Thanks for sharing! I was just in elementary school during that time period, so I know nothing about modern Indonesian record cabinets other than them being mentioned as a brief footnotes in collector's guides. As he previously mentioned, the seller I purchased this from thinks it is an original Chicago Talking Machine Company cabinet and it has plenty of design features to support that. However, even if it is a modern-made cabinet, it is by far the most useful, attractive and well-built one I have ever seen and of course matches the phonograph to an outstanding degree.drh wrote: Mon Jul 08, 2024 10:23 pm I may be way off base here, but...could it be an Indonesian reproduction? Those feet and the finish look a lot like the Indonesian pieces that flooded antique stores back in the 1990s/early 2000s. I have a few in my house, in fact, and although they varied, some of them really were very good. The carving is what gives me paws--er, pause; it's not as clean and distinct as I would expect in a true vintage piece, but a lot of the Indonesian ones were something like that. The 12" sized dividers would suggest the possibility it was made for LPs "in the style of" a cabinet that was made for 78s.
PS: My apologies to Rene for not reading the linked article about his Cabinet That Matches in full before posting - I incorrectly assumed his cabinet was a Herzog since it shares a similar but not identical design.