Whatnot Wednesday: Who’s the Tool of Tools? #CFFC

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Rudy and Peter Skitterians from Pixabay
Rudy & Peter Skitterians at Pixabay

Welcome, my chuckaboos!  If you weren’t here last week, back in the Steam and Victorian Eras, “Chuckaboo” was slang for dear friend.  Cee’s Fun Foto Challenge (CFFC) and the prompt is Gizmos and Gadgets.  Dan Antion, the host, posted a lot of modern-day tools.  The tools I’m featuring go back a ways.   I’m sorry that some of the photos are so small. I suppose that’s because they are from such old sources.

Thomas Alva Edison

Speaking of slang, we’re visiting the timeframe of 1847 — 1931 to check out the tools of someone you might not know was considered (by modern slang) a big tool.   Yes, all of the tools in this post were created by a tool… allegedly.  And I don’t mean AI.

You might say he was the Tool of Tools.  

Thomas Alva Edison is widely considered the most prolific inventor of useful, commercialized tools, holding 1,093 U.S. patents.  However, getting along with him was reportedly quite difficult.  He was described as cranky to say the least.  He was known for having few close friends because he… well, he wasn’t exactly charming.  Associates characterized him as a gruff, egomaniacal, and intense man who struggled socially. His employees said he was a demanding, fickle boss, often neglecting his family to focus solely on his work. 


Today, his views about women and minorities would be considered chauvinistic, racist, and prejudiced.  Edison believed women were “behind men in direct thought due to historical, not biological, factors.”  In his later years, expressed views on the intellectual inferiority of Black people, and he made anti-Semitic comments — to the press, and he was accused of discriminating against Jewish employees. 


Edison’s inventions established major industries, including the electric light bulb, phonograph, and motion picture camera.  Edison also established the first investor-owned electric utility in 1882, basing its infrastructure on DC power.  While a few people might have been even more prolific, Edison’s inventions had a profound, immediate impact on daily life and on industrialization.

Edison's incandescent lights Wikipedia
Edison’s incandescent lights, Wikipedia

I only included a few of Edison’s inventions in my little encyclopedia of weird inventions of yesteryear.  It’s called Real Steampunkery Tech: True Contraptions of the Steam and Diesel Eras, and it mainly focused on stranger things than Edison typically created.  


Let’s begin with phonograph cylinders, also called Edison cylinders, or wax phonograph cylinders.  The earliest commercial medium for recording and reproducing sound, and were for use on a on a mechanical cylinder phonograph.  In their heyday (c. 1896–1916) they were known as “records” — a name which has been passed on to the disc-shaped successor.

Edison Phonograph. Cylinder photo credit M. Dupres, Wikipedia

They were hollow cylindrical objects with audio recording engraved on the outside surface, which can be reproduced when they are played.  The first cylinders were wrapped with tin foil, but the improved version made of wax was created a decade later.  They remained the dominant commercial audio medium until the 1910s.

The electric pen.  Patented in 1876, Edison’s electric pen was the first, and arguably one of the most successful, early commercial electric appliances, paving the way for mimeographs and tattoo machines.  It operated as an early copying machine, allowing users to create stencils to produce up to 5,000 copies of documents.  How did it work?  A small electric motor at the top of the pen powered a needle that moved up and down at high speed, creating a series of small holes in paper as the user wrote.  The device was powered by two wet-cell batteries connected by wires.


Wax paper.  In 1872, Edison came up with paraffin paper, or the idea of coating paper in wax to keep it from getting wet, to use in the telegraph. This is a commonly used household object today, and its origins began with wrapping candy. Paraffin paper was also used to help Edison invent his favorite device, the phonograph.

Thomas Edison and his electric car powered by his nickel-iron battery. Getty Images via BBC.

Hmmm… he doesn’t look like such a cranky tool in the photo above.  You can’t believe everything you read.  But then again, in that picture he’s also a guy with his new car…

The alkaline storage battery. Patented in 1901 and 1906, Edison invented a rechargeable Nickel-Iron battery. It was designed to be a durable, lightweight, and long-lasting alternative to lead-acid batteries. Using a potassium hydroxide electrolyte, it aimed to power electric vehicles, though it eventually found success in industrial uses like mining lamps and train signaling.


Those are just a few of the inventions of Thomas Edison that still have an influence on our everyday lives.  If you want to know what his spirit telephone was, or his contribution to how to answer the telephone, you can find those in Real Steampunkery Tech.  Thanks for visiting.  Friendly comments are welcome.  Hugs.

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Here’s the obligatory shameless self-promotion.

Real Steampunkery Tech: True Contraptions of the Steam and Diesel Eras

Revised cover "Real Steampunkery Tech: True Contraptions of the Steam and Victorian Eras

E-book:  relinks.me/B0DHC6JFVT

Paperback:  relinks.me/B0DHD9BSJB

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This post is all-human written.   Furthermore, the author expressly prohibits any entity from using this publication for purposes of training AI technologies to generate text.  This is a work of fiction.  Characters, names, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, locales, or events is entirely coincidental.

Copyright © 2026 by Teagan Ríordáin Geneviene

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No part of this work may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission.  Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author’s rights.

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43 thoughts on “Whatnot Wednesday: Who’s the Tool of Tools? #CFFC

  1. This is a fascinating post, Teagan.

    Edison was, and is still impactful in our daily lives.

    The pic by his car… he doesn’t look cranky to me, but he looks hiding cranky. LOL!

    Big hugs for you and the Scoobies!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks for commenting, Resa. I thought that was a great and happy looking photo when I first saw it. Then as I learned more about him personally, his expression started looking really smug to me. It’s still a fun pic. Hugs back to you and Norm — and Misha!

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  2. Excellent post, Teagan. Edison’s inventions and contributions were tremendous. His comments about women and the historical context is interesting. My personal opinion is that many men have been intimidated by women throughout history, dismissing their opinions on important matters. This continues today when you see men forcefully attacking women in the media and other public settings.

    A small comment made by John Adams in response to Abigail’s insistence on women’s rights, saying that men were already “limited” in their power, made me think that many men have a very narrow view of their purpose in life, whereas women see themselves as capable of engaging in every aspect of life.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks for commenting, Edward. I enjoyed your post about Abigail Adams. I know that my opinion in work settings has been repeatedly dismissed. I realize that this does not happen to all women. Once I spoke in admiration to a woman at USPTO in a presidentially appointed position. I mentioned what she must have had to overcome (of that nature), and she drew back in astonishment, saying she never experienced anything of the sort. (Although her father was extremely well connected and so was her husband… maybe nobody dared.) I on the other hand, repeatedly had to “fight” my way out of corners.

      You’re probably right about the feeling threatened part. Once a male coworker (different department, same field) ranted at me that I was taking jobs away from men. A different coworker (different job) laughed out loud at the discrepancy in my salary (which he learned about without me stating it). Those and other “personality differences” were constant throughout my career. Married women face a lot of the same, I’m sure. Although, from everything I saw in the past 40 years, unmarried women get it full blast. It seems to take on an entire other aspect. Anyhow, enough of my “ponderating” on that. Wishing you a splendid weekend. Hugs.

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  3. Edison — Yuck! Sara and I are Team Tesla all the way! lol It tickles me that just about once every season, The Murdock Mysteries had Edison as the suspect of a murder investigation. 😀

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  4. When my husband and I lived in Florida, we visited the Thomas Edison and Henry Ford Winter Estates in Fort Myers. Fascinating place! I seem to recall there was a friendly rivalry between the two?

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    1. Hi, Kerfe. That’s cool about the wax paper. Suddenly I have a shadowy vague memory of an art project when I was a child that involved ironing wax paper. But that’s all I remember of it.

      Perhaps Edison’s negative qualities were glossed over and forgotten because so many of his contemporaries shared his attitudes. In other words it was too ordinary to mention. (Shakes head and sighs.) Many thanks for visiting. Hugs.

      Liked by 1 person

    1. He’s quoted as saying “Direct thought is not an attribute of femininity. In this, women are now centuries behind man.” So he might have a light chatty conversation with you, after he patted you on the head. I’m sure it would be interesting. 😀

      Liked by 1 person

    1. Hi, John. Yes, he had a mind boggling number of inventions that amazingly ranged from everyday-useful (like hearing apparatus or lightbulbs) to strangely absurd (like the spirit telephone). I was commenting to Dan about it making for an alternate history story. Happy March — and hugs.

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Edison was quite the inventor, and you gave us some information that I never knew! The images are great – I love the one of the old phonograph! I had to laugh because when I was in high school back in the dark ages, we used to call someone who behaved stupidly a tool.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hi, Noelle. Haha, “tool” as slang (with a few different negative but similar meanings) has been around since the 16th century. I always thought it started in the 80s, but slang rises and falls in popularity sometimes. Thanks for visiting. Hugs.

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  6. A great post, as always, Teagan, and very informative. I knew about some of his inventions, but, as you say, there were so many it’s difficult to keep track. I love the images and I recommend your book Real Steampunkery Tech. It is fantastic! Take care, big hugs, and love to the Scoobies!

    Liked by 1 person

  7. Thanks for joining us at CFFC, Teagan and thanks for featuring the successful, albeit sometimes questionable inventor of the wonderful world of invention era. The amazing part is how many of his inventions remain with us (in some form) today.

    If anyone reading this comment is wondering about Real Steampunkery Tech: True Contraptions of the Steam and Diesel Eras, stop wondering and buy the book. You won’t regret it.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Those ponderings have the makings of an alternate history story, Dan. Imagine if Edison’s battery powered electric car had taken hold and gained acceptance rather than Ford’s — and what other differences might have cascaded from that. Thanks for reading and commenting. And for your endorsement of the book. 😀 Big hugs.

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