Study Moed Katan folio 13B with parallel Hebrew-English text, traditional commentary, and modern study tools. Free access to Babylonian Talmud online.
And so it is taught in a baraita: One may bring home utensils from the house of a craftsman; For example: a jug from the jug-maker's house and a cup from the glass-blower’s house, as they will be used on the Festival itself. But he may not bring home wool from the dyer’s house or utensils from the
The Talmud comments: You have adequately explained the contradiction between the mishnayot about whether one may bring home utensils from the house of a craftsman. The Mishnah that permits it can be understood as referring to a case where the craftsman is not to be trusted. But the Mishnah in Pesaḥi
Mishnah: On the intermediate days of a Festival, figs that were spread out to dry may be covered with straw to protect them from rain and dew. R' Yehuda says: One may even condense the figs. Those who sell produce, clothing, and utensils may sell them in private, for the sake of the Festival. Fishe
Talmud: R' Ḥiyya bar Abba and R' Asi disagree about the following issue, and both of them assert their opinions in the name of Ḥizkiyya and R' Yoḥanan. One said: Cover the figs means to lightly cover them with straw, and condense means to spread straw over them densely. And the other one said: Cove
§ The Mishnah states: On the intermediate days of a Festival, those who sell produce, clothing, and utensils may sell them in private, for the sake of the Festival. Fishermen, groats makers, and bean pounders may ply their trades in private for the sake of the Festival. R' Yosei says that they were