When Real Men Used Floral Fabrics |
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Wednesday, 18 August 2010 10:01 |
![]() Recently, I’ve done several appraisals with lots of Victorian period pieces. It was amusing to me to share with one gentleman that those “prissy” pieces he inherited were actually intended to be used by men. Yes, those rich and powerful Getty, Vanderbilt and Rockefeller men sat in chairs with carved roses on them. They ran business empires in floral print waistcoats and pulled their expensive cigars out of sterling cases decorated with heavily embossed chrysanthemums.
Let me give you a few examples of some “manly” items. One personal item for men only was the mustache mug. These are the mugs that look like early sippy cups with a bridge of porcelain across the mouth designed to protect those long, handlebar mustaches from the liquid inside the cup. If you watch for them in antique stores you will see that they’re often decorated with pink swags and roses. Shaving mugs have similar decoration. After shaving and drinking his first cup of coffee, a man would don his figured waistcoat, his floral embossed pocket watch with chain and fobs, and tuck his floral fabric purse into his pocket. After a hard day at work our gentleman would return home where his At the beginning of my career, I turned up my nose at all the Victorian opulence and laughed at the masculine accouterments of the period. After years of studying decorative arts I have to say I’ve changed my mind. I still decorate my own home with simple styles from an earlier period but I do appreciate the Victorian aesthetic. I appreciate their desire to celebrate their sense of worldliness. I understand the excitement over advances in technology, such as steam driven machines, that could turn fancy pieces, cut and press decoration into items, or weave ornate patterns in textiles. Showing off those abilities was important to our ancestors. These processes allowed mass production, which, in turn, allowed the new middle class to have things similar to the wealthy upper class they aspired to. Even the poorest households could have cheap imitations of “nice things”. The abundance of ornamentation and sheer number of items used was an expression of well-being and wealth (sounds like the 1980’s doesn’t it?).
Libby Holloway is a Certified Appraiser of antiques and residential contents. She is a member of the International Society of Appraisers where she is currently serving as Secretary of the Board of Directors. Libby can be contacted at www.LibbyHollowayAppraisals.com
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