Button thumbnail 1
Button thumbnail 2
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images
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

This object consists of 5 parts, some of which may be located elsewhere.

Button

1832-1867 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Men throughout Europe wore silver buttons with their traditional costume in the 19th century. Silver filigree buttons had been synonymous with rural dress since at least the 16th century. Most European cultures disapproved of male jewellery, but buttons allowed men to show off their wealth and status. They wore them in extravagant numbers, on sleeves and trousers as well as jackets and waistcoats.

Buttons were rarely sewn directly on to the clothing. In the north of Europe people fastened them to their costume with a strip of leather, which ran through the button loops inside the garment. In the south, they used T-shaped toggles permanently attached to the button.

Toggle buttons like these are found throughout southern Europe. They were worn by men, on jackets and waistcoats. These have Neapolitan marks from the first half of the 19th century, and could have been worn anywhere in southern Italy or Sicily. They were bought as part of the Castellani collection of Italian Peasant Jewellery at the International Exhibition, Paris, 1867.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 5 parts.

  • Buttons
  • Buttons
  • Buttons
  • Buttons
  • Buttons
Materials and techniques
Silver filigree
Brief description
Set of five silver filigree spherical toggle buttons, Naples (Italy), 1832-1867.
Physical description
Set of five small spherical open filigree toggle buttons, with ring shank, oval link, and crossover bar. Each button is decorated with applied granules on the face.
Dimensions
  • Diameter: 1.3cm
  • Length: 3.4cm
  • Width: 3.2cm
Marks and inscriptions
  • Woman's head between the characters 'N' and '8' in a rectangular frame (On end of bar. Standard mark for 833 silver, Kingdom of the Two Sicilies (southern Italy), 1832-1872.)
  • 'F.V.' in rectangular frame (Mark of unidentified maker, on end of bar.)
Historical context
Worn by men.
Summary
Men throughout Europe wore silver buttons with their traditional costume in the 19th century. Silver filigree buttons had been synonymous with rural dress since at least the 16th century. Most European cultures disapproved of male jewellery, but buttons allowed men to show off their wealth and status. They wore them in extravagant numbers, on sleeves and trousers as well as jackets and waistcoats.

Buttons were rarely sewn directly on to the clothing. In the north of Europe people fastened them to their costume with a strip of leather, which ran through the button loops inside the garment. In the south, they used T-shaped toggles permanently attached to the button.

Toggle buttons like these are found throughout southern Europe. They were worn by men, on jackets and waistcoats. These have Neapolitan marks from the first half of the 19th century, and could have been worn anywhere in southern Italy or Sicily. They were bought as part of the Castellani collection of Italian Peasant Jewellery at the International Exhibition, Paris, 1867.
Bibliographic reference
'Italian Jewellery as worn by the Peasants of Italy', Arundel Society, London, 1868, Plate 11
Collection
Accession number
291B to E, G-1868

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Record createdMarch 14, 2008
Record URL
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