 To begin with, you have to figure out what they are, which in some cases is really hard. A corner cupboard, I sort of have an image of, or thought I did, the canter, jars, but something like Queen's Wear is worth going and looking up, either in a dictionary or in a local museum or in a ceramics history. Queen's Wear is imported ceramics, kind of middling. You can find images of it. Again, you'd always want to compare. That is, in many cases, they're very fine examples of something, and not so fine examples of something. So you'd want to get a sense of what did most people own. Is this person typical or atypical? Looking at the artifacts themselves is a great help. The other thing I should mention about moving to artifacts is that there is a wealth of knowledge that people who studied material culture have about what was typical in certain regions at certain times. And that doesn't mean that your one inventory may not be atypical, because he made his six leather bottom chairs. Maybe they're a family heirloom, and they came down from somebody in some other part of the country, that's possible. But given what we know about how expensive it is to transport things over land or to put chairs on a ship and ship them out, that's unlikely. They're likely to be fairly locally made, or at least locally sold. They may have been brought in by boats from, say, Philadelphia to Wilmington. And there's a lot of studies that material culture scholars have done to figure out what specifically did people own. I think probably the main thing about these inventories is that they're most valuable when you have a great number of them. And many of the studies of them have been quantitative. So we know what people in, say, a given county, if you could go to this entire hundred, no creek hundred, of Newcastle County in Delaware in your time period and go through and see what different people owned, that would give you a good idea about what some of these things were. And which of these things were typical? Which of these things were extraordinary to this family, if anything? If that's the same or different than it is in other parts of the country, you'd want to know that.