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Colored Kitchen Broom
All natural, hand-tied broomcorn kitchen broom. More Info »Natural Kitchen Broom
Sturdy, functional, hand-tied broomcorn broom without color. More Info »Rooster Tail Broom
This is a new classic. I know that's an oxymoron... but this broom is based on a broom we've identified as one being used in the roaring 20s as an usher's broom. The long handle slid easily into an ushers pocket and the broader than average sweep (for a whisk or turkey wing style broom) More Info »Colored Turkey Wing Broom
Broomcorn brooms haven't been around for very long in the overall scheme of things... people have been using them since the mid-1700s and mostly in the US. Before broomcorn, a whisk - for sweeping instead of blending or stirring - was often constructed out of feathers... a an entire wing. Some of the first broomcorn More Info »Natural Turkey Wing Broom
The story is that before the development of broomcorn in about 1765, folks used a bird's wing as a whisk. When broomcorn brooms were first made, the shape of the bird's wing was imitated by binding the broomcorn tightly on one side like wingbone and fanning it out on the other side like feathers. Made More Info »Whisk Broom
The ultimate in functional utility! Keep on of these small brooms in your car or truck for sweeping out the floorboards or the truck bed. Keep one with your barbecue set for cleaning off the ashes. Keep one on your workbench for sweeping up the sawdust or threads or whatever needs sweeping. I make these More Info »Cake Tester Broom
I remember my grandmother baking cakes and plucking a broomstraw from the old kitchen broom to poke the cake. She used the "clean" end, but still I wondered. She poked the cake and if the straw came out with some batter stuck to it, or if it was even sticky, the cake stayed in the More Info »Pot Scrubber
When making a broom, I like to leave as little waste as possible. The wispy tips are the sweep in most brooms. The stalks get used in the plait - the woven handle. The bristles trimmed from the sweep? We bind them up tight and use them for scrubbing pots and pans or vegetables or... More Info »