Product Features
- Good Grips oversize rubber handle is comfortable even with repetitive strokes
- Swiveling twin blades peel easily with flexible action
- Built-in potato eye remover
- Large hole in handle makes storage easy
- Dishwasher-safe
This is a sturdy peeler with swiveling twin blades and a built-in potato eye remover which easily pares even the toughest skin of your fruits and vegetables and carves out blemishes without damage. It produces thin rinds and peel with little or no pulp and cuts on the first run every single time. Its blade never seems to need sharpening and its hefty body fits comfortably in the hand making it require less force to operate than the more traditional lightweight peelers do and keeping you away from any stress-related injuries. You can even use it to quickly julienne vegetables like carrots cucumbers and potatoes among others.
Like the rest of the products from the OXO Good Grips line this one is a great value of superior quality unsurpassed durability and flawless performance. Its ergonomic design and big pressure-absorbing outstanding non-slip grip complete with flexible fins to accommodate your fingers and an oversized hole for easy hanging allow you comfortable daily wet or dry use.
Its elegant stylized shape fits seamlessly with the rest of the OXO Good Grips collection. Its easy-to-clean simple construction and dishwasher-safe hard-wearing materials make this essential tool one that you will be able to depend on for years and its stainless-steel metal parts will permanently keep your rust worries away.
After submitting this product to over two years of relentless everyday use mine is still just like new.
--Reviewed by M. E. Volmar
Product Features
- Good Grips oversize rubber handle is comfortable even with repetitive strokes
- Swiveling twin blades peel easily with flexible action
- Built-in potato eye remover
- Large hole in handle makes storage easy
- Dishwasher-safe
This is a sturdy peeler with swiveling twin blades and a built-in potato eye remover which easily pares even the toughest skin of your fruits and vegetables and carves out blemishes without damage. It produces thin rinds and peel with little or no pulp and cuts on the first run every single time. Its blade never seems to need sharpening and its hefty body fits comfortably in the hand making it require less force to operate than the more traditional lightweight peelers do and keeping you away from any stress-related injuries. You can even use it to quickly julienne vegetables like carrots cucumbers and potatoes among others.
Like the rest of the products from the OXO Good Grips line this one is a great value of superior quality unsurpassed durability and flawless performance. Its ergonomic design and big pressure-absorbing outstanding non-slip grip complete with flexible fins to accommodate your fingers and an oversized hole for easy hanging allow you comfortable daily wet or dry use.
Its elegant stylized shape fits seamlessly with the rest of the OXO Good Grips collection. Its easy-to-clean simple construction and dishwasher-safe hard-wearing materials make this essential tool one that you will be able to depend on for years and its stainless-steel metal parts will permanently keep your rust worries away.
After submitting this product to over two years of relentless everyday use mine is still just like new.
--Reviewed by M. E. Volmar
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2784-50 Picture shown is item silhouette Carl Pott was in close contact with other significant designers of functional objects. He ran his designs by them and at the same time challenged them to develop their own flatware patterns. His credo was ''I consider it to be my duties to produce not only from the fiscal point of view but as manufacturer I also have cultural responsibilities.'' This reasoning led him to persuade Hermann Gretsch Wilhelm Wagenfeld Josef Hoffmann Elisabeth Treskow Hans Schwippert Paul Voss and Alexander Schaffner to design flatware for the POTT production program. Since the 1950s the Chancellor Flatware is one of the most popular patterns in the Pott program. During the Ludwig Erhard era the Chancellery and almost all German embassies were outfitted with the sterling silver version. Many intelligent details optimize the handling of this flatware. For instance the knife handle has a noticeable curvature at the point closest to the blade where the finger can exert the most pressure. Designed by: Carl Pott 1952 Features: -Complements the Pott 84 collection. -Material: 18/10 Stainless steel. -Dishwasher safe.[]

84-86 Picture shown is item silhouette Carl Pott was in close contact with other significant designers of functional objects. He ran his designs by them and at the same time challenged them to develop their own flatware patterns. His credo was ''I consider it to be my duties to produce not only from the fiscal point of view but as manufacturer I also have cultural responsibilities.'' This reasoning led him to persuade Hermann Gretsch Wilhelm Wagenfeld Josef Hoffmann Elisabeth Treskow Hans Schwippert Paul Voss and Alexander Schaffner to design flatware for the POTT production program. Since the 1950s the Chancellor Flatware is one of the most popular patterns in the Pott program. During the Ludwig Erhard era the Chancellery and almost all German embassies were outfitted with the sterling silver version. Many intelligent details optimize the handling of this flatware. For instance the knife handle has a noticeable curvature at the point closest to the blade where the finger can exert the most pressure. Designed by: Carl Pott 1952 Features: -Complements the Pott 84 collection. -Material: 925 Sterling Silver. -Dishwasher safe.[]
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84-13 Picture shown is item silhouette Carl Pott was in close contact with other significant designers of functional objects. He ran his designs by them and at the same time challenged them to develop their own flatware patterns. His credo was ''I consider it to be my duties to produce not only from the fiscal point of view but as manufacturer I also have cultural responsibilities.'' This reasoning led him to persuade Hermann Gretsch Wilhelm Wagenfeld Josef Hoffmann Elisabeth Treskow Hans Schwippert Paul Voss and Alexander Schaffner to design flatware for the POTT production program. Since the 1950s the Chancellor Flatware is one of the most popular patterns in the Pott program. During the Ludwig Erhard era the Chancellery and almost all German embassies were outfitted with the sterling silver version. Many intelligent details optimize the handling of this flatware. For instance the knife handle has a noticeable curvature at the point closest to the blade where the finger can exert the most pressure. Designed by: Carl Pott 1952 Features: -Complements the Pott 84 collection. -Material: 925 Sterling Silver. -Dishwasher safe.[]
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2781-50 Picture shown is item silhouette In 1931 he designed the clean-lined Modernist Arzberg 1382 tableware service for the Carl Schumann factory in Bavaria which remained in production throughout the 1930s was awarded a Gold Medal at the 1936 Milan Triennale and continued to be manufactured until the 1960s. From 1932 the ceramic manufacturing company Villeroy & Boch employed him in the design of dinnerware services. However in 1940 he wrote Gestaltendes Handwerk (Creative Handicrafts) which despite its publication in the context of German crafts in the Third Reich very much reflected a Werkbund credo of clean undecorated forms as compatible with modern technological modes of mass manufacture as with hand production. Coinciding with the birth of the Federal Republic this formal restrained pattern was introduced as the first Pott sterling silver flatware of the post-war era. It was received to great acclaim and was also produced in silver plated version. Due to its simple elegance it rapidly became a classic whose popularity remains unchallenged. Since 1998 it is also being produced in stainless steel. Designed by: Hermann Gretsch 1949 Features: -Complements the Pott 81 collection. -Material: Stainless steel. -Dishwasher safe.[]
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2742-50 Picture shown is item silhouette In 1974 he studies industrial design in Saarbr cken. By 1980 Ralph Kramer receives a degree in Industrial Design and starts working as a designer for a sporting goods firm. 1983 he began working as a freelance designer concentrating on household items flatware and table accessories something he does still today. Tall and slender is the best way to describe this Ralph Kr mer design whose most striking feature is the saber-like knife blade. The trend in modern plates is to make them larger therefore this extra long flatware will hold its own even on a 12'' plate. Those who prefer standard sizes can always choose the dessert set. Designed by: Ralph Kr mer 1975 Features: -Complements the Pott 42 collection. -Material: Stainless steel. -Dishwasher safe.[]
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