they used cast iron pots and pans and cast iron whisks and ladles they use very crudley made campfire stoves kinda like in a movie with a witch and the HUGE black pot only thiers were small and not shaped like that
Open-hearth cooking and brick ovens were common. Iron stoves were often placed to provide heat as well as cooking areas in smaller dwellings. Handmade wooden implements often replaced the rarer metal goods, which were initially brought from Europe.
The women did all of the cooking. Farmers grew grain in which could be made into bread. Some men fished and hunted. Whatever they grew, hunted, or fished for, they might've ate.
Lawyers in colonial times were somewhat like lawyers in this time now. instead of using suitcases, notebooks, schedule books, a lot of notes on the case, and writing utensils, they mostly use notebooks (mini laptops). Lawyers in colonial times did not always enjoy the prestige they do in modern society.And once the lawyers passed their bar exam, their were guaranteed positions for them. After they graduated, they worked in law enforcement or i law fields. so that's pretty much what lawyers were in colonial times and the difference inn them now.
they make clothes for vilage people and use wool or a weavers cloth
they cook it with...
A cobbler used a hammer and nails, dubbin, wax, last,needle and thread, and a shoe stretcher.
herbs
Pots & pans for cooking
Tudor people use ovens to cook their food.
Look on history.org
no
yes they did
boobs
yes
What tools would the tailors use in colonial times? They would use scissors, needle and thread and measuring devices, such as rulers, measuring tapes, etc. .
knifes
Yes
a forge bellows and hammers
muskets