h a l f b a k e r yRIFHMAO (Rolling in flour, halfbaking my ass off)
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Its a regular-looking coffee mug, but on the bottom (in relief) is the mirror image of your coat of arms, seal, or logo. Now, when you carelessly put your cup on an important piece of outgoing correspondence, instead of leaving an unsightly coffee ring, it imprints an official-looking watermark, or
coffeemark (depending on what youre drinking).
(?) Accidentally baked in 1896?
http://www.olympic.org/uk/index_uk.asp [Fishrat, Oct 05 2004, last modified Oct 17 2004]
(??) Prototype
http://www.geocitie...sign/Coffeemark.htm [AO, Oct 05 2004, last modified Oct 17 2004]
Coaster
http://www.candlema...ucts.pl?09-glch-837 I think the mug should come with one of these clear-glass things to use as a coaster to hold the "ink" for the stamp. [XSarenkaX, Oct 05 2004, last modified Oct 17 2004]
(?) Ballantine XXX Ale
http://www.falstaff.../ballantine_ale.htm Still unbaked, I say. [XSarenkaX, Oct 05 2004, last modified Oct 17 2004]
(?) Stamp Cups
http://www.thorsten...ries/product/?ID=78 [FrankinVa, Oct 05 2004, last modified Oct 17 2004]
Stamp Mugs (might be the link above, not sure)
http://www.gnr8.biz...php?products_id=182 "Those irritating ringmarks that mugs and cups leave..... well, you can turn them into a nice floral pattern now with a set of Stamp Cups. The pattern on the base of the cup match up so you can join as many marks as you want." [calum, Jun 22 2006]
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Annotation:
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Ha! Excellent thought! (Having fooled around making coffee rings for a logo design, something like this occurred to me, but not involving crests.) |
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Brilliant! Lucent couldn't use this, though, as their logo looks like a coffee stain to begin with. |
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Smarty pants. Another bun. + |
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I wish that bris would turn this into a { m - f - d } stamp |
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Wish I'd thought of this :-) |
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Tell your friends you did! |
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I mentioned this to AO last year, I think :) |
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I have just now, for the first time, carefully observed the formation of a coffee ring (starting with a single drop dripping down the side.) Fascinating stuff. |
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"Property of Bart Simpson" springs to mind on this occasion... |
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Excellent. The first idea I've ever seen on the HB that I would actually buy if I saw it <runs to patent office to steal idea> |
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Can I have mine as the seal of the office of the US President? |
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It would have me spilling my beverages on purpose. |
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You could use water in these mugs to send subliminal messages...y'know, "Give this guy a raise," or "Begin wetting yourself," something along those lines. |
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This is a fabulous anti-counterfeiting measure. Not only would you have the distinctive crest, but your own preferences in coffee (i.e. brand, brew strength, cream, sugar, etc.) would create distinctive color and composition in the water mark. There is even the possibility that your own dna could find it's way to the watermark. These attributes could be validated through forensics if necessary. |
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As these "caffeidavits" gain the wider acceptance which is their destiny, yet another profound bond between society, government and coffee could be celebrated. Bravo. + |
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Wow, I was just browsing my Top 100 list of HB ideas and came across this gem. I was amazed to find that it is still about as fresh as a wet coffee stain! Congratulations on posting an idea to gain HB popularity so quickly! |
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Also, [dijontoothpaste], "caffeidavits"... that's priceless. |
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That would make a great gag gift cup. Have the indentations be un-noticeably small, so the giftee doesn't know where these odd "eat after reading" stamps keep coming from. |
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Can I get this with a coffee loaded stamp pad? |
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"Place stamp-pad in water to produce instant single-serve coffee." -- man, Rotarys really have the cush-job now |
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Very good, AO. Nicely done. |
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I want one. Lemme give you your
50th danish to go with that coffee
stamp. + |
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"I'll propose a toast" called Vladimir above be babble of the cocktail party. As he raised his Black Russian, the four other members of the steering committee shuffled to their feet.
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"Bien sur", exclaimed Pierre as he grasped his creme de menthe. "Zis calls for a celebration, non?"
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"I should say so, muttered Sir Rupert, eyeing his rather flamboyant Blue Curacao through his monocle. "It's not every day that we form an international movement on this kind of scale!"
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The ex-senator muttered his approval, although he looked less enamoured with the cherry brandy his exuberant hosts had foisted upon him.
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"Well we may be witnessing the future of athletics gentlemen, drawled Bruce, "but some traditions need to upheld, and I'll be buggered if I'm exchanging my XXXX for one of your poncey drinks".
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An as the committee drank, and chomped on their cigars, Bruce suddenly leapt up with a start. "Bugger me!" he shouted, almost disappearing in a cloud of smoke. Vladimir was almost certain he saw an optimistic eyebrow rise behind Sir Rupert's monocle, which promptly fell into his glass.
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"Look at the tablecloth, breathed Bruce. The committee stared down at the crisp white table covering, now stricken with Vesuvian quantities of cigar ash. There, where the fine-founding gentlemen had placed their assorted cocktails after toasting the future, was a rather natty design of colourful rings.
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"Beautiful" agreed the ex-senator. "Why, this will become a symbol for our movement! Athletes the world over will unite under it."
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[link] Accidentally baked in 1896? (+) |
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Nice. I'm almost tempted to try
this (we have a kiln and about
three quarters of a ton of porcelain
in the garden). |
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you get through a lot of bathroom ware in a year, hippo? |
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Ever thought about making a photocopier, [hippo]? |
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Wow, just two days old and this idea is the 21st highest ranked on the bakery. Nice work, [AO]. |
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It's the highest ever with no bones. |
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Hundred club coming soon! |
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Elegant in it's simpletonicity. |
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now is that nice? calling AO a simpleton. |
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Not obsolete, just patented. |
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Awesome! I get to give croissant #69!!! |
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(-) Not anymore....(+) now its me! |
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I hate seeing "Panic Pin" is still #1. The top 10 list has gotten boring. |
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disagree, XS. its comforting.. |
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You can always add a time filter to your copy of the "best" view. |
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After hours of toil at the potters wheel and countless cups of coffee, I have produced a prototype. See link. |
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[AO] - that coffeemark is a little too perfect. I think one half of it should be lighter than the other half. Fishbone. <-- Just kidding! |
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Just saw the prototype photo and it's marvelous! I'd croissant this idea again, if I could. Can this item be marketed as HB Merchandise, to go along with the plush croissant? |
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This could easily be marketed at rubber stamp shows. |
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phundug, youre right. Real coffee rings -- of the drip-down-the-side variety -- usually go only part-way around, depending on the size of the drip. You would only get the full image (as shown) if you were using a saucer, and sloshed some beverage into it. Fortunately the croissant would still look right, or even better, if only half of it go stamped. |
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The mug would have to come with a nice, little glass coaster, with a lip around it. (See my linky-dink.) That way, you can slosh your beverage around in it and soak your stamper until you're ready to make your mark. |
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jutta: from the domain, I would guess that Fishrat is referring to the Olympic logo of interlocking coffee rings, though that's not especially obvious from the page. |
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Utterly inspired. Does it work for cup-a-soup too? |
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[jutta], the link is the surprise ending to [Fishrat]'s colorful and amusing annotation/story dated Nov. 8, 2003. |
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There is a company that do rubber stamps close to where I live. You can take any design in on paper and they will create the stamp. Staples also do them but they take about a week. |
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I happen to know some rubber "stampers". They are great people with a passion. They just returned from an 8-hour drive to spend 2 days at a stamp show. I truly believe this would sell like hotcakes there. This is an idea I wouldn't mind getting in at the ground floor. Somebody bake this...'please'? |
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Really good idea! Then you can do that to shoes too, so when you walk around in muddy boots you're marking the floor! Wheeeee!!!!!!! |
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With the amount of coffee I drink I could have one for incoming and one for outgoing mail. Great idea. |
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Just flicking through the towering strata of miscellaneous bits of paper on my desk reveals cup rings in dark brown (coffee), light brown (tea), green (mint tea), red (tomato soup) and yellow(erm...not sure..urine?). All unfortunately round and boring. I would love one with "Top Secret" or "Squeak woz ere".Sigh. |
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Ok, who did that? AO, somebody
took one of the croissants from
the pile! |
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@[squeak]: I think you answered your own question as to the origin of the yellow ring in one of your previous posts... chicken soup would leave this sort of embarrassing mark. But what do I know... |
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Maybe spencers gifts will buy the idea for a prankster version ...., it leaves behind a skull and crossbones and says "Ha Hah You have been Poisned" |
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Coffee 101! Go to the top of the class AO. |
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[UB] Possible (see my anno,
above), although we don't have
slipcasting facilities so every mug
would have to be thrown and the
base then hand-carved. [Robert C]
raises a fundamental flaw in this
idea; Another practical flaw is that
it would be unlikely that the base
of the mug would stay flat during
firing (it would have to be flat for
the watermark to work) unless you
made earthenware mugs which
would be substantially weaker
than stoneware or porcelain - for
strength the earthenware clay
would have to be heavily grogged
(i.e. sandy clay) which might
reduce the definition of the
watermark. One not very
practical way of overcoming
[Robert C]'s point about being
unable to get coffee to the 'middle'
bits of the watermark would be to
leave the inside and outsie of the
base of the mug unglazed so that
it had a porous bottom (stop
laughing, po). This would let
coffee slowly leach through the
base of the mug. Experience tells
me though that the mug would
quickly develop a rich, mouldy
smell that only refiring eradicates
(yes, refiring things is sometimes
the easiest way to clean them). |
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Matching coaster perhaps, as [XSX] suggested earlier. |
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Or you could go the "rubber stamp" route mentioned earlier. Have the watermark made as very large rubber stamp, and affix it with glue to the bottom of a mug. |
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I have to admit that when I mentioned the rubber stamp approach, I was thinking that it would be sitting inside the existing bottom rim and the "stamping" surface would be on the same plane as the rim. However, I like the idea of making the bottom of the cup be a rubber stamp that could also act as a coffee cup muffler. I think my wife actually tries to maximize the noise of setting her cup down. |
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Ive been thinking about the problem of getting the coffee to cover the pattern. |
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The easiest and most reliable solution would be to provide a saucer. A saucer would look a little unnatural with the type of mug that I used in the picture, so I think this would best be done with an elegant tea cup. That would make a nice wedding gift. |
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The other approach I thought of would allow for the drip-down-the-side type of coffee mark. As Robert C observed, coffee tends to run around the outside of the ring on a normal cup, so the marking coffee cup would have to have 1) no ring, and 2) the lines of the pattern would really be double ridges, so the coffee would seep through the channel between the ridges. |
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As far as manufacturing the thing goes, I have two suggestions: |
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Take an off-the-shelf mug, put it in a CNC milling machine, and mill out the pattern on the bottom. I think theres enough material there that you could remove some without making a hole all the way through. |
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Or, make a plastic disk to be glued onto the bottom of a standard cup. It could also be rubber (as half suggested), but it would have to fit over the existing ring, so that the drop dripping down the side is not impeded on its way to the pattern. |
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There have been some other instances. But, yeah, they aren't necessarily the majority. |
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I finally discovered this nearly perfect idea. Wow! |
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My teacher needs one of these. I find it rude when papers are handed back not only a long time after they were handed in, but dirty too. Great idea. |
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I want one! The more I think about it, the more sense it makes. Good job, [AO]. + |
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Not baked. Their 3-ring symbol was just inspired by the moisture rings on the bar. They don't have a can, mug, or glass with a stamp carved into the bottom. See the link I found. |
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Can you still get Ballantine anywhere? I've had hundreds of different beers, and I don't think I've ever seen it for sale. |
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I LOVE IT, THE COFFEE MARK ALSO SHOWS HOW HARD YOU HAVE BEEN WORKING IN THE OFFICE, THE BLACKER THE COFFEE MARK, THE SRONGER THE COFFEE YOU ARE USING TO PULL THOSE LATE NIGHTERS. Impress the boss :) |
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Isn't it obvious? He's had way too much coffee. |
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What if these were made as an attachment to your existing mugs? Crazy glued to the bottom they could have openings that channel coffee drips for a full print. |
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my cofee cup doesn't leave cofee ring
will this one do? |
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Very cool, where do I get mine? |
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ideas like this are rare. |
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Great idea. Bt this was invented by the French way back in 1868 when monsieur le watermark first set down his wine glass accidentally on an official property deed... |
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I don't understand the popularity of
this. It seems a bit obvious, not
practical (unless you like huge crests or
skinny, tippy coffe cups), and irrelevant
in a time when documents are not often
stamped or imprinted, at least not on
an occaisional basis.
With this response, maybe it's just me. |
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If it was made with very thin ceramic
that wasn't glazed on the bottom of the
cup (inside and out) the liquid would
seep through the porous clay and
eventually deposit below the cup
according to the pattern. (rebunned)
+++ |
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[AO]: //A mug with your seal on the bottom// |
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How about a seal with my mug on the bottom? Can we create coffee cup watermarkers with customizable caricatures of the cup-owners? o<|:o) |
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Back to +6? We've got some bunning to do, people. |
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So there was a bright side to the recent problems... we get to vote for brilliant ideas like this for a second time! [+] |
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I nearly choked on my coffee this morning when reading the Saturday Telegraph magazine (I only buy it for the crossword, honest) as I came across a page showing "Stamp Mugs" - the name is less elegant but the premise is the same. I showed it to [jonthegeologist] without a further word and we immediately decided these items should be on our wedding list. I came on here to add the link and I find someone has already noted these beautiful items. I wonder if the creator is a baker? |
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Still bunning this one because, like Mary Poppins, it's practically perfect in every way. + |
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I've not been here for months and I've just found this on the recent page. I'm sure the last time I was here it had about 100 buns. Still one of my favourite ideas that this place has ever come up with. |
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Yeah this is great. I personally have just discovered it.
I like these conversations that span decades. I hope things are treating you well back there in 2006. |
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The past is a foreign country ... |
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People dress oddly, the food's weird, you don't recognise most of the brand names on goods in the shops, the place smells distinctly odd, and cellular mobile telephony is patchy, unreliable and disturbingly expensive. |
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The analogy is, in fact, exact. |
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// hat I really need is a digital stamp that can penetrate my ipad screen // |
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No, what you need is a hammer. Or even a pointy rock. |
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Once you have smashed your ipad into fragments, you may go forth in search of a proper computer. |
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Wow, a blast back from when the bakery had people.
I miss those days. |
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