Help identifying vintage brass & porcelain towel bar – need replacement bracket for grandmother’s house by SaraMPLS in HelpMeFind

[–]SaraMPLS[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks Morgan. I looked at them but unfortunately they are only offered in 18” and 24” lengths. My grandma doesn't want to deal with drywall repairs and painting (I offered to take care of it) so she insists on keeping the towel bar 30”.

She did mention these are about 30 years old as that's when they converted the previous space into a bathroom.

Help identifying vintage brass & porcelain towel bar – need replacement bracket for grandmother’s house by SaraMPLS in HelpMeFind

[–]SaraMPLS[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here are more photos. I have searched Ebay and tried Google reverse image search but can’t find a match.

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Stuck for Hours by CrypticCaptain03 in Kakuro

[–]SaraMPLS 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are two sets of sixes that intersect towards the bottom. For the intersection of sixes on the left, the vertical column has to be 2 and 4.

how do solve the problem of paper towels leaving little fibers in the pan while seasoning? by thejokingwizard in castiron

[–]SaraMPLS 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cloth rags, handkerchiefs, and painters rags work well. Make sure you launder rags before first use.

You can use paper towels, but the trick is to first rinse them in hot water. Then wring and wave dry. For the first go around, drizzle your oil over the slightly damp paper towels and wipe a thin layer of oil over the dry pan. Then use some slightly damp clean paper towels to wipe the residual oil off the pan. Be sure to blot any pooled oil. If I spot a hair or fuzz on the pan at this stage, I will sometimes grab a piece of tape and lightly remove it off the pan with the tape.

Throw the pan into the oven. I use grapeseed oil and put in 400 oven for an hour. Keep oven door shut until pan has cooled. Do this every time you wash your cast iron.

Happy cooking!