Head Badge
Head Badge
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![]() 1890s VINTAGE RARE RELIABLE READING BICYCLE HEAD BADGE EXCELLENT CONDITION US $2,499.95
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![]() antique EVINRUDE bicycle headbadge ORIGINAL condition US $399.99
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![]() 20 Schwinn Sting Ray Krate White Headbadge Badge 1000 EXACT Now With Screws US $180.00
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![]() Alexander Rocket Bicycle Head Tube Badge Emblem Acid Etched Brass 1930s US $135.00
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![]() Packard Bicycle Head Tube Badge Emblem Acid Etched Brass 1930s US $135.00
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![]() HERTERS BICYCLE BIKE HEAD BADGE NOS WASECA MINNESOTA US $134.99
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![]() VINTAGE UNKOWN BICYCLE HEAD BADGE PLATE P C A S COMPANY NY US $125.00
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![]() SCHWINN CYCLE TRUCK HEAD BADGE RED WHITE BLUE USA MINT US $110.00
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![]() Bicycle Head Tube Bike Badge African Mission ST etched brass US $110.00
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![]() CYCLE TRUCK HEAD BADGE RED WHITE BLUE FOR SCHWINN BRASS US $110.00
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![]() antique Schwinn THE WORLD bicycle HEAD BADGE 7521 US $99.99
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![]() SCHWINN HEAD BADGE TRAIN PLAIN FOR PRE WAR BIKES OTHERS US $87.00
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![]() SCHWINN HEAD BADGE CYCLE TRAIN PLANE RACE CAR RARE USA US $87.00
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![]() Little Jim Penny Head Tube Bike Badge Emblem Etched Brass US $85.00
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![]() Hickory Bicycle Badge Head Tube Emblem 1800s Wheel Co US $85.00
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![]() Davis Flyer Bicycle Badge Emblem Head 1920 1930s US $85.00
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![]() HEAD BADGE FOR SCHWINN CYCLE TRUCK CHICAGO BRASS US $85.00
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![]() Tempo Head Tube Bike Badge Emblem Etched Brass US $85.00
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![]() Roadmaster AMF Head Tube Bike Badge Emblem Etched Brass US $85.00
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![]() Trojan Head Tube Bike Badge Emblem Etched Brass US $85.00
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![]() Schwinn Henderson Head Tube Bike Badge Emblem Propeller US $85.00
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![]() Good Year Double Eagle Bike Head Tube Badge Emblem Etched Brass US $85.00
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![]() Monark Silver King Bicycle Head Tube Badge Emblem 1930s 1940s etched aluminum US $85.00
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![]() Colson Bicycle Head Tube Badge Emblem Acid Etched Brass 1930s 1940s US $85.00
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![]() Winchester Bicycle Head Badge Acid Etched Aluminum US $85.00
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![]() Wards Hawthorne Bicycle Badge Emblem Head 1930s 1940s US $85.00
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Why Men Never Get Rid Of Stuff
There's a real mystery to men and stuff and why they hold on to it that will probably keep archaeologists scratching their heads for the next two millennia. It's probably fairly certain that the average man will collect more stuff and hold onto it then any other creature that's ever evolved on this planet. Men and boys and their toys only differ by how much of it they have, it would seem.
For example, consider a ski helmet. It may be that this harmless little helmet -- sitting all alone in the corner gathering dust and threatening nobody, no person or country, even -- was obtained during freshman year of college. Never mind that that freshman year was back when Jimmy Carter was busily running for president, it's over in that corner nonetheless and isn't going anywhere.
Indeed, that helmet has a good chance of being found by alien explorers when they finally get around to visiting the planet 4 million years from now. Though it's a sure bet that it'll be petrified, it's also a sure bet that it will be occupying the equivalent of some dusty corner in some archaeological dig. It could be that men look at it as way to connect with a long-ago past, which is why it's still hanging around.
Another good example is that old black sport watch that broke back during the first Clinton administration and was never repaired. Sure, there are probably more than a few memories attached to that watch but you'd think a man would either pay the money to get it fixed or just throw it out. Maybe the psychic vibes of all those good times emanate from it in the dark of night to comfort his dreams. Yes, that might be it.
At any rate, most women who are around men in some form or another understand that the opposite sex has an inordinate love of all things arcane, obscure and memorable (to them at least). Good luck trying to get a guy to let go of something like a pair of parachute pants that were last popular when the mid-80s turned into the late 80s. Those pants aren't going anywhere, it would seem.
Maybe when he was a boy, and he went to his favorite baseball team's ball game and got one of those souvenir helmets with the little Oriole on the front of it, that it had some relevancy. After all, there was many a day that that the helmet graced his little noggin, though the little bird is long gone and there's a crack running alongside from when that little black helmet was hit with a baseball just a bit too hard during a sandlot game. Again, that helmet's not going anywhere, either.
This is why men tend to make the best museum curators and cultural historians. They look back at history and see nothing but an unbroken line of men, all collecting stuff. Even the pharaohs collected stuff to the ultimate degree and actually tried to take it all with them, including their living servants. Perhaps at some point in the future, an archaeologist will find a watch, a helmet and something to do with snow and scratch her head about what it all means, though any man would be able to explain it all.
Great bicycle collectible head badges


US $2,499.95
























