Category Archives: collections

Handbag Week! Day 4

Our week of handbags continues, in chronological order. Yesterday was all 1940s, all the time so if you know your decades, you realize that today we’re focusing on the 1950s. Clicking on any image will bring up a somewhat larger view for detail study.

I am intrigued by the shape of the bucket bag shown here, and found two online (here and here) at very reasonable prices.

The brass frame bag by Toro isn’t identified as such by the museum, but I’ve seen a few (very few) of these bags, one with the Toro hallmark, and the style, clasp, and handle are so unique that I think it’s a safe bet they’re all Toro bags. You can look for them, but you’ll be lucky to come across one. I found one of these “butterfly” models today in a store’s Sold archive, it went for $260. (Disclosure: I have a Toro of this shape in my unlisted inventory. I’ve had it for a while, actually. It would seem that I’m having a hard time parting with it.)

The Chanel bag is one you may recognize, because it’s still in production today as the Classic Flap Bag.

The telephone cord tote took me by surprise. Red and black phone cords? Without seeing the construction in person, I had this pegged as an ’80s creation. But no! To celebrate Western Electric’s then-new spiral telephone cord invention, some creative manufacturer used the all-new cords in an all-new way. Well done, anonymous artist!

CREDITS: Photography by Jenna Bascom and Ken Music Photography. All handbags shown here are from the collection of Tassenmuseum Hendrikje/Museum of Bags and Purses, Amsterdam except for the Chanel bag, from the vast collection of Sandy Schreier.

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Handbag Week! Day 3

For those of you in the U.S.: Happy Independence Day! For everyone else: Happy random Wednesday!

Our week of handbags continues, in chronological order. Today is all 1940s, all the time. Clicking on any image will bring up a somewhat larger view for detail study.

Beaded handbag with plastic frame, United States, 1940s

Shoulder bag woven from banana leaves and embroidered with raffia, 1940s

Textured cordé handbag, United States, 1940s

Plaited handbag with matching shoe, Hawaii, c. 1945

Let’s talk about cordé for a minute. Advertised during the 1940s as the longest wearing of all handbag fabrics, this was an important selling point during WWII. While rationing in the U.S. wasn’t as restrictive as it was in Europe, manufacturers both here and abroad had to comply with strict limitations regarding the use of leather and metal. Cordé handbags were created by stitching geometric patterns of gimp braid to a fabric background. Clear or tortoise Lucite pulls or handles were often added to add a touch of glamour. The result was a beautiful handbag that would last for the duration, and beyond.

EDIT 7/5/2012: I found this beaded bag on Etsy today, it’s nearly identical to the beaded bag featured here.

CREDITS: Photography by Jenna Bascom and Ken Music Photography. All handbags shown here are from the collection of Tassenmuseum Hendrikje/Museum of Bags and Purses, Amsterdam.

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Handbag Week! Day 2

Our week of handbags is progressing in chronological order; with today’s examples being manufactured between 1908 and 1939, although the iconic Kelly bag is still made (by hand) by Hermès to this day. And look, a nod to Olympic fever, in time for this year’s London games! Clicking on any image will bring up a somewhat larger view for detail study.

Silver and leather bag with decorative spider “spinning” an egraved web, Russia, 1908-1917

Beaded handbag made by a 14-year-old girl during the Amsterdam Olympic Games, 1928

Sac à dépêches, Hermès circa 1935 (this example from the late 20th C.)

Enameled minaudière with jeweled clasp that can be worn as a brooch, Asprey, 1939

About that Kelly bag: Introduced in 1935, Hermès’ “Sac à dépêches” is a true classic. Its nickname was adopted in 1956, when Grace Kelly was frequently photographed carrying hers. Popular history says that she used the sizable bag to conceal her pregnancy, but the photos below, taken before her marriage, show that the Sac à dépêches was already a staple in her wardrobe.

Grace Kelly: signing autographs, loading gowns into her car, announcing her engagement to Rainier III, Prince of Monaco.

CREDITS: Purse photography by Jenna Bascom and Ken Music Photography. Photos of Grace Kelly via LIFE magazine. All handbags shown here are from the collection of Tassenmuseum Hendrikje/Museum of Bags and Purses, Amsterdam.

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Handbag Week! Day 1

I promised on the Tiddleywink fan page that I’d devote this week’s posts to the study of handbags, and I haven’t forgotten. My emphasis, because of my personal taste, will be on the 1940s and ’50s, but I will show a selection that spans over a century of style. However, again due to my personal tastes, they may all bear a resemblance to bags which could have been made in the ’40s and ’50s!

The week will progress in chronological order; with today’s examples being manufactured between 1810 and 1902. Clicking on any image will bring up a somewhat larger view for detail study.

Aren’t they all lovely? I’m particularly fond of the Clan Stewart tartan bag. Do you have a favorite shown here, or from this time period?

CREDITS: Photography by Jenna Bascom and Ken Music Photography. All handbags shown here are from the collection of Tassenmuseum Hendrikje/Museum of Bags and Purses, Amsterdam.

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Things Found In Handbags

I’d planned for this post to be about handbags, and it is, sort of. It’s related, anyway.

Next week will be devoted to handbags. Beautiful examples, clever examples, still-in-production examples. But my list became too many for a single post. As a little whet-your-whistle, today will instead be about things that I’ve found in handbags that I’ve bought at estate sales.

I can practically guarantee that in every purse purchased from an estate sale, you will find any or all of the following:

  • bobby pins
  • a safety pin
  • a pill of some sort, in my experience usually Tums (these pills are NEVER wrapped in any way)
  • a neatly folded facial tissue
  • toothpicks

Each purse I buy gets a visual inspection, then gets turned over a trash bin before the real clean-out for resale begins. I don’t want to touch that tissue, no matter how neatly folded it is.

Once in a while, however, I’m rewarded with a treasure of some sort. A shopping list. A creased coupon clipped from some aged newspaper. A receipt. And happy me, found inside the calico inner pocket of a woven basket bag, I found these two photos.

I don’t know who they are. The gent’s photo, with staple marks and a partial stamp (reading …AAMSE TOB…, “Vlaamse” is Dutch for “Flemish” so there’s that much, maybe), appears to be an ID photo. I gleaned from other items I spotted at that estate that the man of the house, possibly this man shown here, was an avid cyclist. He certainly looks athletic, no? The woman’s photo has some writing on the back, but it’s far too faded for me to make out anything besides “1953.” Based on the combination of letter pairs, the other photo, and a receipt—also in the handbag—from a shop with locations in Amsterdam, Zaandam, and Haarlem, I assume that whatever it says is written in Dutch. How much do we love her notch-collar jacket?

If you’re curious, the only other item I found in this purse was a round-head screw.

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