Tuesday, August 14, 2018

Musings on Vintage Mason Jars

I love vintage Mason jars!

If you came to my house and saw how many I have you'd realize what an understatement that is. I started out years ago collecting the big aqua ones with the zinc tops.
I use them in my kitchen pantry to store dried beans and peas and flour and sugar and various cooking needs.


But then the aqua ones started getting too hard to find and too expensive if I did, so I switched to collecting the clear glass ones made by Ball and Atlas.
The clear glass kind are great to use filled with flowers as table centerpieces:

I also put candles in them for special dinner celebrations, and for festive evening parties on a patio you can fix wires around them and hang the the jars with lit candles inside from nearby tree branches.

When we have picnics at our house, I fill one jar with knives, another with spoons, and a third with forks. And they're perfect for "salads on the go," which have become pretty popular lately.

Vintage Mason jars also provide ideal storage in the bathroom, especially for Q-tips and cotton balls. And in the craft room, they corral buttons, thread spools, shells, gem stones, marbles, and whatever else you have that needs containing.

Another of my vintage canning jars is now a lamp,
and one has been outfitted with a soap dispenser (which you can buy here on Etsy at Jarring Creations, like I did--thank you, Kim!) and sits in the bathroom.
Anyway, I just couldn't pass up collecting Mason jars at yard sales and church sales and wherever I found them, so I kept on accumulating more and more and more. Until finally I decided: this is  crazy--I need to start sharing my finds.

So now in my Etsy shop I offer lots of three Ball jars or six Ball jars as well as three Atlas jars and six Atlas jars (which essentially differ only in what's embossed on the front of them). All are pint size:

Mason jars have a fascinating history. John Landis Mason invented this type of jar in 1858, and in 1884 the Ball brothers used his design in creating the first Ball Mason jar.

More history about Ball Mason jars can be found here, and history about the Atlas Jars (also known as Hazel-Atlas) can be found here.

I love vintage canning jars so much I created a Pinterest board with various ideas of what to do with them ~ take a look and start stockpiling your own collection. For me, they're indispensable!

8 comments:

  1. Great post, Kris... I still regret *giving away* a huge pile of mason jars, including aqua ones... it was 2002, before they became popular again and we had to deal with my grandma's things in a hurry.

    Ah well, now to figure out what the next big trend will be : )

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  2. I love canning jars, too. Kris. I have a couple on a shelf near where I am sitting. I can't seem to part with them yet. Great blog post and photos.

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    1. Thanks, Sue ~ canning jars are definitely decorative and handy!

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  3. Thanks, Joanne ~ and oh, I feel your pain! :)

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  4. While I may not have quite as many Mason jars as you do, Kris, I'm in love with them as well! I used them for just about every way you do and particularly love them for button jars. You can see the colors or styles through the clear glass.

    Great photos and many informative tips and uses! GREAT JOB!

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    1. Thanks, Dawn ~ I, too, love them for button jars and have a bunch of aqua ones in a window with white buttons. (Blue and white is a prevailing theme in my home). Appreciate your kind comments!

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  5. Funny how collections have ways of evolving--and taking over! I admire classic canning jars--and want to snarl every time I see one swirled about with pink paint like a bottle of Pepto Bismol and called "cottage chic". Ah, well--pet peeve!

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    1. Boy, that is my pet peeve as well--I'm not sure why anyone thought that was "cottage chic"! :)

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