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Archive for March, 2009

suede-21

suede-3

Beautifully vanity compact carry-all purse with a nice handle, made from gold tone metal and black suede. The interior is lined with satin and features a rectangular mirror, plus three individual compartments for loose powder, lipstick and a powder puff. The metal and the clasp are in perfect condition, c.1930.

silk-1

silk-2

This is another very pretty black silk purse is a bit like a carry all of vanity type purse. I believe it is from the 50’s and is French in origin. It is lined with caramel suede. The clasp is nice and secure, and the mirror is in mint condition. If the purse was used, it would have been rarely and gently.

Some other examples…

carryall-3carryall-3bcarryall-4b-1940carryall-9

carryall-5carryall-5bcarryall-6-a

carryall-6-b1carryall-7carryall-7-c

carryall-7-bcarryall-7-dcarryall-8

carryall-10acarryall-10bcarryall-15carryall-15-b

carryall-bcarryall-b-1930carryall-c-1930

suede-and-silk-vanity-purse-carry-alls-1950suede-and-silk-vanity-purse-carry-alls-1950-bwhiting-davis-enamel-mesh-purse-1920s-b

Purses, pouches or bags have been used since humans have needed to carry precious items. The purse, which came in many shapes and sizes, was a common accessory for both men and women.

coca bags - Bolivia

coca bags - Bolivia

a-antique-banjara-pouch-circa-1900a-antique-mirror-bag-uzbekistan-late-19tha-greek-embroidery-handbag-1920

a-old-indian-banjara-textile-dowry-baga-tepehuane-pouch-made-from-maguey-fibrea-persian-baga-turkish-handbag-otoman-dynasty

History of Handbags & Purses

The pouch is a form that has existed since prehistoric times. Made from vegetable fibers twisted together or animal skins, the bags appear to have held many functions, ranging from seed storage to burial containers.

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b-pre-colombian-coca-bag-500-800-adb-sihuas-pouch-s-coast-peru-circa-300-adb-pre-colombian-coca-bag-500-800-ad-2

b-sihuas-pouch-s-coast-peru-circa-300-ad-2b-pre-colombian-coca-bag-500-800-ad-3

Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs show men wearing purses around the waist, and the Bible specifically identifies Judas Iscariot as a purse carrier.
The aegis refers to several different things in Greek mythology. Robert Ranke Graves in “The Greek Myths” (1955) asserts that the aegis in its Libyan sense had been a shamanic pouch, filled with powerful ritual objects belonging to Athena.
Handbags were used by the Babylonians and Assyrians from 1500 BCE to 550 BCE. They were richly embroidered and used for religious ceremonies.

bb-assyrian-handbag-865-860-bc

Ecclesiastical purses were highly significant and were used to hold relics.
San Eloi (Limoges 590-659) once preached an excellent sermon, still preserved, against superstition. He denounced particularly the use of charms and incantations. But he had his own little streak of superstition. When he had committed some fault, after confession, he used to hang bags of relics in his room, and watch them for a sign of forgiveness.
Included in the treasury of an ancient cathedral in Sion, Switzerland, are five purses or bags that had been designed to withhold the revered relics of saints. The pouches are dated to the fourteenth-century but are of unknown origin.

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c-bags-for-a-kreuzreliquie-10thc-purse-14th-bc-purse-14thc-purse-14th-c

The first evidence of a handbag with any role as a fashion accessory came in medieval times, when wealthy women would embellish the simple bag they wore on their belts to carry their necessities, with lavish embroidery and even jewels, to reflect their status.
From the 14th to 16th centuries the city of Caen, France, was noted for its embroidered bags and purses, which had the local name of tasques (tasque, tasche or tasse), whence the street inhabited by the embroiderers was called the Rue Tasquiere.

Et de passer devant l’huys ne se lasse,
Et met à point ou sa robe ou sa tasse.

Le Debat de deux fortunes d’amours
by Alain Chartier (1390-c.1440)

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cc-england-bag-17thcc-english-purse-16th

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The handbags that have been verified historically were small sacks carried by gentlemen containing pomanders (scented spices and oranges), flint and money. These were called “pockets” and were hung by thongs from the back of the girdle.
From the 17th century to the late 19th century, most women had at least one pair of pockets, which served a similar purpose as a handbag does today.

Lucy Locket lost her pocket,
Kitty Fisher found it;
Not a penny was there in it,
Only ribbon round it.

Lucy Locket
English nursery rhyme.

d-pocket-britain-1700-25d-pocket-britain-1700-25bd-pocket-britain-1700-25c

e-english-seal-burse-18th

In the 1790s women began to use reticules, decorative bags designed be carried over the arm in the manner of our contemporary handbag.

e-reticule-england-1800-24

e-victorian-embroidered-reticule

The term ‘handbag’ first came in to use at the beginning of the twentieth century and was used for leather bags then carried by men. It was the 1920’s that saw the first emergence of the modern handbag carried by women.

ee-antique-austrian-beabed-bag-19thee-austrian-beabed-bag-1900

ee-austrian-needlpoint-handbag-1890
This exciting accessory can be divided in many categories depending on their age, quality, style and design: Pouch Bags, Reticule-Miniature purses, Beaded Bags, Clutches, Black Bags, Pocket books, Evening Bags, Purses.
It can be made in different materials: embroidery stitches, gilt-trimmed velvets, soft leathers, crocheting, silk tapestries, metals, precious stones and sparkly beads
The handbag was a symbol of their new independence women could now go forth into the world carrying all they needed themselves.

Valentino Handbag

Valentino Handbag


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my-plasco

my-plasco-2

This is a great old hard plastic doll house kitchen furniture set, in white with the blue bottom, dates from the 1950’s. Set includes a fridge and stove. They are marked “A Plasco Toy Co, Made in USA”.

my-plasco-mark

Plastic became the choice material for American doll house furniture manufacturers, in the 1940’s during World War II. Wood and metal were necessary materials in the war effort and therefore the new process of plastic moulding became more widely integrated into the domestic marketplace. The hard plastic items could be intricately detailed including the maker’s name. Plastic is still being used today because of its durability and its low labor cost of production. Renwal, Ideal, Plasco, and Marx made hard plastic doll house furniture in the 1950s and, as the pieces are usually marked, can be easily identified by the collector.

There have been several standard scales in dolls houses over the years. Children’s toy houses during most of the 20th century were three quarter scale (where 1 foot is represented by 3/4 of an inch), also known as 1:18 (1′ equals 18″), 3/4-scale furniture was most often made from plastic.

For the last century, dolls houses have primarily been the domain of children but their collection and crafting have also fascinated a large number of adults.

doll-house

Some Examples of Plasco toys

plasco-kitchen-furniture

plasco-2plasco-3plasco-1plasco-harp-back-chair
plasco-chairplasco-china-ladiesplasco-couch

plasco-table-and-chairsplasco-dollhouse-vanityplasco-dollhouse-kitchen-sink

plasco-toys-1plasco-pink-deskplasco-vanity-and-stool-set

Plasco Toy Co. marks

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plasco-mark-5

plasco-mark-3

plasco-mark-4

1950s American Kitchen

american-kitchen-1950-f

american-kitchen-1950-c

american-kitchen-1950-d

american-kitchen-1950-e

american-kitchen-1950-a1

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