Thu, 8 January 2009 Post By Online Shopping Store
- Bypass pruners
- Wire cutters
- Weed remover
- Grafting knife
- Bark lifter
- Phillips screwdriver
- Saw
- Flat screwdriver
- Sprinkler tool
- Bottle opener
- Ruler
- 100 percent stainless steel blades and tools
- Non-slip handles
- Length closed: 4.74 inches
- Length open: 8.13 inches
- Weighs 8.7 ounces
- Company: Warner Home Video
- ISBN: 6301008901
- List Price: $14.98
- Amazon Price: $65.90
- Used Price: $17.95
- Non-slip soft insert in handle
- Changeable blades - perfect for any job
- Blade cuts 70% on pull and 30% on push
- Blade is stainless steel
- Blade lock ensures that blade will stay in place when in use
- Hard molded handle frame with soft rubber insert for comfort and control
- Includes wood cutting (coarse-cut) blade
- Extra bone cutting (fine-cut) and wood cutting (coarse-cut) blades available
- Comfortable, universal design
- Thermo-resin handle (dishwasher safe)
- Quality construction
- High carbon surgical steel
- Cutco's forever guarantee
These powerful 8-inch kitchen shears cut food, flowers, paper, cardboard, even carpet. They're balanced in the hand and work equally well for right-handers and left-handers. Blades formed from high-carbon stainless steel curve inward so they meet in only one place at any given position and cutting action is smooth and exact. One blade's serrations prevent slippage. A plastic cap on the screw securing the blades can be lifted so the shears can be taken apart for resharpening. Steel-tooth insets in the rugged synthetic handles twist open bottle and jar caps. The shears are dishwasher-safe, but hand washing better protects the blade edges. --Fred Brack |
Pruners that Work as Hard as You Do: The Hybrid Line from Leatherman About the 830556 Hybrid Pruner Multitool Capabilities: Optional Accessories (not included) Warranty: What's in the box: |
By the composer of Bye Bye Birdie, Annie, is one of the best loved Broadway musicals of all-time. All the instruments played on this album are live. Songs are recorded in the original show key, and show tempo. Tracks 1-12 have background tracks and guide vocals, tracks 13-23 have the accompaniment tracks alone. When played in a CDG player, lyrics will appear on-screen. This album may also be played in any CD player; full lyrics are provided in a booklet enclosed in the jewel case. This album is a re-recording and not a rendition by the original cast. |
Recorded in 1994, Bob Dylan: MTV Unplugged is a brilliant, quietly impassioned performance by one of pop music's most significant figures. Fronting his empathetic five-piece band (Bucky Baxter excels on dobro, mandolin, and pedal steel guitar; Bob himself plays frequent "rhythm leads" on his Martin), Dylan performs four of his best-known and potentially most overdone tunes in the 73-minute show; but "All Along the Watchtower," "The Times They Are A-Changin'," "Like a Rolling Stone," and "Knockin' on Heaven's Door" all sound great, with Dylan, as is his wont, re-casting both the arrangements and melodies. Even better is the obscure "John Brown" (written in the early '60s but apparently unreleased by Dylan until now), a driving, biting war protest song of the kind that made him famous, while "Dignity," a lesser-known tune from the '90s, is filled with great lines ("Met Prince Phillip at the home of the blues... said he was abused by dignity"), and "Shooting Star" revisits Oh Mercy, Dylan's best '80s album. Through it all, Dylan says nary a word, although he does smile and shake some hands (even removing his shades) at the end. And as good as it may be, this show is most likely different from every Dylan concert before or since, a sure sign of an artist in no danger of becoming irrelevant. --Sam Graham |
A meatier, more aggressive album for Shear, incorporating his gift for lyrics and melody, with an edgier sound. On "More", he worked with producer/engineer extraordinaire Sean Slade (Radiohead, Hole, Dinosaur Jr.), and is joined by legendary producer Paul Kolderie (Spacehog, Radiohead, Uncle Tupelo) on bass, Dresden Dolls drummer Brian Viglione, and Anthony Saffery (Cornershop, The Lemonheads, Dirty Vegas) on guitar.Tags : More
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The script for this movie was written by outrageous poet-author-alcoholic Charles Bukowski. But director Barbet Schroeder makes it into an oddly amusing story of a pugnacious drunk writer (Mickey Rourke) based on Bukowski himself. Rourke spends almost all of his time at the bar, struggling with sobriety (he's against it) and, occasionally, having fistfights with the bartender (Frank Stallone). He meets another souse, a formerly attractive woman (Faye Dunaway), and gets involved with her, which means they drink copious amounts of liquor and try to have sex. Not much happens beyond that, yet this film is strangely entertaining, for all of its bottom-of-the-barrel humanity. Maybe that's the secret: "Oh, the humanity...." --Marshall Fine![]() Tags : Barfly
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Inspired by an actual incident, this unassuming, wonderfully good-natured romantic comedy tells the story of a New York City street cop named Charlie (Nicolas Cage) who makes a promise to a coffee-shop waitress named Yvonne (Bridget Fonda) that will change both their lives. One day after coffee, Charlie is embarrassed to discover he doesn't have money for a tip, so he tells Yvonne that he'll share half of his winnings if the lottery ticket he's holding comes up a winner. Sure enough, he wins the jackpot--a whopping $4 million payoff--and Charlie's wife, Muriel (Rosie Perez), goes ballistic when he tells her about his deal with Yvonne. From this point, It Could Happen to You follows Charlie's dilemma as he is forced to decide the proper course of action, and director Andrew Bergman smoothly incorporates a gentle love story into this amusing crisis of conscience. Fonda and Cage have an easygoing chemistry that adds a pleasant touch to the movie's fairy-tale plot, and the story's kindhearted sentiment is never so thick that it becomes sticky-sweet or artificial. As feel-good comedies go, this one's a class act. --Jeff Shannon |
Submitted for your approval, the second season of Night Gallery, Rod Serling's atmospheric anthology series that more often than not was in the Zone. Each week, Serling, acting as "an undernourished Alfred Hitchcock," played the role of host and curator of "a palladium of art treasures that range from the kooky to the uncommon, from the bestial to the bizarre." Comprised of original works and short story adaptations, Night Gallery's palette had many colors: touched-by-an-angel fantasy (the holiday fable "The Messiah on Mott Street"); the macabre ("Green Fingers"); the darkly comic ("The Late Mr. Peddington"); and the haunting ("The Tune in Dan's Cafe," which spawned the surprise country hit, "If You Leave Me Tonight I'll Cry"). Night Gallery has long resided in The Twilight Zone's shadow, but great art demands a second, closer look. At its best, Gallery featured superb writing (Serling's body snatcher gem, "Deliveries in the Rear") and great performances (Orson Welles as the narrator of "Silent Snow, Secret Snow"), but it was also a director's showcase for moods and aesthetics. A series benchmark is the terrifying, "The Caterpillar," starring Laurence Harvey as a man who gets an earful of earwig. In addition to Harvey, Gallery featured a stellar roster of actors who did not ordinarily do television, including Edward G. Robinson ("Mott Street"), Patrick O'Neal and Kim Stanley ("A Fear of Spiders"), and Geraldine Page ("Stop Killing Me" and the classic, "The Sins of the Fathers"). It also featured familiar faces in atypical roles, such as Laugh-In's verrrry interesting Arte Johnson as a womanizing radio disc jockey in "Flip Side of Satan," Pat Boone as a callous father considering a very special school for his delinquent son in "The Academy," and Rudy Vallee as a committed doctor, or at least one who should be, in "Marmalade Wine." Comic vignettes and blackouts between offerings are more miss than hit (in one, Death, riding in a crowded elevator, chivalrously removes his skull in the presence of a female rider), but they are brief and can be easily skipped. Museum goers who like audio tours to enhance their appreciation of the exhibits will appreciate episode commentaries by Jim Benson and Scott Skelton, who literally wrote the book on the series (Rod Serling's Night Gallery: An After-Hours Tour, and Pan's Labyrinth and Hellboy director Guillermo Del Toro. A series retrospective and a featurette spotlighting the artist who created the Gallery paintings featured in each episode make this DVD set one that is suitable for framing. --Donald Liebenson Amazon.com |
A likable mix of WWII action and light comedy, the first 10 episodes of the NBC series Baa Baa Black Sheep (1976-78) wing their way onto DVD in this double-sided two-disc set. Based on the adventures of Marine Corps pilot Major Gregory "Pappy" Boyington (played in the series by the always dependable Robert Conrad) and his squadron of roguish ace fliers in the South Pacific Theater, Baa Baa Black Sheep benefited from an excellent cast (which included such TV and film vets as Simon Oakland and Dana Elcar, as well as up-and-comers like John Larroquette and Larry Manetti of Magnum, P.I.) and scripts from series creator Stephen J. Cannell (as well as long-time TV scribes like Philip De Guere and Milt Rosen) that offered a enjoyable balance of humor and combat. The blend gets an excellent showcase in the 1976 two-hour pilot, Flying Misfits, which kicks off volume 1; the remaining 10 adventures pit Pappy and the Black Sheep boys against the Axis Japanese in a secret squadron of captured planes ("The Meatball Circus," episode 8), a brainwashed American captain ("Presumed Dead," episode 7), and a tough major (Charles Napier) with designs on commanding the squadron ("Best Three out of Five," episode 3). Fans of the series may question the decision to include only half of the first season's episodes in this set (the 1976-77 season ran for an additional 12 episodes before being dropped by NBC; the series was revived in late 1977, rechristened Black Sheep Squadron, and ran for an additional 13 episodes before being canceled in 1978), but the inclusion of the two-part pilot and interviews with the real Pappy Boyington (who served as the show's consultant and even cameos in the pilot) should appease any concerns. --Paul Gaita |
JA Henckels 43553-161 Lightweight and balanced for smooth, snag free cutting. Great for a wide variety of uses! The steel quality has a major influence on the performance and durability of a pair of scissors. J.A. Henckels' research has resulted in the development of the most suitable steel alloys which are produced exclusively for their scissors. Stringent quality control at all points of production guarantee the highest level of performance of the finished products. Features: -Finger rest for optimal control. -Perfect closing action and easy re-sharpening of kitchen shears. -The handles are made of tough, glassfibre-reinforced polyamide that is unbreakable and impact-resistant. -Dishwasher safe. |
The HTC1620 is a shear type wire and cable cutter. Straight blades provide clean cuts on multiconductor cable up to 3/8" diameter and hook-up wire up to 10 AWG. Spring return limits user fatigue by re-opening blades after cut. Includes locking lever to keep blades closed when not in use. Steel construction and plastic coated handles. This is L-com part number HTC1620. |
The multipurpose HTC2030 is a shear type wire and cable cutter plus a wire stripper. Straight blades provide clean cuts on multiconductor cable up to 3/8" diameter and hook-up wire up to 10 AWG. Six wire stripping options will handle 20-30 AWG wires. Spring return limits user fatigue by re-opening blades after cut. Includes locking lever to keep blades closed when not in use. Steel construction and plastic coated handles. This is L-com part number HTC2030. |
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There are numerous uses for these heavy-duty shears - section off pieces of chicken, snip fresh herbs, open bags, cut frozen food, use in arts and crafts, etc.Features and benefits of Cutco: |
The Lamb's Shear Delight Cheese and Sausage Gift Box is the perfect Easter gift for any cheese-lover. This gift box from Old Tavern Food Products contains a 12 oz. cup of Sharp Cheddar Cheese Spread, 8 oz. All Beef Summer Sausage, 4 oz. Lamb-shaped Cheddar Cheese, and 4 oz. Deluxe Mixed Nuts. Makes a great gift for any springtime occasion and a perfect accompaniment to your Easter dinner! Shipping Notes: Ships Monday and Tuesday only. |

