Gaming Purse
1660-1700 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Object Type
This is a special purse for use at the gaming table, to hold money or counters. Its style is quite different from other 17th-century purses. The flat, circular base with sides gathered on a drawstring prevented spilling or revealing the contents.
Materials & Making
This gaming purse is quite plain, with no embroidery, only a twist of copper gilt thread. Its lack of decoration may have been deliberate, to deceive other players into thinking its owner had little money. Copper gilt was a cheap substitute for the precious metal thread made of silver-gilt.
Social Class
Playing and betting on card games was a socially acceptable pastime for the wealthy in the late 17th century. Along with dancing, riding and the theatre, it was an amusement for those classes that did not have to work.
This is a special purse for use at the gaming table, to hold money or counters. Its style is quite different from other 17th-century purses. The flat, circular base with sides gathered on a drawstring prevented spilling or revealing the contents.
Materials & Making
This gaming purse is quite plain, with no embroidery, only a twist of copper gilt thread. Its lack of decoration may have been deliberate, to deceive other players into thinking its owner had little money. Copper gilt was a cheap substitute for the precious metal thread made of silver-gilt.
Social Class
Playing and betting on card games was a socially acceptable pastime for the wealthy in the late 17th century. Along with dancing, riding and the theatre, it was an amusement for those classes that did not have to work.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Silk, pasteboard, copper, gold; hand-woven velvet, couched |
Brief description | Gaming purse, velvet, trimmed with copper-gilt thread, France, 1660-1700 |
Physical description | Gaming purse of green silk velvet, lined with white silk taffeta. It has circular base reinforced with pasteboard; the sides pleated and pulled together with drawstrings of narrow copper gilt braid and 2 spherical tassels of silver wire, net and filé and purl. The sides and top edge are couched with copper gilt braid. |
Dimensions |
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Gallery label |
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Object history | Probably made in France |
Subjects depicted | |
Summary | Object Type This is a special purse for use at the gaming table, to hold money or counters. Its style is quite different from other 17th-century purses. The flat, circular base with sides gathered on a drawstring prevented spilling or revealing the contents. Materials & Making This gaming purse is quite plain, with no embroidery, only a twist of copper gilt thread. Its lack of decoration may have been deliberate, to deceive other players into thinking its owner had little money. Copper gilt was a cheap substitute for the precious metal thread made of silver-gilt. Social Class Playing and betting on card games was a socially acceptable pastime for the wealthy in the late 17th century. Along with dancing, riding and the theatre, it was an amusement for those classes that did not have to work. |
Collection | |
Accession number | 2010-1899 |
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Record created | March 27, 2003 |
Record URL |
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