I hope I'm not subverting the intention of this forum, but instead of overtly contributing here, I'm asking a question that perhaps has resonance with others, though not maker ID oriented (that is, I'm hoping there is an allowance here for questions of generalized silverware appreciation not strictly limited to the ID of the maker). I have collected a number of ladles, from small to large, generally made well over a hundred years ago. The wear on those ladles has, of course, varied significantly, with the most abuse, as expected, applied to the exterior. However, a number of my ladles, from gravy to soup, have serious wear to the interior of the bowls. This is generally not smooth wear, but rather numerous dints and spikes, not sufficient to distort the bowl to the opposite side, but nonetheless cumulatively rather rough in nature, and in excess of the wear on the bowl bottom, where one would expect more abuse. So my question is, what was it what that put this spiky wear into the interior of these ladle bowls? I have a number of ladles that have smoother bowl bottoms than interiors. What were the original owners doing to produce such dinting to the bowl insides???
SS
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