
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Gotta say, I like the concrete lightbulb wall hook better.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/90524731@N00/1029578463/

posted by whamo on August 15th 2007 at 3:56pm
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