Recent Beach Find
Forum rules
Please note: This forum is intended for accounts of your day's detecting and finds, etc. If you require an identification of your finds, please use our Finds Identification facility. Any replies here offering a ID will be removed.
Please note: This forum is intended for accounts of your day's detecting and finds, etc. If you require an identification of your finds, please use our Finds Identification facility. Any replies here offering a ID will be removed.
Recent Beach Find
Found this little beauty recently on the beach, am I right in thinking Georgian shoe buckle? Has some nice decoration on it, nice patina, had a bit of bronze disease, managed to get most of it off. What do you think ladies and gents?
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
- fred
- Posts: 18911
- Joined: Wed Dec 10, 2014 6:15 pm
- Location: Kent
- Has thanked: 6985 times
- Been thanked: 15047 times
No you are not right. That is much earlier, probably Early Stuart at the latest and more likely Elizabethan. A great beach find. 

Thank you for the quick reply and pertinent information Fred, I am surprised it is earlier than I thought it would be.
thank you
Sam.
thank you
Sam.
- fred
- Posts: 18911
- Joined: Wed Dec 10, 2014 6:15 pm
- Location: Kent
- Has thanked: 6985 times
- Been thanked: 15047 times
Obviously I have no idea where you detect but older stuff does sometimes come off of beaches. Just after the New Year I had identifiable mid Georgian halfpennies on four trips on the trot at two locations separated by 150 miles. Last year I had a fragment of a Henry III penny from way out on the sand. 

- Bfg
- Posts: 169
- Joined: Tue Jan 09, 2018 11:43 pm
- Location: Suffolk, England.
- Has thanked: 254 times
- Been thanked: 99 times
As always Fred - that's some ID. I wonder if you would mind sharing a few tidbit clues of how you date from one era to another, perhaps in the decoration style, the degree of detail, the method of manufacture and choice of metal, or is it the size or designed shape.. Don't get me wrong I'm not questioning any of your ID's, I honestly just like to learn. Thanks.fred wrote: Sun Jan 21, 2018 12:24 pm No you are not right. That is much earlier, probably Early Stuart at the latest and more likely Elizabethan. A great beach find.![]()
Bfg.

.
. . . . . . . . . . . There is more worth in a kindness than in gold.
Introduce yourself : old giffer taking fist baby steps in md'g
Minelab E-trac
- fred
- Posts: 18911
- Joined: Wed Dec 10, 2014 6:15 pm
- Location: Kent
- Has thanked: 6985 times
- Been thanked: 15047 times
Everything you said plus fifty years of digging up the things plus the Internet to research and cross check anything that I am not sure about. A healthy(ish) dose of cynicism also makes me cautious about simply accepting and repeating other people's IDs which, for many different reasons, may not be quite correct. I still make mistakes but even those can often help point others in the right direction and at the end of the day it is always a correct ID that matters most, not who made it.Bfg wrote: Sun Jan 21, 2018 12:42 pmAs always Fred - that's some ID. I wonder if you would mind sharing a few tidbit clues of how you date from one era to another, perhaps in the decoration style, the degree of detail, the method of manufacture and choice of metal, or is it the size or designed shape.. Don't get me wrong I'm not questioning any of your ID's, I honestly just like to learn. Thanks.fred wrote: Sun Jan 21, 2018 12:24 pm No you are not right. That is much earlier, probably Early Stuart at the latest and more likely Elizabethan. A great beach find.![]()
Bfg.![]()

Anyway for buckles this is a good place to start:
https://www.ukdfd.co.uk/ceejays_site/pa ... lepage.htm.
I have used this a few times and it has been of great use:
http://www.ukdfd.co.uk/ceejays_site/pag ... lepage.htm
http://www.ukdfd.co.uk/ceejays_site/pag ... lepage.htm
- fred
- Posts: 18911
- Joined: Wed Dec 10, 2014 6:15 pm
- Location: Kent
- Has thanked: 6985 times
- Been thanked: 15047 times
That make two of us then. Must be good!Sewin wrote: Sun Jan 21, 2018 1:35 pm I have used this a few times and it has been of great use:
http://www.ukdfd.co.uk/ceejays_site/pag ... lepage.htm

- FUBAR
- Posts: 8015
- Joined: Sat Aug 14, 2010 1:23 pm
- Has thanked: 564 times
- Been thanked: 1060 times
This buckle guide is also very good.Bfg wrote: Sun Jan 21, 2018 12:42 pmAs always Fred - that's some ID. I wonder if you would mind sharing a few tidbit clues of how you date from one era to another, perhaps in the decoration style, the degree of detail, the method of manufacture and choice of metal, or is it the size or designed shape.. Don't get me wrong I'm not questioning any of your ID's, I honestly just like to learn. Thanks.fred wrote: Sun Jan 21, 2018 12:24 pm No you are not right. That is much earlier, probably Early Stuart at the latest and more likely Elizabethan. A great beach find.![]()
Bfg.![]()
- Bfg
- Posts: 169
- Joined: Tue Jan 09, 2018 11:43 pm
- Location: Suffolk, England.
- Has thanked: 254 times
- Been thanked: 99 times
Wow ! Brilliant work, but what a way to spend years of your life.. in compiling a 124 page catalogue of someone else's buckles.

.
. . . . . . . . . . . There is more worth in a kindness than in gold.
Introduce yourself : old giffer taking fist baby steps in md'g
Minelab E-trac
-
- Posts: 6126
- Joined: Thu Sep 16, 2010 11:47 am
- Location: Herts
- Has thanked: 29 times
- Been thanked: 2025 times
Always nice to find something of a decent age from the beach.
These buckle galleries/guides may also enlighten you:
http://www.colchestertreasurehunting.co ... ieval.html
http://www.colchestertreasurehunting.co ... 16thC.html
http://www.colchestertreasurehunting.co ... 17thC.html
These buckle galleries/guides may also enlighten you:
http://www.colchestertreasurehunting.co ... ieval.html
http://www.colchestertreasurehunting.co ... 16thC.html
http://www.colchestertreasurehunting.co ... 17thC.html
Believe me, there are even some more truly mundane publications. I went to a carboot sale and bought a couple of Brian Read book for 50p each just because they were cheap. 106 pages of buttons and 240 pages of hooked fasteners, not exactly exhilarating bedtime reading but have been useful for the occasional ID.Bfg wrote: Fri Jan 26, 2018 11:41 pmWow ! Brilliant work, but what a way to spend years of your life.. in compiling a 124 page catalogue of someone else's buckles.![]()


Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 37 guests