Bottle Ticket
1814-1815 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
The history of bottle tickets provides a fascinating insight into English eating, drinking and personal habits. Contemporary gazettes begin to refer to ‘labels for bottles’ in the 1770s but it was not until the 1790s that they were established as wine or decanter labels. Their function was to identify the contents of a bottle or decanter, which might alternatively contain spirits, sauces, toilet waters or cordials. These tickets also illustrate in miniature, the skills of the silversmith over the last two hundred years. While the variety of styles and materials were enormous, silver bottle tickets tended to reflect fashionable designs in metalware generally. Makers were quick to adapt the many technical advances of the 18th and 19th centuries.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Silver, engraved |
Brief description | Silver bottle ticket, London hallmarks for 1814-15, mark of Phipps, Robinson and Phipps. |
Physical description | Bottle ticket with the word SHERRY. Silver, crescent with reeded and feathered edge, the latter prolonged to form scrolled ends which support an oval escutcheon engraved with a crest (a greyhound? statant, collared around the middle): chain attached. |
Dimensions |
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Marks and inscriptions |
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Credit line | P. J. Cropper Bequest |
Subject depicted | |
Summary | The history of bottle tickets provides a fascinating insight into English eating, drinking and personal habits. Contemporary gazettes begin to refer to ‘labels for bottles’ in the 1770s but it was not until the 1790s that they were established as wine or decanter labels. Their function was to identify the contents of a bottle or decanter, which might alternatively contain spirits, sauces, toilet waters or cordials. These tickets also illustrate in miniature, the skills of the silversmith over the last two hundred years. While the variety of styles and materials were enormous, silver bottle tickets tended to reflect fashionable designs in metalware generally. Makers were quick to adapt the many technical advances of the 18th and 19th centuries. |
Collection | |
Accession number | M.488-1944 |
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Record created | March 8, 2005 |
Record URL |
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