
American-Made Glass Floats
In the 20th century, American companies manufactured glass fishing floats, which still wash up on beaches today.
Read moreIn the 20th century, American companies manufactured glass fishing floats, which still wash up on beaches today.
Read moreA wave-worn bottle punt or kickup on the beach is a satisfying find.
Read moreThere are infinite ideas for shaping and decorating clay pieces, and here are some ways to help identify them.
Read moreWith a long history of glassmaking, Toledo, Ohio, is known as “The Glass City.”
Read moreOld bottles recovered from the Thames are filled with intriguing backstories about the people who once used them.
Read moreLake Erie beachcombers still find artifacts on the lake’s shores from a shipwreck in 1764.
Read moreFinding a marble on the beach is on many people's bucket lists. Finding the bottle where it came from is even more exciting.
Read moreIt took 14 years, but Katerina finally identified her beach find from the Channel Islands.
Read moreIt’s hard to imagine Christmas without a cracker, the small gift, the bad joke, and the paper hat.
Read moreThe Bonney Family Beach house is nestled among the large beach mansions the last of a handful of what were once all family places.
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