Green Gallo Flavor Guard Bottles?

Welcome to our Antique Bottle community

Be a part of something great, join today!

Joined
Aug 19, 2016
Messages
8
Reaction score
0
Points
0
IMG_1573[1].jpgIMG_1589[1].jpgIMG_1590[1].jpgIMG_1591[1].jpgIMG_1592[1].jpgIMG_1594[1].jpgIMG_1595[1].jpgIMG_1596[1].jpgIMG_1597[1].jpgIMG_1598[1].jpgIMG_1602[1].jpgIMG_1603[1].jpgIMG_1605[1].jpgIMG_1599[1].jpg

Hey Everybody I am new to collecting Antique Bottles. I live near an old dump site where people used to dump all their trash & their must be a thousand of old glass bottles from the 60's & 70's buried there. There are a ton of these Green Gallo Flavor Guard Bottles there. I think they are from the early to mid 70's. Just wondering a ballpark figure what they are worth without the cap. They are in pretty good shape with no cracks or chips just a few scratches here & there. They just need to be cleaned up. I don't have a picture of them but they look like a regular wine bottle that is green.

Also is there any 60's or 70's Glass Bottles there are worth more than others like a Brand or Color?

I will be posting some pictures of a bunch of other 1960's & 1970's Glass Bottles to see what they are & what they are worth. If you could help me out in any way I will Greatly Appreciate It Very Much! Thanks for your Time.:D

Marcus
 
Last edited:

CanadianBottles

Well-Known Member
Joined
May 24, 2014
Messages
4,690
Reaction score
2,406
Points
113
I hate to break it to you, but most of those bottles are worth approximately zero dollars. Not very much from that era is worth anything, the blue bottles will sell for a dollar at flea markets but there's nothing else there with any value. Soda bottles from that era can be worth a bit, the Zetz looks alright and the Mountain Dew bottle would be a good one if it wasn't in such bad condition. If you can find a spot where the soda bottles aren't losing their labels, or where there are a bunch of No Deposit, No Return embossed sodas, then it could be worth digging, unfortunately otherwise that era is just too modern.
 

andy volkerts

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 10, 2005
Messages
2,833
Reaction score
2
Points
0
Location
Sacramento, California
CanadianBottles is pretty much right on, there isn't much worth anything from that era, unless you can get into some of the rarer 7Ups and Cokes, there isn't anything else worth digging unless you have an outlet for clean crushed glass for art projects........Andy
 
Joined
Aug 19, 2016
Messages
8
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Thanks Guys so much for the Info! I really Appreciate it. I have seen some of the 60's & 70's bottles that I've found going for anywhere from $1 to $30 on Ebay. Just was wondering which ones was worth the most. I have found about 2 dozen soda bottles that do say no deposit no return on them. I cleaned them up & they look brand new. I will post some pics later.

This dump site is about a quarter mile from my house & it was used years ago from local people around here. The newer bottles are on top duh & the older bottles are deeper. The oldest bottle that I've found so far said 63 on the bottom. So I don't know if that means it was made in 1963 or what. So maybe if I dig deeper I can find some older Bottles like from the 50's or Earlier. I found a 1960's Clorox Brown bottle. I don't know if that is worth anything or not. After I dig some more & clean up the bottles I will post some more Pics.

I will be looking for more No Deposit No Return & Other Soda Bottles. Thanks again CanadianBottles & Andy volkerts.
 

sunrunner

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 10, 2007
Messages
2,111
Reaction score
8
Points
38
i would not waist my time digging in that trash . you can still find that stuff in any woods or even on the side of the road. very few people collect no deposit's . they may garnish more interest in 20 years.
 

hemihampton

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 6, 2006
Messages
9,160
Reaction score
6,183
Points
113
Which ever ones you seen sell for $30 on ebay I would only pick those up then. Good Luck. LEON.
 
Joined
Aug 19, 2016
Messages
8
Reaction score
0
Points
0
The thing is there must be thousands of 1960's & 1970's bottles in that dump. There are so many to choose from that I don't know which ones to pick. That's why I'm asking you all which ones are worth the most. Like I could bring home several hundred 1970's bottles easy. I have seen little medicine bottles like bayer aspirin, vicks vapo-rub, Clorox bottles, lots of old green wine bottles & short neck beer bottles. I have to dig a little to find the soda bottles like Coke, Pepsi, 7-UP or Mountain Dew. So if I can find like 1940's or 1950's glass bottles would that be worth digging for? I am just looking for Bottles that will at least be worth a Dollar because there must be thousands in that dump. If I find a thousand $1 Bottles then that's a thousand dollars if I can sell them. The hardest thing is cleaning them up. I have about 100 bottles sitting in bleach water. What is the best way to clean an old bottle?
 

sunrunner

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 10, 2007
Messages
2,111
Reaction score
8
Points
38
the bottles that bring any money or that is collectable at all would be the acl soda's and they have to be in real good shape . that means no faded out or flacking. milk bottles with pyro glaze . and agene the logo must be in good shape. the file market would be your best bet.
 

CanadianBottles

Well-Known Member
Joined
May 24, 2014
Messages
4,690
Reaction score
2,406
Points
113
At that era it's really only the soda bottles that are worth taking home. The things of real value in that era of dump is the non-bottle things, like old enamel advertising signs that were being phased out around that time. Although in theory if you find 1000 $1 bottles you could make $1000, the reality is that you can only get a dollar for that sort of bottle at a flea market and most flea markets don't have 1000 people buying $1 bottles, so you flood the market really fast. I was doing pretty well selling dollar bottles at my flea market for a couple weekends and then people stopped buying them because there weren't enough new customers.

In terms of what bottles you should keep, for that era it's just soda bottles and maybe blue glass bottles for flea markets. Once you get back to the 50's (which I think you may be getting into judging by the Mountain Dew bottle) you can start finding good milk bottles as well. Then it's mostly just sodas and milks that are worth keeping all the way back to the 1910's/20's, when all sorts of bottles start being good finds.
 

Members online

Latest threads

Forum statistics

Threads
83,357
Messages
743,814
Members
24,376
Latest member
Ally_Mac
Top