I find it very disappointing when an estate sale advertises antique/old buttons and at the sale all they offer is a plastic peanut butter jar filled with dirty nylon shirt buttons.
Just because the buttons are dirty does not mean they are old.
Recently I found three nice button tins at estate sales.
Here are some buttons from the first tin. Some of these I will keep and some I will use in art work
Pearls
Black Glass
Bone, Glass
China
Composition
Fabric (nearly all have pad back shanks)
Vegetable Ivory
Metals
Here are the more interesting buttons to me
left: Republic Mexicana stud button (Mexican silver)
right: brass, high relief
and my favorite is this fabric Gone with the Wind button
Most Gone with the Wind buttons have not survived over the years due to improper storage/care and use.
I am delighted this sweet small button found a new home with me!
The remaining two button tins will be posted later.
* * * * * * * *
Here is my article on Gone with the Wind buttons minus a few photos due to copyright restrictions.
(This article may not be used without my expressed permission, Thank you.)
Gone with the Wind Buttons
by Tami Hacker
If you search for Gone with the Wind
buttons, you may find yourself searching endlessly. The term Gone with the Wind does not
appear in our National Button Society (NBS) Classification Blue Book.
According to Return Engagement of Black
Glass Buttons this endearing term was bestowed by button collector Margaret
Johnson to a specific type of woven fabric buttons found on women’s 1850-1860s
garments. In her July 1946 Just
Buttons magazine article, she refers to these buttons as “cloth buttons
with raised designs covered with the same or contrasting material.” She also mentions she has original store cards of these buttons with
hand-written notes of “45c per dozen”, and “1 doz, Inv. of 1868” – thus helping
us to date them.
These buttons are made up of two or more
separate molds consisting of several pieces of cardboard which are covered by woven fabric. Most are ½” in diameter, and can be as high
as they are round. Molded Top buttons
maybe decorated with cording or contrasting weave. Others known as Fancy Tops include a center
raised mold with glass centers; primarily black or white
glass. They were sold in sets of 20-24
both as fasteners or decoration on single and double-breasted bodices. Almost always they have a pad back although
a few have thread backs.
They are
classified as Division 1
(pre-1918) buttons.
Original garments, early fashion magazines
such as Godey’s, and antique photos help to date these buttons between the
Civil War and the 1860s.
Margaret Mitchell’s 1936 book Gone with
the Wind was brought to life in the 1939 movie by the same title. The Civil War (1861-1865) came to life on the
big screen popularizing such things as the fashion of that era.
It is thought Gone with the Wind (GWTW)
buttons earned their name due to the era in which they were created, this is
partly true. It is also thought Margaret
Johnson apt the phrase Gone with the Wind
because of the materials used in creating them. Some of the fabrics used were Damask, Faille,
Satin, Silk, Taffeta, Velvet and Wool.
For years these buttons laid unnoticed by button collectors, and like
most uncared-for fabrics, moths devoured them until their existence disappeared
like the wind…Gone with the Wind.
These button are officially classified in the
NBS Blue Book (2009-2010 and 2011-2012) as:
Section 5 –
Fabrics/Textiles
5-3.2 Two or more-piece molded tops. Two or more separately covered molds combined
to form a composite woven fabric button.
The fabrics may be the same or contrasting.
May include additional other material
embellishment (OME).
5-3.2.1 Fancy Tops. Center raised mold is shaped
(non-circular). Glass center on single
mold fabric base does not qualify, and belongs in other material embellishment
(OME) class.
These lovely and often overlooked buttons
range from $3.00-$15.00+. Grab them
while you can as there is a piqued interest by current button collectors.
Aren't these sweet buttons?
Happy button hunting, Tami