ADVERTISEMENT

I spend most of my days beachcombing and searching for sea treasures for making sea-themed jewelry. I am not only searching for seashells and corals, but also for rare sea glass and sea pottery.

One of my proudest finds is a 200-year-old undamaged Maraschino bottle, from the Austro-Hungarian Empire. After finding it, I returned it back home to the Cosmacendi Palace, where in the past lived the maker of the bottle and is now the Museum of Ancient Glass! It was not only an incredible find but also a bottle without any proof that it even existed.

I love using a piece of history in my jewelry and other creations that makes it more special and one of a kind. If you are interested in my jewelry, you can find it here!

More info: Instagram

RELATED:
    #2

    Tiny Seashells

    Tiny Seashells

    Report

    #3

    200-Year-Old Cosmacendi Maraschino Bottle

    200-Year-Old Cosmacendi Maraschino Bottle

    Report

    #4

    Deep Purple Is One Of The Rarest Sea Glass Colors

    Deep Purple Is One Of The Rarest Sea Glass Colors

    Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    #5

    Beautiful Perfume Bottle

    Beautiful Perfume Bottle

    Report

    #6

    German Company Oberselters Mineral Water Bottle From 1860s

    German Company Oberselters Mineral Water Bottle From 1860s

    Report

    Add photo comments
    POST
    DE Ray
    Community Member
    5 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    That is a truly gorgeous design. Simple and functional, but quite a bit of detail obviously went into the manufacture.

    View More Replies...
    View more commentsArrow down menu
    #7

    100+ Years Old Sea Pottery Finds

    100+ Years Old Sea Pottery Finds

    Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    #9

    All Pieces Were Found On The Beach

    All Pieces Were Found On The Beach

    The 3 different plates that I placed together, the cup with the initials AC, a saucer for the cup and a silver spoon with the initials BM.

    Report

    #10

    Victorian Art Glass Vase From The Second Half Of The 19th Century

    Victorian Art Glass Vase From The Second Half Of The 19th Century

    It has an applied trail of blue rigaree citrine glass trailing around the vase and lovely silver design of a branch with flowers, leaves and acorns.

    Report

    #11

    Cobalt Blue Bottle With A Moon And A Star

    Cobalt Blue Bottle With A Moon And A Star

    It was probably once used for powders.

    Report

    Add photo comments
    POST
    Alexandru Bucur
    Community Member
    5 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This is definitely an apothecary bottle of some description, because, at the time, cobalt-blue bottles like this were typically used for poisonous substances. The star-and-crescent would suggest Turkey, but of course, it was a widely used symbol, specifically because it suggested "oriental-ness". For all we know, this bottle could have been made in down-town Graz...

    View More Replies...
    View more commentsArrow down menu
    #12

    Found This Stunning Blue Piece The Other Day

    Found This Stunning Blue Piece The Other Day

    Report

    #13

    The Bottle With Healing Water Made From The Melissa Herb

    The Bottle With Healing Water Made From The Melissa Herb

    This beautiful bottle, with the words "Melissa Dei C Scalzi" on one side and "Venezia" on the other, is the famous "l’Acqua di Melissa". I have contacted the so-called barefoot Carmelite Fathers of the Venetian Province and they have told me that this bottle was made in the early 1800s

    Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    #15

    Glass Stamps From 200-Year-Old Maraschino Bottles

    Glass Stamps From 200-Year-Old Maraschino Bottles

    Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    #17

    Blue, Green, Aqua, Turquoise, Seafoam, Navy... So Many Shades Of The Rare Color Blue

    Blue, Green, Aqua, Turquoise, Seafoam, Navy... So Many Shades Of The Rare Color Blue

    Report

    #18

    So Tiny, So Colorful, So Cute

    So Tiny, So Colorful, So Cute

    Report

    #19

    Luigi Dejak Beer Bottle From The 19th Century

    Luigi Dejak Beer Bottle From The 19th Century

    Report

    Add photo comments
    POST
    Alexandru Bucur
    Community Member
    5 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Pola, which is now in the next country... Still amazes me how diverse the old Austro-Hungarian Empire was... which is why it ever stood a chance in the modern day. Just before the war, in 1912-13, the House of Deputies had to be dissolved twice, because delegates of different ethnicities (which each spoke their own language as a point of pride and there were no translators) would start fighting on the floor of the chamber and pull all kinds of shenanigans to impede their opponents, such as the Czech Radicals showing up one day with a small steam engine attached to a whistle from a locomotive. It was said that the citizens of Vienna, who could attend the sessions, would consider it better than the circus...

    View More Replies...
    View more commentsArrow down menu
    #20

    Old Pharmacy Bottles

    Old Pharmacy Bottles

    The number showed the amount of millilitres in the bottle

    Report

    #21

    150+ Years Old Stamp From A Luxardo Maraschino Bottle Zara

    150+ Years Old Stamp From A Luxardo Maraschino Bottle Zara

    Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    See Also on Bored Panda
    #22

    Vintage Nail Polish Bottle With A Little Bit Of The Original Nail Polish

    Vintage Nail Polish Bottle With A Little Bit Of The Original Nail Polish

    The liquid dried up but it still trapped inside.

    Report

    Add photo comments
    POST
    Lotte
    Community Member
    5 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I'm imagining like this lady on a cruise who is painting her nails and after a while just YEETS it into the ocean " That wasn't my colour"

    View More Replies...
    View more commentsArrow down menu
    #23

    Half Of A French Plate From The 1860s

    Half Of A French Plate From The 1860s

    Report

    Add photo comments
    POST
    Douglas Campbell
    Community Member
    5 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    The style looks to be transfer English blue flow. Is it stamped 'fabriqué en France'?

    View More Replies...
    View more commentsArrow down menu
    #24

    Bullet!

    Bullet!

    The 8×52mmR Mannlicher cartridge was first introduced in 1888 for the Mannlicher M1888 rifle. It was made in and also used by the Austro-Hungarian Empire from 1888 to 1890.

    Report

    Add photo comments
    POST
    Alexandru Bucur
    Community Member
    5 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Hah. I have one of those as well, from 1891 (and yes, that makes it pretty rare, because this kind of ammunition was theoretically superseded by the "M.1890 scharfe Patrone" 8X50R semi-smokeless round one year earlier, but obviously they kept producing them for at least a bit longer), found in the ditch of the "Alba Carolina" fortress in Alba Iulia. It's weird to think that, until 100 years ago, we would have been in the same country, to the extent that, when my great-grandfather fought the Italians in the Isonzo Campaign, one of the battles he took part in was that of Caporetto, which is now Kobarid in Slovenia...

    View More Replies...
    View more commentsArrow down menu
    #25

    Sometimes Searching For Tiny Treasures Leads You To A Treasure Chest Full Of Gold

    Sometimes Searching For Tiny Treasures Leads You To A Treasure Chest Full Of Gold

    .

    Report

    #26

    Beautiful Texture On This Glass Bottle Bottom

    Beautiful Texture On This Glass Bottle Bottom

    Report

    #28

    Surprise! I'm Engaged To The Beach

    Surprise! I'm Engaged To The Beach

    Report

    Add photo comments
    POST
    theo james
    Community Member
    5 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    🎶the sailors say brandi you're a fine girl what a good wife you would be!🎶

    View more commentsArrow down menu
    ADVERTISEMENT
    See Also on Bored Panda
    #29

    German Clay Mineral Water Bottles From 1860s

    German Clay Mineral Water Bottles From 1860s

    Report

    Add photo comments
    POST
    Nadine Elizabeth Gibbons
    Community Member
    5 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I wonder if this is where the name alka seltzer comes from - the dry powder added to water to ease the stomach and sooth the head.

    View More Replies...
    View more commentsArrow down menu
    #30

    Victorian Rummer Glass

    Victorian Rummer Glass

    Report

    Add photo comments
    POST
    Alexandru Bucur
    Community Member
    5 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It's an interesting thing that we ended up calling objects from the late 19th century "Victorian" generically, even though here, in the ol' K.u.K. Empire, we had Emperor Franz Joseph at the time and queen Vicky was a ways away... But then again "Josephian" doesn't really roll off the tongue, so maybe it's for the best?

    View More Replies...
    View more commentsArrow down menu
    #31

    Stunning Sea Glass Piece With The Number 150 On It

    Stunning Sea Glass Piece With The Number 150 On It

    Report

    Add photo comments
    POST
    Kaisu Rei
    Community Member
    5 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Not only are your findings gorgeous but the photography is beautiful as well!

    View More Replies...
    View more commentsArrow down menu
    #32

    This Blue Sea Glass Piece Reminds Me Of Bubble Wrap

    This Blue Sea Glass Piece Reminds Me Of Bubble Wrap

    Report

    #33

    Embossing On The Seal Says: Romano Vlahov Zara

    Embossing On The Seal Says: Romano Vlahov Zara

    Report

    Add photo comments
    POST
    Alexandru Bucur
    Community Member
    5 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Apparently, people in that area drank a lot of Marashino liquor back in the day...

    View More Replies...
    View more commentsArrow down menu
    #35

    Collecting Beautiful Sea Glass For New Unique Pieces

    Collecting Beautiful Sea Glass For New Unique Pieces

    Report

    #36

    Searching For Sea Glass Is Just Like Searching For Rare Sea Treasures

    Searching For Sea Glass Is Just Like Searching For Rare Sea Treasures

    Report

    Add photo comments
    POST
    Hassini
    Community Member
    5 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Is it just me or does it kinda blend into the hand, and the middle one looks like a cut...?

    View More Replies...
    View more commentsArrow down menu
    ADVERTISEMENT
    See Also on Bored Panda
    #37

    M Like Maristella - Beautiful Sea Pottery Piece

    M Like Maristella - Beautiful Sea Pottery Piece

    Report

    Add photo comments
    POST
    Sophie Warner
    Community Member
    5 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Have you seen the work of a Scottish artist which was recently shown on Bored Panda (but now seems to have vanished, it was at "https://www.boredpanda.com/i-find-surf-tumbled-pottery-shards-on-the-beach-and-make-them-into-unique-pieces-of-artwork"), who turns shards of sea pottery into the inspiration & part of illustrations?

    View More Replies...
    View more commentsArrow down menu
    #38

    Gorgeous Turquoise Sea Glass Piece

    Gorgeous Turquoise Sea Glass Piece

    Report

    Add photo comments
    POST
    Janice Stohlman
    Community Member
    5 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    where do you beach comb? i do not think you are in the USA. i like to go to sanibel, florida to search for treasures. i live on an island called galveston, texas. we also have shells, but no treasures like you have found. thank you for sharing.

    View More Replies...
    View more commentsArrow down menu