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    Antique Binoculars

    Are you an antique nut? Do you see beauty in dusty old stuff that has lived well beyond your grandmother's years?

    Binoculars are currently making waves in the market. With the emergence of more innovative ways of bringing objects closer to the viewer, binoculars remain to be one of the top must-have gadgets.

    But do you know that there are people who'd rather have the oldest binocular models than those recent small and high-tech versions? Antique binoculars mean gold to those collecting them. They are considered showpieces, and most of them are even totally functional.

    Optical antiques, binoculars included, are almost always made of brass. They have that old-look that is so appealing to the antique enthusiasts. Because most antique binoculars are brass-made, they can be polished to give them that shiny aged charm.

    Antique binoculars are not of the same size and shape. These are mostly used as fashion pieces sometime in the 19th century and some of them has that famous eyepiece, made from either gold or silver, depending on the amount of money the first owner was willing to spend on it. They were generally small and some were even adorned with gems. These antique binoculars were more popularly known as opera glasses and were basically utilized to enlarge the view of the theatrical performance for those who were seated on the balconies.

    Antique binoculars that were intended for the outdoors were known as Field Glasses. These had a simpler look than the opera ones. The term "binoculars" was used in place of "field glasses" during the middle of the 19th century.

    Some people who are in possession of these antique binoculars may have acquired them from family members of previous generations. Others may have gotten theirs by buying them from antique dealers. Collecting antique binoculars is not an inexpensive endeavor. In fact, it is getting harder to acquire these pieces.

    The monetary worth of antique binoculars ensures their survival. It is the driving force that brings out these old relics out of the storage rooms and then back into the market. There are people who insist that the antique binoculars' least important detail is its monetary value though. Sure, the reason that it's great grandma's fashion accessory 100 years ago is a far more interesting aspect than how much people are willing to pay for it. But if everybody will feel this way, antique binoculars will never have the chance of going back into circulation - or ending up in museums.

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