Liqueur Malette French Match Striker by Bonnecaze Absinthe & Home
This unique match strike (or pyrogène in French) is a reproduction of those found throughout late 19th and early 20th century France . At that time, it was common to see a match striker sitting on a bistro table or bar. The strikers served three purposes. First, the hollowed-out top was used to store matches. Secondly, its side or base (with its ribbed surface) was used to strike and ignite the match. And lastly, the piece served as an advertising venue. Many distilleries used these match strikes to promote their liquor, and were usually provided to the bar for free. White-Tip Matches (commonly referred to as "strike anywhere" matches) are suggested for use and are available at specialty stores or online. Regular household kitchen matches will not light, as the white-tip match is needed to ignite the match. The strikers can also be used to hold a variety of items such as toothpicks.
- ASIN
- B08B8YHHMW
- Embedding
- CLIP ViT-L/14 · 768d
- Distance metric
- cosine
- Doc fetch
- 1mscache hitGET /v2/namespaces/amazon-products/documents/B08B8YHHMW
- Similar query
- 22msnearest_to_id → /query
Doc fetch goes through Layer's Aerospike pull-through cache; cache hit served the row without touching turbopuffer. The similar query asks Layer for nearest neighbors of the stored product vector — queries don't go through the doc cache, so no cache header is set.