Bottle Ticket thumbnail 1
On display
Image of Gallery in South Kensington

Bottle Ticket

1808-1809 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Bottle tickets identified the contents of a bottle or decanter, which might alternatively contain spirits, sauces, toilet waters or cordials. Here the contents were milk of roses, a toilet water made from pulverised almonds and rose water.

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. These tickets also illustrate in miniature the skills of the silversmith over the last two hundred years. While the variety of styles and materials was enormous, silver bottle tickets tended to reflect fashionable designs and technical advances in metalware generally.

Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Silver-gilt
Brief description
Silver-gilt, London hallmarks for 1808-1809, mark of Phipps and Robinson
Physical description
Bottle ticket with the words MILK OF ROSES. Silver-gilt, rectangualr with cut corners, double reeded edge, and chain attached.
Dimensions
  • Length: 3.1cm
  • Width: 1.7cm
Marks and inscriptions
  • Mark of Phipps and Robinson
  • London hallmarks for 1808-1809
  • MILK OF ROSES
Gallery label
(2000)
"MILK OF ROSES"
Silver-gilt
British, 1808-9
Mark of Thomas Phipps and Edward Robinson
Based on a mkixture of pulverised almionds and rose water.
M.117-1944
Credit line
P. J. Cropper Bequest
Object history
Acquisition RF: 44 / 177
Bequest - P.J. Cropper
per W J Sheldrick
A toilet water. Part of a set: M.116 to 118 - 1944.
Summary
Bottle tickets identified the contents of a bottle or decanter, which might alternatively contain spirits, sauces, toilet waters or cordials. Here the contents were milk of roses, a toilet water made from pulverised almonds and rose water.

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. These tickets also illustrate in miniature the skills of the silversmith over the last two hundred years. While the variety of styles and materials was enormous, silver bottle tickets tended to reflect fashionable designs and technical advances in metalware generally.
Associated objects
Collection
Accession number
M.117-1944

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Record createdMarch 3, 2004
Record URL
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