Daily life for people associated with Bell Beaker traditions in this region must be reconstructed from ceramics, burial contexts, settlement traces and comparative ethnography. The beaker vessel — often intricately decorated — is the emblematic object, used in feasting, consumption and likely social display. Archaeological contexts around Kornice and nearby cemeteries show that pottery, along with flint tools and occasional metal items, was incorporated into funerary practice, indicating the importance of material identity in life and death.
Economy was mixed: cultivation of cereals, animal husbandry and mobility across river valleys and uplands all feature in the wider Bell Beaker economy. Metallurgy was becoming more widespread in the late 3rd millennium BCE; trade networks carried copper and early bronze across long distances, linking Poland to broader European exchange. Social organization may have emphasized kin groups, with gendered roles visible in burial assemblages elsewhere in the Bell Beaker world — though local variation was substantial.
Archaeological data indicates that these communities were dynamic, negotiating new technologies and styles while maintaining local landscapes of memory. Because preservation and excavation vary by site, reconstructions remain interpretive frameworks rather than fixed portraits.