Button thumbnail 1
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Jewellery, Rooms 91 to 93 mezzanine, The William and Judith Bollinger Gallery

Button

19th century (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Lapland and Iceland are the most remote areas of north-west Europe. Their traditional jewellery retains many medieval characteristics lost elsewhere.

Buttons and clasps were mostly used for decoration. Women in Iceland wore large buttons of this kind, typically in sets of three, to hold their decorative aprons in place at the waistband. Many were round or hemispherical, but shallow, drum-shaped buttons like this one are typically and uniquely Icelandic.

Icelandic silversmiths had worked occasionally in filigree since the Middle Ages, but by the middle of the 19th century it had become their favourite technique. This button shows all the characteristics of Icelandic filigree. The pattern is clear, regular, and slightly asymmetric. It has small pendant filigree hearts (three are missing) in the same technique. It is made of open filigree, which is riveted to the front of the hollow button, not soldered. It could only come from Iceland.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Silver sheet with openwork filigree
Brief description
Large silver drum-shaped button with filigree decoration and three pendant filigree hearts, Iceland, 19th century.
Physical description
Hollow drum-shaped button decorated with open filigree on the front and sides. One large and two (originally five) smaller heart-shaped pendants of filigree hanging from the front.
Dimensions
  • Diameter: 4.7cm
  • Length: 5.1cm
  • Depth: 3.5cm
Production
Worn by women
Subject depicted
Summary
Lapland and Iceland are the most remote areas of north-west Europe. Their traditional jewellery retains many medieval characteristics lost elsewhere.

Buttons and clasps were mostly used for decoration. Women in Iceland wore large buttons of this kind, typically in sets of three, to hold their decorative aprons in place at the waistband. Many were round or hemispherical, but shallow, drum-shaped buttons like this one are typically and uniquely Icelandic.

Icelandic silversmiths had worked occasionally in filigree since the Middle Ages, but by the middle of the 19th century it had become their favourite technique. This button shows all the characteristics of Icelandic filigree. The pattern is clear, regular, and slightly asymmetric. It has small pendant filigree hearts (three are missing) in the same technique. It is made of open filigree, which is riveted to the front of the hollow button, not soldered. It could only come from Iceland.
Collection
Accession number
471-1901

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Record createdJune 29, 2007
Record URL
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