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Basic Information | | Accession Number: | 1981M374 |
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| Collection: | Applied Art - Costume |
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Notes | For as long as people have had precious items and money to carry about their person, bags and purses have played an important role in our daily lives. Accessories like these small bags have been valued for their usefulness. They have also been a relatively cheap and easy way to update fashions and are an indicator of style and taste.The forerunner of the handbag was the 'redicule' adopted in France in the late eighteenth century. Although British women took longer to embrace the idea, they soon came to rely on them and called them their 'indispensables'.The term 'handbag' initially referred to the hand held luggage bags usually carried by men. In the last third of the nineteenth century practical and stylistic elements of the leather travelling bag, such as its metal fastenings and compartmentalised interior, ticket pockets and sturdy handle, inspired the new handbag for women, the precursor of the twentieth century handbag.This reptile skin purse is full of bills and ephemra from local Birmingham shops from between 1895 and 1907. They include a bill for groceries from H Dawborn of 89 Villa Road, Handsworth dated 1903, a bill for Jevons & Mellor of Corporation Street for a costume skirt dated 1901, a folded postcard of the Malvern Hills, 1907. A bill for a stay at Eastbourne 1894 and a Great Western Railway ticket from Claverdon to Hatton 1901. | | Bequeathed by Mrs Norah Hawker, 1981. |
Further Information | | Production Period: | 19th Century |
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| Medium: | Hand crafted reptile skin, silver, paper and card. |
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| Material(s): | Card |
Dimensions | | Height: | 7 cm |
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| Width: | 10 cm |
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| Depth: | 4 cm |
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