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- Inside Antiques:
- The Wide World of Collectible Buttons
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By Robert Reed
When it comes to antiques and collectibles few fields are as
remarkably diverse as the simple functioning button.
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- Today, the world of collectible buttons ranges in material
from brass to Bakelite and range in design from striking Art
Deco to fancy cloth.
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- Historically, the button has been crafted from just about
every possible substance including copper, enamel, glass, gold,
horn, ivory, pearl, porcelain, shell, silver, and wood. Some
were decorated with rhinestones, some were hand-painted, and
some were eventually mass-produced to be resistant to washing
machines. Partly as a result of all that, the sometimes lightly
regarded button is without peer in its range of appeal.
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- Various documents made reference to buttons as early as the
17th century. In 1651 England, it was noted that John Eliot
had ordered three gross of pewter buttons for trading with
the Indians in the new world. Elsewhere, inventories sometimes
listed black coloured buttons, while button pairs usually referred
to sets of silver or gold buttons used on the sleeves of mens'
fashionable coats.
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- Advertisements as early as the 1730s called attention to
so-called Philadelphia buttons. Such buttons, crafted from brass,
were produced in significant numbers by Caspar Wistar.
The buttons were said to be warranted for seven years because
they were so durable. Philadelphia buttons became extremely popular,
and Wistar and his son, Richard, were among the first Americans
to grow wealthy in the button business.
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- In 1746, the estate of John Burton of Boston included
a parcel of crystals for buttons. In addition to glass (crystal)
and brass, buttons of that period included those with a horn
base and covered with mohair. Some finer buttons were trimmed
in silver. By the 1750s, a French directory was listing more
than 40 different types of buttons available to the public including
a number involving fancy bead and tapestry work.
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- Famed cabinetmaker Benjamin Randolph began producing
and advertising wooden buttons around 1769 as an alternative
to British metal issues. Randolph's production of wooden buttons
was one of the first formal efforts to boycott goods from England.
When the revolutionary war occurred, the uniforms of American
forces generally bore pewter buttons. Button designs on the military
uniforms varied, but many were marked USA.
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Historical records show that President
George Washington himself wore rather creative buttons
on his suit for his inaugural of 1789. The large gilt buttons
were designed by William Rollinson of New York City and
were engraved with the Great Seal of the United States.
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- Ultimately, leading Colonial craftsmen turned to providing
elegant buttons of silver and gold for prosperous citizens. By
the 1790s, even the legendary patriot and silversmith, Paul
Revere, was offering a considerable range of buttons for
the gentlemans coat, sleeve, or jacket. Revere's buttons
were made of silver, gold. stone, and tortoise-shell.
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- For the more modest budget, there were still plenty of pewter
buttons to choose from, along with other types. In Connecticut,
one late 18th century maker offered buttons of hardened tin which
were advertised as very serviceable and of good appearance.
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- The relatively stark contrast in the content and quality
of buttons continued in the early 1800s. In high fashion were
highly decorative gilt buttons much like those championed prior
to that time by George Washington. Early 19th century gilt issues
were sometimes strikingly illustrated with images of fruits or
flowers. Others were plain in design but highly polished.
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- Both metal and shell were used as basic material for the
gilt buttons. Makers proud enough to include their name or initials
on the backs of the buttons included Benedict & Burnham;W.
H. Jones & Company; and Wadham, Coe & Company.
Elsewhere, there were modified pewter buttons sometimes identified
as hard whites. These differed from older pewter issues in that
they were now given wire loops which were embedded in the processing
of the pewter alloy. Most of the hard whites were plain in design,
but some were given a star-like mark. Numerous manufacturers,
like the makers of some gilt buttons, added their name or initials
on the button backs.
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- During the first half of the 19th century, gilt and enamel
buttons remained in demand
in European countries, including France and England, among the
most stylish. Some wooden buttons with cloth covering were in
use and in 1851 Nelson Goodyear obtained a patent for
a hard and inflexible rubber button. Rubber buttons became quite
popular in the United States for a time, overshadowing most others,
including glass and pottery types.
By the final quarter of the 19th century, the wide world of buttons
also included fashionable selections of pearl, jet, ivory and
even calico fabric examples. Frequently, fine buttons of that
era were sold in groups of five, rather than individually or
in pairs. While richly done silver buttons were available at
the onset of the 20th century, the majority of buttons tended
to be plain and offered little or no decoration.
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- The authors of Buttons: The Collectors Guide, Nancy Fink
and Maryalice Ditzler, suggest that most buttons of that
period were representative of the ordinary shirt button. Moreover,
darker buttons were usually favored over lighter colors.
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- However, the authors point out that North America did turn
to a few fancy cloth buttons by the 1920s. Selections ranged
from an image of cartoon character Betty Boop to the sometime
fancy floral patterns which matched the cloth of the garment
being worn.
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- No one can say exactly when North Americans actually began
collecting buttons, as opposed to merely saving them in a tin
box or glass jar for future use. Certainly by
the late 1940s, advice on button collecting was clearly in print.
Any button made up to as late as 1920 is now worth more than
the original purchase, declared Morgan Towne in the 1949
book Treasures in Truck and Trash. Study all old buttons found
in boxes; dress buttons, cuff and sleeve buttons, collar buttons,
all kinds of buttons, and then study button books.
Towne went so far in those years immediately after World War
II as to suggest would-be collectors could cut buttons off of
old dresses, old coats, old waistcoats, old overalls, and old
uniforms. Study them, not as a collector but as a prospector
who, in finding buttons, has struck gold, Towne concluded.
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- Meanwhile, Fink and Ditzler note that occasionally, whimsical
styles were introduced to the consumer both immediately before
and immediately after the war years. They point out the arrival
of molded wood and colourful Bakelite during the 1940s and 1950s,
and Lucite buttons later in the 1950s.
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- What truly changed the nature of buttons in the second half
of the 20th century, according to the two authors and other researchers,
was the washing machine. The basic plain and flat plastic button
more than met the need for an enduring button, which could stand
the stress of the electric-powered washer. Buttons of materials
typically reserved for clothing which needed special cleaning,
grew more and more scarce.
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- Today, the range and nature of buttons from the past for
the curious collector is vast.
A sound formula for judging a buttons value is to study its age,
size, condition, subject matter and material, observes Claire
Garrity in the preface of the fourth
edition of The Collectors Encyclopedia of Buttons by Sally
Luscomb.
As with any item, concludes Garrity, the buyer must know what
to look for in
making a good (button) purchase.
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- Recommended reading: The Collectors Encyclopedia of Buttons,
4th edition, by Sally Luscomb. (Schiffer Publishing).
Photo 1 - Luckyday buttons, both washable and ironable,
ca. 1950s
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- Photo 2 - Antique buttons, made in Europe ca. 1780s
to 1790s. (Victoria and Albert Museum)
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- Antique and Collectible News Service. Articles by Robert
Reed, serving
regional and national publications
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- Robert Reed archives:
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