Products in the “Tap Handles” Category
Icehouse Lucite Tap Handle
This is the Icehouse Lucite 7" Tap Handle
Plank Road Brewery, Since 1855.
Alaskan Amber Compass and Life Ring Tap Handle
This is an Alaskana Amber Compass and Life Ring Tap Handle.
Compass At Top Of Tap Handle
This Tap Handle is made of Resin. 13" Tall
Shipping Included To The Lower 48 States
Alaskan Brewing IPA Surfboard Tap Handle
Alaskan IPA tap handle celebrates the surf culture found in Alaska and the Pacific Coast. 11"
This bright green surfboard has an Alaskan wave breaking at its base. Get this eye-catcher for your kegerator today!
Shipping To The Lower 48 Included
Amstel Light Gold Ceramic Tap Handle
This is the Amstel Light 12" Gold Ceramic Tap Handle.
As the first importer to introduce light beer in 1980, Amstel led the American light beer revolution with delicious Amstel Light. At just 95 calories per bottle, its unique mixture of barley and hops delivers a full – never diluted – flavor that’s just as tasty as regular beer.
•Born in 1980
Amstel Light Official Beer of the PGA 11″ Wooden Tap Handle
This is the Amstel Light PGA 12" Wooden Tap Handle
On June 11, 1870, the first stone for the Amstel Brewery in Amsterdam was laid. The new brewery was the brainchild of two Amsterdam businessmen, De Pester and J.H. van Marwijk Kooy, responding to the skyrocketing popularity of Bavarian beers in Holland. And although there were already 559 breweries in Holland at that time, only two of them brewed Bavarian style 'lager' beer. By 1886, the Amstel Brewery was the city's largest brewer of lager beer. In 1883, Amstel started exporting beer to the UK and the Dutch colonies in the Far East.
In 1980, Amstel Light was born. It is now the #1 imported light beer in the United States. Characteristic of this beer is a unique selection of raw materials and an intensive fermenting process. The result is a special light beer containing only 3.5% alcohol and approximately 35% fewer calories than regular lager beer. Its popularity proves that great taste wasn't sacrificed along the way. It's the beer drinker's light beer.
Amstel Light Resin & Wood 12″ Tap Handle
This is the Amstel Light Resin & Wood 12" Tap Handle
This tap handle resembles an old potatoe masher
As the first importer to introduce light beer in 1980, Amstel led the American light beer revolution with delicious Amstel Light. At just 95 calories per bottle, its unique mixture of barley and hops delivers a full – never diluted – flavor that’s just as tasty as regular beer.
•Born in 1980
Bass Ale Illuminated Rotating 13″Tap Handle
This is the Bass Ale Illuminated 13" Tap Handle
This is a neat tap handle the round top spins(non motorized) and lights up(Batteries 3AA)
The Bass Brewery was founded as a brewery in 1777 by William Bass in Burton upon Trent, England The main brand was Bass Pale Ale, which was once the highest selling beer in the UK. The company became one of the main breweries in the UK, and Bass Pale Ale was exported throughout the British Empire, the distinctive red triangle becoming the UK's first registered trademark.
Bass Ale Three Sided Red Triangle Tap Handle
This is the Bass Ale Three Sided Red Triangle 12" Tap Handle
The Bass Brewery was founded as a brewery in 1777 by William Bass in Burton upon Trent, England The main brand was Bass Pale Ale, which was once the highest selling beer in the UK. The company became one of the main breweries in the UK, and Bass Pale Ale was exported throughout the British Empire, the distinctive red triangle becoming the UK's first registered trademark.
Bass Ale Traditional 12″ Ceramic Tap Handle
This is the bass Ale Traditional 12" Ceramic Tap Handle
The Bass Brewery was founded as a brewery in 1777 by William Bass in Burton upon Trent, England The main brand was Bass Pale Ale, which was once the highest selling beer in the UK. The company became one of the main breweries in the UK, and Bass Pale Ale was exported throughout the British Empire, the distinctive red triangle becoming the UK's first registered trademark.
Beamish Irish Stout Tap Handle with Shield
This is the Beamish Irish Stout Tap Handle with Shield
It is a 12" Wooden Handle
The Beamish and Crawford brewery was founded in Cork, Ireland in 1792 by William Beamish and William Crawford.
They purchased an existing brewery on a site that had been used for brewing since at least 1650 (and possibly as early as 1500). Alfred Barnard, a noted brewing and distilling historian, remarked in his book Noted Breweries of Great Britain & Ireland in 1889 that "The business of Beamish & Crawford in Cork is a very old one dating as far back as the seventeenth century and it is said to be the most ancient porter brewery in Ireland". The brewery is situated in the heart of Cork's medieval city, close to the site of the city's South Gate.
Beck’s Bottle Tap Handle
This is the Becks Bottle Tap Handle
This Glass Bottle Tap Handle Is A Must If You Are A Fan Of The Beer.
Becks Dark Powder Coated Aluminum Tap Handle
This is the Becks Dark Gold Colored Powder Coated Aluminum Tap Handle.
This tap is about 12" tall.
Becks Oktoberfest Compositie Tap Handle
This Tap Handle is 12 inches Tall.
Beck's Oktoberfest for U.S. Market only -forbidden in Gemany because it is not brewed by a Munich Brewery. VERY INTERESSSSTING.
Blue Moon Full Moon Winter Ale Tap Handle
This is the Blue Moon Full Moon Ceramic 10" Tap Handle
For the winter season of 2006, Blue Moon Brewing Company released Blue Moon Winter Ale. In 2007, the name of this variety was changed to "Full Moon" with the subtitle "Blue Moon Winter Ale."
It is described on the bottle as a "winter seasonal ale that blends three varieties of slow roasted malts and multiple hops to deliver exquisite aroma and taste". It is brewed with natural flavor and a caramel color.
It contains 5.6% alcohol in a standard 12 fluid ounce bottle. The back of the bottle reads it's "that time again-the weather cools and our seasonal ale is here. Blue Moon Winter Ale captures all the season's subtle colors and complexity."
Blue Moon Harvest Moon Pumpkin Ale Ceramic Tap Handle
This is the Harvest Moon Pumpkin Ale 10" Ceramic Tap Handle
This variety contains the flavors of vine-ripened pumpkins and other autumnal spices. Blue Moon Pumpkin Ale is typically available in bottles from mid-September through December. In 2007, the name of this variety was completely changed to "Harvest Moon". It contains 5.6% alcohol in a standard 12 fluid ounce bottle.
Blue Moon Honeymoon Summer Ale Tap Handle
This is the Blue Moon Honeymoon Summer Ale 10" Ceramic Tap Handle
This is a brand new release from the makers of the Belgian White Beer.
Blue Moon Honey Moon Summer Ale. "This ale is brewed with clover honey, orange peel, pale malt, and malted white wheat." This ale was a first place winner at the Great American beer Festival 2006.
Brooklyn Beer Pilsner Ceramic Tap Handle
This is the Brooklyn Pilsner Ceramic 12"Tap Handle
Brooklyn has always been a haven for immigrants and entrepreneurs. In the 19th Century, many of the immigrants were Germans who brought with them their taste for good beer and their tradition of brewing beer by the Reinheitsgebot, the purity law that since the 1500?s has legally forbidden the use of any ingredients other than hops, malted barley and wheat, yeast and water. Brooklyn, along with cities like St. Louis and Milwaukee with large German populations, became one of America?s foremost brewing centers in the 1800s.
One hundred years ago, there were no fewer than 48 breweries in Brooklyn. Taverns were community civic centers where the important issues of the day were debated by everyone from politicians to the workers who built the Brooklyn Bridge.
In the afternoon and evening, it was common to see children scurrying back and forth to breweries and neighborhood taverns carrying pails of fresh beer, known as growlers, for their parents to enjoy with dinner. Brewers themselves were civic and social leaders, and their monuments remain an impressive part of Brooklyn?s Evergreen Cemetery.
The last of those great brewing families, Schaefer and Liebmann (Rheingold), closed their Brooklyn breweries in 1976, victims of competition with bigger Midwest breweries that produced vast volumes of beer more cheaply over the country?s new highway system and peddled them through televisions commercials that sold ?national? beers as superior to local ones. By then, the light pilsner beers made with corn and rice as well as malted barley that most Americans drank had little in common with the full-flavored robust lagers and ales brewed before Prohibition.
Brooklyn IPA Ceramic Tap Handle
This is the Brooklyn IPA Ceramic 12" Tap Handle
Brooklyn has always been a haven for immigrants and entrepreneurs. In the 19th Century, many of the immigrants were Germans who brought with them their taste for good beer and their tradition of brewing beer by the Reinheitsgebot, the purity law that since the 1500?s has legally forbidden the use of any ingredients other than hops, malted barley and wheat, yeast and water.
Brooklyn, along with cities like St. Louis and Milwaukee with large German populations, became one of America?s foremost brewing centers in the 1800s.
One hundred years ago, there were no fewer than 48 breweries in Brooklyn. Taverns were community civic centers where the important issues of the day were debated by everyone from politicians to the workers who built the Brooklyn Bridge. In the afternoon and evening, it was common to see children scurrying back and forth to breweries and neighborhood taverns carrying pails of fresh beer, known as growlers, for their parents to enjoy with dinner.
Brewers themselves were civic and social leaders, and their monuments remain an impressive part of Brooklyn?s Evergreen Cemetery.
The last of those great brewing families, Schaefer and Liebmann (Rheingold), closed their Brooklyn breweries in 1976, victims of competition with bigger Midwest breweries that produced vast volumes of beer more cheaply over the country?s new highway system and peddled them through televisions commercials that sold ?national? beers as superior to local ones. By then, the light pilsner beers made with corn and rice as well as malted barley that most Americans drank had little in common with the full-flavored robust lagers and ales brewed before Prohibition.
Bud Dry Draft Solid Oak Vintage Tap Handle
This is the Bud Dry 12" Wooden Draft Tap Handle.
THIS HANDLE IS FROM AN ERA WHEN THINGS WERE MADE RIGHT THE FIRST TIME.
THIS IS TOP QUALITY REAL OAK.
NOT LIKE THE HANDLES TODAY OUTSOURCED OVERSEAS. OWN A PIECE OF HISTORY THAT DISSAPEARED FROM ANHEUSER BUSCH.
Bud Ice New York Rangers Hockey Stick Tap Handle
This tap handle is 14" tall and is made from resin. Attached to the top of the tap handle is an OFFICIAL Vegum NHL Hockey Puck with the New York Rangers Coat of Arms printed on it. It's the perfect collector's item for any New York Ranger's fan!
Bud Light Acrylic Surfboard Tap Handle
This is the Bud Light Acrylic Surfboard Tap Handle.
This collectable was released in 1993 and is 10" tall.
Bud Light Softball Bat Tap Handle
This is the Bud Light Softball Bat Tap Handle.
Item #801-083, Released in 1991 this is a real collectible.
Bud Lucite Football Tap Handle
This Tap Handle is 7 inches long.
Budweiser Classic Draught Major League Baseball Tap Handle
This is the Budweiser Classic Draught, Official Beer of Major League Baseball Tap Handle.
This tap is 13" Tall
This tap has a Red Wooden Bat with Real Baseball Connected.
Budweiser Frog Tap Handle
This is the Budweiser Frog Tap Handle
Item#090-672
This collectable was released in 1995 and is 10" Tall
Budweiser Guitar Tap Handle
This is the Budweiser Guitar Tap Handle, Item # 090-643.
This Heavy Plastic Tap Handle was first rerleased in 1991. This is a real collectable.
Budweiser Major League Baseball Tap Handle
This is the Budweiser Major League Baseball Tap Handle.
The Official Beer Of America's Favorite Pastime. Wooden Bat with Baseball Mounted to Top.
