Hey Folks! A few links for my other sites: My website: www.GMMD.us Facebook: Facebook.com/GreenMountainMetalDetecting Instagram: @Green.Mountain.Metal.Detecting
I was curious if you are aware that you are in another video done by “Awesome!” Date is for August 7 2021 Under title “ Girl Vanishes , 7 months later Hiker tells cops to look closer at log pile. There are a few pictures in it if you. I wasn’t sure if you knew about it or not.
The iron piece with the two brass things on it is the handle to a coffee grinder. They were on the top of the grinder. I believe the blade is for fleshing hides of animals like beaver,deer or hogs and cattle.👍☮️
Brad ,Looked like 1888 to me:) At 20:01 on the grounds there seemed to be a triangular piece of metal, naybe related to that leather cutter. Mason Jar glass inserts kept the food from touching the metal and were supposed to keep them from getting tainted. Cheers, Rik Spector
Hey brother I am going out for my first hunt in months my surgery was a absolute success and I have been cleared by my doctor to return to what I love to do. Wish me luck by the way I have truly enjoyed your videos lately you have really stepped it up and they have been awesome. I love the hunting for the Degraw I probably spelled that wrong but you get the gist of it. Great video bro God Bless brother.
I have a hole bunch of old leather tools,punches,blades,14 different tools ,I dont do leather work ,im 75 ,and I can't get around much any more,im from wisconsin.and as a young guy we walked the hills in west Central wis.about 50 MI from the mississippi river, in so watching you guys hikeing is awesome,that leather tool you found
That's what I was thinking initially, but Googling for similar description/photos it appears to be a Halfmoon Knife used for cutting leather/leather working.. as Brad had surmised. I personally would worry it is too fragile/brittle after all that time in the ground to risk trying to cut leather with it... but what do I know!
Nice hunt Brad .. I agree with the previous comments about the demi-lune fleshing tool, and have to agree it's in phenomenal condition for its age .. Not uncommon to find smaller versions, of similar form, used in home food preparation during the period, chopping vegetables and the like for consumption .. I know of passionate antique collectors of choppers "up-country" who would have all their juices flowing to stumble across one of that size and condition .. a wonderful find ! Thanks for sharing another great day in Vermont.
I dig maaon jar lids in MN all the time. The porcelain or white milk glass was used to keep the food inside the jar from coming into direct contact with the metal lid. This was done to keep the food from getting a metallic off-taste. The liner also decreased the chances of bacteria getting in the food. New lids obviously are lined with rubber/plastic seals. Hitting the site of a former homestead tomorrow here and hoping to find a mason jar lid or two while there. Jim Parry, Backroads Metal Detecting
squirrel hunting trick, tap a coin (penny) on your gun stock rapidly. Sounds like squirrel when they break nuts and eat. Other ones feel safe and come out. boom.
What you have also found is the lid from a preserving jar. They still make them--check "Fowlers Vaccola" preserving kit--it will show you all of the stuff--and the glass lids that are held on by a vacuum once the preserves cool down. Lotsa fun. There are US made versions too.
Blueberries almost a plague in southern NH. Its the soil. VT has a much sweeter soil, most of ours very acid. Thats why you have very different flora. If you eat those little berries & wild strawberries you will NEVER want that grocery store CRAP. Truly one of Gods gifts LFOD !
Great episode Brad. That cutting implement looks a lot like an Ulu, (traditional Inuit woman's knife which is used mainly for scraping skins, sewing & cutting meat).
That mason jar lid would have a brand name on it and it's name is Ball. A company would make these in the early 1900's but they made the first ones in 1858.
Items don't only get covered by leaves etc.With a lot of rain the soil will turn liquid,and the item will literally sink.I've found 40's coins in the middle of open parkland 9" deep(which had me scratching my head for a while) until I tumbled to what's going on.Been watching for years,and hope to be watching for years more.Good luck and good health to you and yours!
I have found 2 of those cutters at colonial sites in NC. Here they were used generally to chop cabbage for sauerkraut, and for potatoes and other root veggies
The old mason jar lids were made of zinc. The ceramic inserts were used to protect the contents of the jar from being contaminated by the zinc in the lid as it would give the contents an “off-taste”. Thanks for another great video!
HI FROM THE UK, I ONLY FOUND YOUR SITE 2 DAYS AGO, AND AM ENJOYING IT VERY MUCH AS I'M BAD WITH ARTHRITIS AND CAN'T GET OUT AT ALL. JUST HAVE A COUPLE OF SUGGESTIONS ABOUT TWO ITEMS YOU HAVE UNCOVERED IN YOUR SHOWS, ONE FROM 5 YEARS AGO,A ROUND PEWTER PIECE WITH A SLIT IN IT REMINDED ME OF THE WICK APERTURE ON A STORM LAMP, YOU FOUND THE WINDER IN THE SAME EPISODE. ALSO , IN AN EPISODE FROM 2 YEARS AGO YOU UNEARTHED TWO IRON OBJECTS WHICH YOU SAID MIGHT HAVE BEEN FIRE RELATED. IN ENGLAND WE CALL THEM FIRE DOGS, AND WOULD HAVE STOOD AT EITHER SIDE OF THE FIRE, IN THE HEARTH AREA, YOU NOTED THAT ONE OF THEM HAD BEEN CAST AND HAD A HEART IN THE DESIGN. I'M 68 AND HAVE A GOOD BASIC KNOWLEDGE OF ENGLISH AND FOREIGN ANTIQUES, I USED TO BE HOOKED ON A PROGRAM OVER HERE CALLED ANTIQUES ROAD TRIP WHICH HAS SADLY BEEN CANCELLED RECENTLY, BUT I HAVE SEEN FIRE DOGS ON NUMEROUS OCCASIONS AND CAN SAY WITH CONFIDENCE THAT THAT IS WHAT YOU HAD. NO IDEA WHY THEY WEREN'T A PAIR, MAYBE THE BLACKSMITH HAD BORROWED THE ORNATE ONE TO MAKE A FEW COPIES AND WAS USING IT AS A TEMPLATE. HOPE YOU FIND MY SUGGESTIONS USEFUL, JOHN KEARNS FROM BAMBER BRIDGE, LANCASHIRE.
My grandmother ( born in late 1800's) did a lot of canning and I saw many of those Mason jars with those same kind of lids.. There was a separate small gasket to seal the contents of the jar.. thx for taking us along for the ride..
The LU looking tool must be a fantastic steel to have taken a patina and survived like that. It will be interesting to see what kind of an edge it takes. I'll bet a really good one! I like the hide scraper suggestion, in which case the impregnation of fats may have helped keep the steel good. Look forward to seeing it as a leather tool.
I am really surprised you don’t find wild blueberries all the time, I grew up in the Brattleboro Vt, Keene Nh area and found them all the time. Arrowheads too. Love your channel! Takes me home again every Friday. Makes me wonder all the old metal I walked over and never knew it.
Brad, at the 2-minute mark I saw Checkerberry in your hand and Indian Cucumber just behind that... first thing I would have done is chew on the checkerberry leaves, then dig up the root of that "cucumber", THEN look at the buckle :-) ... Good show this week!
Your intro music is awesome. I love the complexity of the arrangement and how you bring the guitar up and expand it out. This was a fun dig do love that veggie/ leather cutting tool.
Hey Brad that Mason jar lid had a red rubber seal with it. When boiled in pan the jar would be removed and quickly tightened. When it cooled the jar would seal. The rubber seal had a tab that stuck out so you could pull it to break the vacuum seal and open the jar. Yes I'm and old guy and helped my great grandmom who was born in 1879 to can.
I was late to the party this morning. Usually up by 5:30 but things didn't go well last night so sleep deprived right now. Anyway, I made it and am excited by the probable coffee grinder handle and the hide scraper. I also like that fancy button quite a lot. Very nice design. Isn't it amazing how the earth holds onto things until it comes time for them to be found? Yep, great day for you. Thank you for a good start to my Friday morning. Now I can breathe deeply again and enjoy the memory.
I love your videos. History amazes me, I love Vermont, and you are such an interesting young man with a head full of information. Loved seeing your family and gardens, but especially like the nature shots. I'm in NY, right in the triangle of Mass and Vt., Berkshire. Bennington is about 35 minutes away, so I get to VT. now and then.
Great video! The Mason jar lid peeked my interest. My wife and can food and you can still get those lids but they are plastic with a rubber seal. We normally use disposable lids but these are good if you can't get those 😊
The old buttons with the stud end are called collar studs. They were used to attach collars to shirts--and not work shirts either Dress shirts.. These were from the days of starched collars and spats.
I believe the cresent cutter is a 'fleshing knife' used on animal skins once they're in a streatcher to clean all the meat and tallow off before they dry
The inserts are metal now adays for the Mason jar, they have a rubber gasket attached to them, they are placed on the top of the jar when its still hot (filled, stood in a kettle of water to get hot), as it cools it pulls that cover piece down tight (thus the gasket). After the jar is totally cool then you screw the rim piece down tight.
The blade you found reminded me immediately of the Inuit ulu. I believe ulu translates into ‘woman’s knife’. It was the women who scraped caribou hides or seal pelts to make clothing. They were originally made from stone and were a treasured possession. I imagine pioneer women had much the same duties. So, perhaps you found an old hide scrapper.
Awesome day. Good thing you slipped on the rock but glad you didn't hurt yourself! Nice knife chopper and coins. Sad the shoe buckle was broke and not complete darn it! Happy hunting!
Hey Folks! A few links for my other sites:
My website: www.GMMD.us
Facebook: Facebook.com/GreenMountainMetalDetecting
Instagram: @Green.Mountain.Metal.Detecting
I was curious if you are aware that you are in another video done by “Awesome!” Date is for August 7 2021 Under title “ Girl Vanishes , 7 months later Hiker tells cops to look closer at log pile. There are a few pictures in it if you. I wasn’t sure if you knew about it or not.
It's a slaughtering knife.
@@gaylenealis7268 hes aware and its been reported sometime last year or year before
@@hilljackprospecting4610 thanks for letting me know!
I see you got you a 4-wheeler now , I bet it cuts down on walking so far ..
The iron piece with the two brass things on it is the handle to a coffee grinder. They were on the top of the grinder. I believe the blade is for fleshing hides of animals like beaver,deer or hogs and cattle.👍☮️
I agree on both
@@dennisjohnson406 ditto
not for fleshing, it's a garden edger, food chopper, dough cutter
Go figure, I'll be out all day detecting and find nothing, but all Brad has to do is trip and discover a cool find.....Nice!
I seen something similar on the TV show "life below zero".it's used to flesh out an animal skin.
That blade looks like a tool used for cutting tobacco and rolling cigars. But I get the feeling that it's a common cutter shape for lots of jobs.
The rivet like buttons appear to be collar buttons for holding linen collars to a shirt. The posts are actually the front.
Brad
,Looked like 1888 to me:)
At 20:01 on the grounds there seemed to be a triangular piece of metal, naybe related to that leather cutter.
Mason Jar glass inserts kept the food from touching the metal and were
supposed to keep them from getting tainted.
Cheers,
Rik Spector
Yes that is correct.
Dude… definitely has to be the original pizza cutter…. 😂 😂
Or a rocker knife for cutting dough.
Hey brother I am going out for my first hunt in months my surgery was a absolute success and I have been cleared by my doctor to return to what I love to do. Wish me luck by the way I have truly enjoyed your videos lately you have really stepped it up and they have been awesome. I love the hunting for the Degraw I probably spelled that wrong but you get the gist of it. Great video bro God Bless brother.
I've been wondering where you've been 😃. I'm so glad to read your comment about your surgery being a complete success. Now go find those treasures 🤗
Those wild berries have so much better flavor than tame. What an added bonus treasure
I have a hole bunch of old leather tools,punches,blades,14 different tools ,I dont do leather work ,im 75 ,and I can't get around much any more,im from wisconsin.and as a young guy we walked the hills in west Central wis.about 50 MI from the mississippi river, in so watching you guys hikeing is awesome,that leather tool you found
Would love to see the restoration of that cutting tool!
Great video Brad. The blade is for cleaning the pelts of larger animals.
That's what I was thinking initially, but Googling for similar description/photos it appears to be a Halfmoon Knife used for cutting leather/leather working.. as Brad had surmised. I personally would worry it is too fragile/brittle after all that time in the ground to risk trying to cut leather with it... but what do I know!
I agree, it looks like a vintage hide scraper to me as well.
Every Friday I wake up this thinking oh boy it's Green Mountain day.
I miss you this morning 🤷♂️ better late then never , nice haul today 👍
Always enjoy your channel. 😊🙏
I have a similar chopper to that as it was my great grandmother's brought from Russia. Yes, mine has a wood handle.
Nice finds, Brad. Enjoy the holiday weekend. 👍🇺🇸
I've been enjoying watching your older videos, thank you.
YOU THE MAN OF METAL DETECTING
Nice hunt Brad .. I agree with the previous comments about the demi-lune fleshing tool, and have to agree it's in phenomenal condition for its age .. Not uncommon to find smaller versions, of similar form, used in home food preparation during the period, chopping vegetables and the like for consumption .. I know of passionate antique collectors of choppers "up-country" who would have all their juices flowing to stumble across one of that size and condition .. a wonderful find ! Thanks for sharing another great day in Vermont.
I dig maaon jar lids in MN all the time. The porcelain or white milk glass was used to keep the food inside the jar from coming into direct contact with the metal lid. This was done to keep the food from getting a metallic off-taste. The liner also decreased the chances of bacteria getting in the food. New lids obviously are lined with rubber/plastic seals. Hitting the site of a former homestead tomorrow here and hoping to find a mason jar lid or two while there.
Jim Parry, Backroads Metal Detecting
Great finds. Especially the blueberries... Huggs from the great state of Maine... 🤗
BRAD ON 1443.MASON JARS HAD THE MILK GLASS INSERTS TO KEEP THE FOOD FROM COMING IN CONTACT WITH THE ZINC LID.
Brad nice day for you young man enjoyed the video and blueberry love them stay blessed and see you again on the next episode 2👍
The milk glass inserts on jar lids were to keep acidic contents (like pickles or tomatoes) from eating the metal lid
Wish I had some of those! Modern lids are weaksauce.
As a kid in Scotland I used a cutting tool just like you found , it had a long handle and it was for edging lawns, or cutting sod.
Lol. woodpecker made my day. Great video Brad.
squirrel hunting trick, tap a coin (penny) on your gun stock rapidly. Sounds like squirrel when they break nuts and eat. Other ones feel safe and come out. boom.
Amazing! Love that cutting tool and how you tripped into finding it. Like to have a look at it when you get it restored. 🤓
Thanks Brad…as always love the adventure and scenery👍😊
Love the sound of the water when you dug the shoe buckle.
another great day stay safe
The soundtrack for all your vids is incredible. I know you play all of the instruments, and that adds a great deal to the whole experience.
Long Trail End2End
Good morning Brad, it’s a great Friday when I start my day with you. Wonderful finds and video. Have a wonderful week. Joyce 🇺🇸❤️
At the sound of the gunshots, I realized it was time for you to start wearing an orange vest. Stay safe! (It's a Mom thing).
Good video I enjoyed it nice finds catch you on the next one 🇺🇸
Lots of nice finds. That cutter looks to be for removing hides from animals to butcher.
cool...like a Ulu knife
Great finds today! Love the old coppers. Keep up the good work. Also love the old tool!
What you have also found is the lid from a preserving jar. They still make them--check "Fowlers Vaccola" preserving kit--it will show you all of the stuff--and the glass lids that are held on by a vacuum once the preserves cool down. Lotsa fun. There are US made versions too.
Blueberries almost a plague in southern NH. Its the soil. VT has a much sweeter soil, most of ours
very acid. Thats why you have very different flora. If you eat those little berries & wild strawberries
you will NEVER want that grocery store CRAP. Truly one of Gods gifts
LFOD !
The blade you found is an old garden tool called a Kantenstecher/ edging knife
That's what I was thinking. Looks like a sod cutter that the Scots and Irish used to cut peat.
Those are some great finds! I also found an Indian head penny from 1906.. great day!
Great episode Brad. That cutting implement looks a lot like an Ulu, (traditional Inuit woman's knife which is used mainly for scraping skins, sewing & cutting meat).
I thought that as well. Search “The Fastest woman with a Ulu” for a cool example.
@@ronsdigginthemidwest5502 Pretty sure we're correct :)
That mason jar lid would have a brand name on it and it's name is Ball. A company would make these in the early 1900's but they made the first ones in 1858.
Items don't only get covered by leaves etc.With a lot of rain the soil will turn liquid,and the item will literally sink.I've found 40's coins in the middle of open parkland 9" deep(which had me scratching my head for a while) until I tumbled to what's going on.Been watching for years,and hope to be watching for years more.Good luck and good health to you and yours!
A Blog video of you restoring the leather tool would be cool to see. Also, maybe showing how it works? Would be a good winter video 👍
I have found 2 of those cutters at colonial sites in NC. Here they were used generally to chop cabbage for sauerkraut, and for potatoes and other root veggies
Thank you for the great family content.
Another great video 📹 love the blade and the coppers
Good morning and thumbs UP !
The old mason jar lids were made of zinc. The ceramic inserts were used to protect the contents of the jar from being contaminated by the zinc in the lid as it would give the contents an “off-taste”. Thanks for another great video!
The mystery buttons are collar studs and the mystery doodad
looks like a desk hinge, or a box hinge.
Excellent video Brad! I really enjoyed watching it. Happy Hunting!
HI FROM THE UK, I ONLY FOUND YOUR SITE 2 DAYS AGO, AND AM ENJOYING IT VERY MUCH AS I'M BAD WITH ARTHRITIS AND CAN'T GET OUT AT ALL. JUST HAVE A COUPLE OF SUGGESTIONS ABOUT TWO ITEMS YOU HAVE UNCOVERED IN YOUR SHOWS, ONE FROM 5 YEARS AGO,A ROUND PEWTER PIECE WITH A SLIT IN IT REMINDED ME OF THE WICK APERTURE ON A STORM LAMP, YOU FOUND THE WINDER IN THE SAME EPISODE. ALSO , IN AN EPISODE FROM 2 YEARS AGO YOU UNEARTHED TWO IRON OBJECTS WHICH YOU SAID MIGHT HAVE BEEN FIRE RELATED. IN ENGLAND WE CALL THEM FIRE DOGS, AND WOULD HAVE STOOD AT EITHER SIDE OF THE FIRE, IN THE HEARTH AREA, YOU NOTED THAT ONE OF THEM HAD BEEN CAST AND HAD A HEART IN THE DESIGN. I'M 68 AND HAVE A GOOD BASIC KNOWLEDGE OF ENGLISH AND FOREIGN ANTIQUES, I USED TO BE HOOKED ON A PROGRAM OVER HERE CALLED ANTIQUES ROAD TRIP WHICH HAS SADLY BEEN CANCELLED RECENTLY, BUT I HAVE SEEN FIRE DOGS ON NUMEROUS OCCASIONS AND CAN SAY WITH CONFIDENCE THAT THAT IS WHAT YOU HAD. NO IDEA WHY THEY WEREN'T A PAIR, MAYBE THE BLACKSMITH HAD BORROWED THE ORNATE ONE TO MAKE A FEW COPIES AND WAS USING IT AS A TEMPLATE. HOPE YOU FIND MY SUGGESTIONS USEFUL, JOHN KEARNS FROM BAMBER BRIDGE, LANCASHIRE.
Yay!!! Great video! Great finds! See ya next week for sure!!!
I'm glad you didn't get hurt when you fell.
Yes The Mason Jar lid always had a rubber gasket to help it seal I had a whole set of very old Blue mason Jars Years ago.
My grandmother ( born in late 1800's) did a lot of canning and I saw many of those Mason jars with those same kind of lids.. There was a separate small gasket to seal the contents of the jar.. thx for taking us along for the ride..
The projection on the cutting tool (or anything like a knife) that goes up into a handle to secure it is called a tang. That's an awesome find!
Great way to spend time in the woods.
The large button cleaned up beautifully! The tool is awesome! Always enjoy your videos.. Great finds.. another great video....
Looking forward to seeing your new find restored. It’s going to look amazing.
The LU looking tool must be a fantastic steel to have taken a patina and survived like that. It will be interesting to see what kind of an edge it takes. I'll bet a really good one! I like the hide scraper suggestion, in which case the impregnation of fats may have helped keep the steel good. Look forward to seeing it as a leather tool.
I am really surprised you don’t find wild blueberries all the time, I grew up in the Brattleboro Vt, Keene Nh area and found them all the time. Arrowheads too.
Love your channel! Takes me home again every Friday. Makes me wonder all the old metal I walked over and never knew it.
Same here. I lived in Underhill Vt for a while and we found them in the late summer all the time.
Nice find you tripped over. Your shows are very good. Keep em coming
Brad, at the 2-minute mark I saw Checkerberry in your hand and Indian Cucumber just behind that... first thing I would have done is chew on the checkerberry leaves, then dig up the root of that "cucumber", THEN look at the buckle :-) ... Good show this week!
The sharp triangle is a cabbage cutter for kraut. My 1800's born grandparents used them.
Your intro music is awesome. I love the complexity of the arrangement and how you bring the guitar up and expand it out. This was a fun dig do love that veggie/ leather cutting tool.
Another excellent hunt, and that cutting tool you stumbled across is a top notch find. Thank you for another entertaing video 👍 top shelf.
Beaut blokes as we say Downunder Australia way.
Big loves and lots of gold to you both.
A Nana in Queensland Australia ✌🙃💜
Sweet finds!
Hey Brad that Mason jar lid had a red rubber seal with it. When boiled in pan the jar would be removed and quickly tightened. When it cooled the jar would seal. The rubber seal had a tab that stuck out so you could pull it to break the vacuum seal and open the jar. Yes I'm and old guy and helped my great grandmom who was born in 1879 to can.
Found some really great stuff! Good day. Stay safe with your family.
I was late to the party this morning. Usually up by 5:30 but things didn't go well last night so sleep deprived right now. Anyway, I made it and am excited by the probable coffee grinder handle and the hide scraper. I also like that fancy button quite a lot. Very nice design. Isn't it amazing how the earth holds onto things until it comes time for them to be found? Yep, great day for you. Thank you for a good start to my Friday morning. Now I can breathe deeply again and enjoy the memory.
Great finds congrats
Awesome video ty Brad
I love your videos. History amazes me, I love Vermont, and you are such an interesting young man with a head full of information. Loved seeing your family and gardens, but especially like the nature shots. I'm in NY, right in the triangle of Mass and Vt., Berkshire. Bennington is about 35 minutes away, so I get to VT. now and then.
The iron think with the 2 brass buttons could also be of a buggy with a canvas or leather top
the blue berries and you swinging the detector was a nice touch to the video
That tool is amazing surprise find! I hope u show the new handle u add to make it beautiful again!
Great job enjoy it
Great music! Great finds! 🇨🇦
That is definitely an ulu knife. I have one identical. Also known as a veggie chopper.
Great video! The Mason jar lid peeked my interest. My wife and can food and you can still get those lids but they are plastic with a rubber seal. We normally use disposable lids but these are good if you can't get those 😊
That was a great hunt. The cutting tool is so nice. You looked so happy to find it.
Thanks for sharing your videos, can't wait for the next adventure.
It was always meant to be found by him YaHuWaH does those special things for. Us. YaHushuWaH GREAT Gifts
Proud of you Brad !
The old buttons with the stud end are called collar studs. They were used to attach collars to shirts--and not work shirts either Dress shirts.. These were from the days of starched collars and spats.
I believe the cresent cutter is a 'fleshing knife' used on animal skins once they're in a streatcher to clean all the meat and tallow off before they dry
The round cutting tool you thought was for leather my dad had something like that when he used to tan hides back in the 80s
The inserts are metal now adays for the Mason jar, they have a rubber gasket attached to them, they are placed on the top of the jar when its still hot (filled, stood in a kettle of water to get hot), as it cools it pulls that cover piece down tight (thus the gasket). After the jar is totally cool then you screw the rim piece down tight.
The blade you found reminded me immediately of the Inuit ulu. I believe ulu translates into ‘woman’s knife’. It was the women who scraped caribou hides or seal pelts to make clothing. They were originally made from stone and were a treasured possession. I imagine pioneer women had much the same duties. So, perhaps you found an old hide scrapper.
its a can opener, brad! dug thousands of them
I believe that second find you made is part of the mechanism that rises and lowers the canopy over a Surrey or some other kind of horse drawn buggy.
Yes it is
Awesome day. Good thing you slipped on the rock but glad you didn't hurt yourself! Nice knife chopper and coins. Sad the shoe buckle was broke and not complete darn it! Happy hunting!
like your videos enjoy your woods ,they are identical to mine ,I border vt and bore the mountain is sand gate
Thank you Brad for a vary enjoyable video I look forward to them
Agree that blade tool is for skinning or leather/hide work. IMO that was a great day of detecting.
4:20 piece of Jalacy window mechanism
Great video and some nice finds. Keep it up Brad!
That cool ive found a lot of those thin milk glass plates and never knew they were from Mason jar lids...