RARE GEORGIAN BILSTON ENAMEL PATCH BOX, CIRCA ...

Item Ref
FEV95

This is a delightful 18th Century Bilston * enamel "love token" patch box. The pale lilac base and white hinged cover charmingly painted with the words "May charms like thine Be still my lot, And love like mine Be ne'er forgot". The hinged lid opening to reveal the orignal mirror and white interior.

Dimensions:

Length: 4cm / 1.6 inches.
Width: 3cm / 1.2 inches.
Height: 2.5cm / 1 inch.

Condition:

In remarkably good condition for this type of object.
Minor grazing, commensurate with age.
Original lead mirror pitted but not cracked.
Good strong hinge.
Lid snaps shut firmly.

Postage UK: £7.00 Special delivery.
Postage overseas: £12.00 standard International mail.
You can pay by PayPal, bank transfer, cheque, debit or credit card.
To pay by PAYPAL please add P&P and click on button below.
To pay by credit or debit card over the phone or by cheque, please contact me on 01449 760 585.

* By the early 18th Century the town of Bilston, on the southern edge of Wolverhampton, was already established as a metal-working centre. The next step for these manufacturers of artefacts such as buckles, boxes and toy was get ahead of their competitors by decorating them. So they turned to enamels.
The technique of enamelling is applying heat to a mixture of silica, soda, potassium silicates and lead oxide, the enameller produced a paste which could be painted on to metal surfaces. Different colours could be created by introducing various metallic oxides into the mixes.
Enamellers often collected broken glasses from pubs and inns to grind them into the paste, but there were already, by the mid-1750s, suppliers selling coloured enamel powders already mixed. Bilston enamellers were particularly partial to rose pink.
There were patch and snuff boxes, boxes for trinkets and jewellery, bonbonnieres. These boxes became, with the advent of transfer printing, little gift boxes given as token of love and friendship or souvenirs from various towns. This surviving example is transferred with the words "A Trifle from Norwich" .
SOLD

GEORGIAN BILSTON ENAMEL PATCH BOX, CIRCA 1780 ...

Item Ref
JUIL72

This is a delightful 18th Century Bilston * enamel patch box with a dark blue base and white hinged cover painted with the words "A trifle from Norwich".

Dimensions:

Length: 4cm / 1.6 inches.
Width: 3cm / 1.2 inches.
Height: 2.5cm / 1 inch.

Condition:

In good condition for its age.
Minor crack on lid.
Original lead mirror pitted but not cracked.
Good strong hinge.
Lid snaps shut firmly.

Postage UK: £7.00 Special delivery.
Postage overseas: £12.00 standard International mail.

You can pay by PayPal, bank transfer, cheque, debit or credit card.

To pay by PAYPAL please add P&P and click on button below.

To pay by credit or debit card over the phone or by cheque, please contact me on 01449 760 585.


* By the early 18th Century the town of Bilston, on the southern edge of Wolverhampton, was already established as a metal-working centre. The next step for these manufacturers of artefacts such as buckles, boxes and toy was get ahead of their competitors by decorating them. So they turned to enamels.

The technique of enamelling is applying heat to a mixture of silica, soda, potassium silicates and lead oxide, the enameller produced a paste which could be painted on to metal surfaces. Different colours could be created by introducing various metallic oxides into the mixes.

Enamellers often collected broken glasses from pubs and inns to grind them into the paste, but there were already, by the mid-1750s, suppliers selling coloured enamel powders already mixed. Bilston enamellers were particularly partial to rose pink.

There were patch and snuff boxes, boxes for trinkets and jewellery, bonbonnieres. These boxes became, with the advent of transfer printing, little gift boxes given as token of love and friendship or souvenirs from various towns. This surviving example is transferred with the words "A Trifle from Norwich" .
SOLD