There are many independent stores across the nation that buy and sell gold and silver. They are often referred to as "exchanges" and will buy pieces of silver.
One can sell scrap gold to a number of vendors. The easiest place would be to go to your local jewelry store. Another useful place can buys scrap gold is a pawnbroker.
Scrap booking brads can found at almost any place that you can get scrap booking supplies. A lot of different places do sell different types of brads. To find the biggest selection you may want to go somewhere like Michaels.
250,000 albums for silver.
eBay Most shops that sell jewelery also buy gold and silver.
Scrap Metal can be sold at your nearest scrap recycling center. To find your nearest scrap yard, go to google maps, find your town/city, and search for scrap metal recycling. Bring in your scrap metal ,and they will weight it and pay you accordingly...But make sure you clean it all up before hand for a better price. For more info, check out the How To in the related links.
Scrap metal prices can vary from one scrap yard to the next. So it's a better idea to call ahead and talk to the scrap yard owners and learn their prices. For a fair bargain on your aluminum cans, I'd say visit the SIMS facility in your town. We usually go down there whenever we have to sell scrap in Memphis.
I would sell the silver bars to an online dealer like APMEX or CMI.
if you want wrecked cars for cheap or free, you should go to your local scrap yard, they usually have plenty of cars that they will either sell or give away for parts, ive gotten many parts for free from my local scrap yard
Some companies specifically sell genuine turquoise jewelry, such as Dorango Silver and South West Silver. In general, one should go to a trusted jeweler, such as Kay, or Jareds.
I would go to websites about silver silverware and see if there is a list of prices for 1945 silver silverware
Scrap metal is everywhere! if you just want a little scrap for some alternate pupose, find a broken appliance like a microwave and break it open to harvest the wire. if you are looking to sell the metal for a profit, go to auto shops, machine shops, engineering companies, and the like to inquire as to how they dispose of scrap. offer to take it off their hands. For more info, check out the How To in the related links.
It depends on what the coins are. If any of them are collectible, the value depends on the coin's denomination, mint mark, date, and condition. To know that you'd have to sort through the coins, of course. If they're all common date silver (e.g. dimes and quarters from 1955-64, etc.) their value is determined by the price of scrap silver. Check a site like coinflation.com for current scrap silver prices - they change every day so any answer here would be out of date almost immediately. If you go to one of those "we buy old gold and silver" places you'll get about 50% of the scrap price. With $500 in face value, you might be able to get a better deal from a jeweler or coin shop, so check around.