OhioCanGuy wrote: ↑Fri May 04, 2018 7:33 amWow, nice!
I assume that is NOT Mark from Indy's can that was recently on Ebay? If it is the same can, you improved the rub out immensely.
You assumed wrong. It is my old buddy Marks can. LEON.
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OhioCanGuy wrote: ↑Fri May 04, 2018 7:33 amWow, nice!
I assume that is NOT Mark from Indy's can that was recently on Ebay? If it is the same can, you improved the rub out immensely.
Leon, that is amazing. You need to post before and after pics. Maybe in its own thread.Leon wrote: ↑Fri May 04, 2018 6:05 pmOhioCanGuy wrote: ↑Fri May 04, 2018 7:33 amWow, nice!
I assume that is NOT Mark from Indy's can that was recently on Ebay? If it is the same can, you improved the rub out immensely.
You assumed wrong. It is my old buddy Marks can. LEON.
@willssoda I use the same method. I copy it to my pc, open it in paint, rotate it 90 degrees, save it, and then post to the forum. You can also right click on the image and just select 'rotate right" and then save and post. A lot of extra work but........ConeAddict wrote: ↑Thu May 10, 2018 10:24 am What I find with pics from my phone is once I copy them to my PC I edit them, flip them around 360 and then save them. Then when I post them they stay upright, it's something about the way my iphone saves them, just need to re-save them on the PC to get them in the right format I guess.
But more importantly, did you remember to put the lid back on the donuts? Don't upset your wife. :)
Here's some 1966 Soft Drink Exposition salt and pepper shakers made by Glenshaw Glass.
Here is some interesting information.willssoda wrote: ↑Thu Jul 26, 2018 9:43 pm Those are cool, thanks for sharing. I am realizing that there are are more salt and pepper shakers available then the samples. So I guess that would lead me to ask is one tougher than the other? Anyone have anymore information on these little bottles and rarity?