Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 0 Cast Iron Toy Skillet
This is the last one. The Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 0 toy skillet completes the Steve's Seasoned Classics Wagner Ware Sidney -O- Complete Skillet Set — No. 0 through No. 14, with No. 1 confirmed as a size that was never produced. At approximately 5 inches across the top rim, the No. 0 is the smallest piece in the set and the only toy skillet in the line. It carries the full stylized Wagner Ware Sidney -O- logo on its small base, a heat ring on its base perimeter, original milling marks on its cooking surface, and no catalog number — only the logo, which is enough. Cast from the same Sidney iron, in the same foundry, with the same quality standard as the No. 14 alongside it. Every size. Every piece documented. Every story told.
Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 4 Cast Iron Skillet
The Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 4 is a scarce size — acknowledged by collectors as one of the harder sizes to find in any configuration, and particularly so in the stylized logo heat-ring era. At 7 inches across the top rim it is the smallest size in the standard Wagner skillet line to carry a heat ring, and it is where the downward heat-ring progression of the complete set stops. This example, catalog number 1054, carries the bold, large-format stylized logo character the Cast Iron Collector associates with the earlier end of the catalog-number era, a heat ring intact, and all markings legible. It is the one that takes the most searching to find, and it holds its place at the lower boundary of the heat-ring configuration in the SSC complete set.
Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 5 Cast Iron Skillet
The Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 5, catalog number 1055 H, is the heat-ring representative of this size in the SSC complete skillet set — cast in the decade between the adoption of Wagner's catalog numbering system in 1924 and the smooth-bottom transition of approximately 1935. At 8 inches across the top rim it is compact, practical, and domestic in character: the smallest size in the standard line to carry both the heat ring and the stylized logo in the catalog-number era. Pattern letter H documents eight generations of mold production for the No. 5 within that window, a quiet record of sustained household demand for a skillet that kept being made because it kept being needed.
Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 6 Cast Iron Skillet
The Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 6 is one of the two most commonly produced sizes in the standard skillet line — and in a complete set, that commonness is the point. The No. 6 was the size that fit the standard domestic stove eye, the size a cook reached for a single serving or a small family portion, the size produced continuously across the full span of the collector era. This example, catalog number 1056 D, is the heat-ring version — cast in the decade between the adoption of the catalog numbering system in 1924 and the smooth-bottom transition of approximately 1935. It is the No. 6 from the wood-stove era, before the flat-topped gas range made the heat ring obsolete, and it documents the daily domestic cooking life of a generation of American households as faithfully as any rarer piece in the collection.
Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 7 Cast Iron Skillet
The Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 7 in the SSC collection is the oldest-marked piece in the complete skillet set, and its age is written plainly on its base. The logo is not the iconic stylized looped W. It is an earlier mark — WAGNER in an arc above straight-lettered WARE, SIDNEY, and -O- — the Arc/Straight/Straight configuration produced during the transitional 1920s period after Wagner began marketing its products as "Wagner Ware" around 1914, and before the stylized W was introduced around 1922. No catalog number is present, placing this piece firmly before 1924. Size number 7c below the logo and a heat ring on the base complete the picture. This is the No. 7 from the moment the Wagner Ware brand was still finding its identity — a transitional piece that brackets the exact visual transformation from arc-lettered Wagner to the stylized W that would define the brand for four decades.
Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 9 Cast Iron Skillet
The Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 9 is an uncommonly encountered size — sandwiched between the ubiquitous No. 8 and the more readily found No. 10, it falls into a gap that most collectors working the open market encounter as a genuine search rather than a casual find. This example, catalog number 1059 D, carries the stylized Wagner Ware Sidney -O- logo at 12 o'clock, the heat ring of the c. 1924–1935 production era, and the fourth pattern designation in the No. 9 mold sequence. It was acquired in electrolytically stripped condition — markings fully legible, iron sound, base flat — and enters the SSC collection as the heat-ring representative of the No. 9 in the complete Wagner Ware Sidney -O- skillet set.
Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 11 Cast Iron Skillet
The Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 11 is one of the genuinely scarce sizes in the standard skillet line — less frequently encountered than the No. 10 below it or the No. 12 above it, and seldom found with fully legible markings in presentable condition. This example, catalog number 1061A, arrives in the SSC collection as-found and unrestored, retaining the original aged surface patina of a pan that worked for decades. The stylized logo sits at 12 o'clock, the catalog number 1061A — pattern letter A designating the first mold pattern cut for this size — sits at 6 o'clock, the heat ring is intact, and all markings are fully legible. A scarce size, an early pattern designation, and an original surface: three things worth preserving and documenting.
Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 12 Cast Iron Skillet
The Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 12 in the Steve's Seasoned Classics collection is not simply a large, scarce skillet — it is a dated document. The stylized Wagner Ware Sidney -O- logo positioned at the center of the base, combined with the complete absence of a catalog number, places this piece in the narrowest datable window in the entire Wagner Ware Sidney -O- skillet series: approximately 1922 to 1924. This is the earliest configuration in which the iconic stylized W logo appears on a Wagner skillet, cast before the four-digit catalog numbering system was adopted in 1924 and before the logo settled permanently into the 12 o'clock position. A scarce size made rarer still by an early mark, this No. 12 carries the oldest datable stylized logo configuration of any skillet in the SSC complete set.
Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 13 Cast Iron Skillet
The Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 13 is one of the two scarcest sizes in the standard Wagner skillet line. At 14¼ inches across the top rim and 12¾ inches at the cooking floor, it sits just below the No. 14 in the size progression and shares its rarity, its heat ring, and its commercial character. Never produced in smooth-bottom form, never intended for the household stove, the No. 13 was built for boarding houses, farm kitchens, and camp cookhouses — anywhere a cook worked at volume. This example, catalog no. 1063, is in exceptional restored condition with deep even seasoning, fully legible markings, and both handles intact. It occupies the penultimate position in the Steve's Seasoned Classics complete Wagner Ware Sidney -O- skillet set, No. 0 through No. 14.
Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 14 Cast Iron Skillet
At 15¼ inches across the top rim and 13½ inches at the cooking floor, the Wagner Ware Sidney -O- No. 14 is the largest standard skillet the Wagner Manufacturing Company of Sidney, Ohio ever produced — and one of the rarest. Built not for the household stove but for the boarding house, the logging camp cookhouse, and the farm kitchen feeding a harvest crew, the No. 14 represents the outer limit of what Wagner cast in its 108 years of Sidney production. This example, catalog no. 1064, carries the stylized Wagner Ware Sidney -O- logo, a heat ring correct and expected for this size, and the size mark '14' incised on the handle top — all confirming pre-1959 collector-era manufacture. It anchors the Steve's Seasoned Classics complete Wagner Ware Sidney -O- skillet set, No. 0 through No. 14.