Monday, December 31, 2018

Feathered Butter


Aren't these an interesting pair of buttons? Major oldies going back to the 1930's, this duo is made of creamed corn Bakelite and wow are they carved! The deeply cut design resembles the plumage plucked off of some very yellow birds. Biggish buttons, wouldn't these have looked spectacular on Claudette Colbert's overcoat? (A fine actress. I just watched her and Clark Gable in the screwball comedy, It Happened One Night, circa 1934). Pardon the smudging. These dirty birds are about to get a long, hot bath.

-Sherbert McGee 

Friday, December 28, 2018

Rootbeer Daisy Cluster


Aloha! This wondrous button has always reminded me of a Hawaiian lei balled up into a spectacle of bronze light. This unusual beauty is made of tortoise Bakelite (aka rootbeer) and boasts one of the prettiest carvings I've ever seen in a button. Most of my rootbeer buttons tend to run smooth, whereas this one is riddled with sculpted flowersthree daisies to be exact. Dating back to the early 1930's, this meticulous bouquet is practically an amber jewel.

-Sherbert McGee   

Thursday, December 27, 2018

Exemplary Bakelite


Could it be the perfect Bakelite button? Here's a delightful specimen of creamed corn Bakelite with carvings and patnina that typify the Bakelite look. A dandy oval with a nice shine and plenty of interesting character, I'm calling this a lucky find circa 1924. This button hails from one of my treasure hunts in the Midwestern USAgleaned from an antique shop in good old Kansas City!

-Sherbert McGee

Wednesday, December 26, 2018

Shifty Maroon


Bakelite can be very sneaky when it comes to its colors. In person, this beautifully carved Bakelite button is definitely a classic shade of maroon. But somehow the button doesn't translate accurately via photography. I must've taken a dozen pictures of this old treasure and the maroon is unfailingly converted to more of a mainstream redif not a darkish tomato red. One thing is certain: Despite its evasive coloring, this elongated antique's a definite charmer. circa 1926.

-Sherbert McGee

Tuesday, December 25, 2018

O Tannenbaum


A Bakelite button is a special thing indeed, but imagine finding a whole card of them dating back to the 1920's. That's what we have herein almost all of the Bakelite colors and made by the olden-day BWG button company. The way these eight buttons are plied up has always reminded me of a vivid Christmas tree. And on that note, seasons greetings to all of my Bakelite button blog followers. Here's to a cozy holiday with lots of mistletoe & eggnog. xoxo

Warmest Christmas mittens,
-Sherbert McGee

Monday, December 24, 2018

Moss Log


One of my least favorite Christmas carols is "Merry Christmas Darling" in which Karen Carpenter sings the cheesy line: Logs on the fire fill me with desire. Worst holiday lyric ever! But on the subject of logs, here's a large button made of brownish moss Bakelitecarved to resemble a hearty chunk of timber, if not a Christmas log in a warm and cozy fireplace, circa 1930. Happy holidays to all!

-Sherbert McGee  

Friday, December 21, 2018

ART NOUVEAU: Lilies


And here's where we bring my week of Art Nouveau buttons to a close. Let's revisit the meaning of Art Nouveau, a term borrowed from the French to describe an international style that came into prominence between 1890 and 1915. The style began in Europe where it was apparent in paintings, interior design, glass, jewelry, ceramics, metalwork, furniture, architecture and even buttons. Of the five buttons I've posted this week, this one's my favorite even though it doesn't boast a bead or a gemstone like the others. Instead, we have four elegant and long-stemmed lilies leaning this way and that way quite beautifully and pinned on a black Bakelite base that's carved on angled sides at the left and right. The button caught my eye five years ago at the famous "Tender Buttons" button shop in Manhattan that I've mentioned a few times over the years on this blog. Steeply priced at over $100, the button beguiled me with its poetic allure; and today it stands as one of my absolute trophies of vintage fashioneven an exquisite masterpiece. 

Now to bring this Art Nouveau-themed week to a fitting end, here's a photograph of one of the Art Nouveau subway signs in Paris, France. When I was in The City of Light a few years ago, these "Metropolitain" signs at the mouth of every subway entrance, absolutely charmed me with their Parisian glamour. Of course, the fonts and shapely contours of these old signposts epitomize the style we describe as Art Nouveau.

-Sherbert McGee 

“Beauty is a form of Genius—is higher, indeed, than Genius,
as it needs no explanation. It is one of the great facts of the world,
like sunlight, or springtime, or the reflection in the dark waters
of that silver shell we call the moon. It cannot be questioned.
It has divine right of sovereignty. It makes princes of those who have it.”

—Oscar Wilde