I totally missed seeing that, Pam. The rust colour camouflages so much of it.@Aunt Marg The edges on the cart are obviously razor sharp due to gradual wearing away. Very dangerous.
I totally missed seeing that, Pam. The rust colour camouflages so much of it.@Aunt Marg The edges on the cart are obviously razor sharp due to gradual wearing away. Very dangerous.
Not of you clean it the right way and often which is what you do with toilets and houses.Even with a new toilet, it will soon look this way again because of the high iron and mineral content in the water supply.
Remember these cabinets that I couldn't get the drawers open in the summer. I just remembered them and tried to open the drawers. EMPTY!This was left in the cellar by the previous owners. I can't get the drawers open. They may have rusty nails in them, antique coins, or just be empty. Probably not worth trying to move after being on that wet cellar floor for decades. Probably fall apart if touched. Dimensions in photo caption.
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What?Remember these cabinets that I couldn't get the drawers open in the summer. I just remembered them and tried to open the drawers. EMPTY!
Sadly, no.No untold number of $100 bills stacked up in bundles? LOL!
Yup... I’d keep it all and use as container gargens and trellises. And that level I would add a board on the top and use as a cute little shelfSeveral large clothes racks (my mom always dried the clothes in the cellar next to the furnace in winter). Two galvanized pails. Two galvenized tubs (one is pretty rusty but holds water - these would be okay for container gardening) and a spirit level.
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I was considering saving them for my yard sale, but people are so fussy these days. The racks I could use to display clothing. I haven't even scratched the surface cleaning the cellar. There are several large stoneware pieces down there that might be worth something (to a collector). One has the likemess of George Washington on it. It was made in 1932 - his birth bicentennial.
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That is why God made liners for the pots and garden containersBut they are all Rusty!
One thing that pleased me, though, was finding the mate to an odd shaker that was in a cabinet upstairs. I though my mom had bought just one shaker, now I have the pair. It must have fallen into a box if assorted electrical gadgets my dad had near the shelving. There was a patent number on the bottom, so I did some research and found they were made in the 1920s.
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My sister, who is in the business, calls them dead people toys.The problem is finding folks who want these things and more importantly, are willing to pay for them. My kids don't want more than a single Orrefors or Waterford vase. Lenox or other fine china, crystal bowls, sterling silver flatware, Lladro figures, etc, don't speak to them.
Hummels, Precious Moments, knick-knacks, depression glass, etc. are barely worth what it costs to haul them to the dump.
(I'm not suggesting that I own all that I listed above - just saying that younger generations don't care for what many in our generation and older valued.)
Junk from the cellar indeed. Most of us inherited plenty of beautiful things that our family will not be interested in when it's their turn to own them.
Sometimes I feel sad about this, but I realize that future generations get to make their own decisions about what's valuable and what they want in their homes.
When I remodeled the bathroom in our first home, I put some time capsule time type stuff in the wall for the next remodeler to find.What?
No untold number of $100 bills stacked up in bundles? LOL!
That is so awesome!When I remodeled the bathroom in our first home, I put some time capsule time type stuff in the wall for the next remodeler to find.
That would probably cash out for a nickel by thenThat is so awesome!
I always thought it would be fun to write a million dollar check and tuck it into a sealable container but date it for the year 3000, or something silly like that.
Not sure it's true but when I was a kid I watched my gramma stick old nails in the dirt at the base of her rose bushes and she said the rust is good for the soil (the iron maybe?).That is why God made liners for the pots and garden containers
Excellent point! LOL!That would probably cash out for a nickel by then