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You can look at the Victoria Arduino line from Nuova Distribution. The machines are solid and are made for commercial use. They also have the small home version similar to the one you posted.
- Matt
awesome!! Love the cartoon! These things - the coffee machines, come in brass too, rather than just the chrome, and the original version I saw had plenty more arms and levers and things that hissed at you, so steampunk heaven in my opinion. I am calling my cafe "Doctor Coffee's" (I'm actually doing my PhD about this industry, so I really will be Dr. Coffee soon!) - anyway, I thought these added to the kinda Mad Scientist image??
It's also super-easy to make steampunky looking knick-knacks to add onto the machine yourself if you wanna make it look like the only one of it's kind. This month's make magazine (makezine.com) has loads on steampunk and i'd also reccomend instructables.com
Bel Townsend said:awesome!! Love the cartoon! These things - the coffee machines, come in brass too, rather than just the chrome, and the original version I saw had plenty more arms and levers and things that hissed at you, so steampunk heaven in my opinion. I am calling my cafe "Doctor Coffee's" (I'm actually doing my PhD about this industry, so I really will be Dr. Coffee soon!) - anyway, I thought these added to the kinda Mad Scientist image??
I've had drinks from one in Laramie Wyoming...of all places...back before I didn't really know what questions to ask about it. I'd love to find out more about the guts of it. The style dates to the early 1900's, and it's bloody gorgeous.
I'm a bigger fan of the 1934 La Marzocco, with the bitchin' lion on top. I cry a little inside when I look at it.
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