Pages

Showing posts with label Bakelite. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bakelite. Show all posts

April 23, 2018

Collections: Vintage Buttons



Many of us have our mom's or grandmother's old buttons,
often stored in cookie tins or mason jars.
I have childhood memories playing with my Granny's stash,
 sifting them through my fingers
sorting by color or size, lining them up.
dazzled by the fancy ones!

Vintage buttons are very collectible, as you'll see
with the variety of groupings here.
Antique bits from the past made of glass, celluloid,
pearl, bakelite, metal, or wood; each is a tiny treasure.




 





















Other posts in my "Collections" series:
A Show of Hands



July 19, 2015

The Antique & Vintage Market at The Kimmel Center

Kimmel1


An afternoon in Philadelphia began with a stop at The Kimmel Center.
Best known as a performing arts venue for concerts and theater,
today it hosted peddlers of antiques and collectibles,
who filled the gorgeous Kimmel Center lobby with their wares.

Here are some highlights of what we saw~



How about this accordion?

Kimmel2






Kimmel3





Loads of vintage jewelry.

Kimmel4





Cookie cutters and a treasure of an old book.

Kimmel5





Art in interesting frames.

Kimmel6





Hundreds of vintage buttons cleverly displayed in this suitcase.

Kimmel10





This colorful old quilt led me to wonder about the busy hands that stitched it.

Kimmel7






Kimmel8





A great assortment of Bakelite bracelets.

Kimmel9





Children's books.

Kimmel11





Dominoes, finger puppets and rhythm instruments.

Kimmel12


Visit the Kimmel Center Website.


February 15, 2013

Bakelite

countryliving

In 1907, Dr. Leo Baekeland, a scientist from Belgium, discovered a new compound of carbolic acid and formaldehyde. He took out a patent and  named it "bakelite" (pronounced bay-ka-lite). As the first synthetic plastic, it was wildly popular. It was touted as "the material of a thousand uses".

Here are just some of them:
Desk sets, dresser sets.
Handles for umbrellas, pots, and kitchen utensils.
Guitars, fishing reels, tape measures.
Electrical plugs and parts.
Dice, poker chips, dominoes, chess pieces & checkers.

And of course...jewelry!

vintagelivingmagazine


During the Great Depression, when money was scarce, bakelite jewelry was affordable. 


galessasplastics


Bakelite pieces dating back to the 1920's to 1940's 
show signs of having oxidized because their original colors have changed. 
For example, pink became orange, white changed to butterscotch, and blue to green.



radiocraze


retrokimmer


vintagejunkinmytrunk


moblog




A really popular use for Bakelite was billiard balls.

styleenmiopinion



Let's get back to jewelry, shall we? 
How about this fantastic necklace overflowing with charms? Fun!

imageeve



I'm lovin' the whimsy of this leapfrog pin!

chemheritage



Buttons...

maren6300


...purses...

hemlockvintage


...and belt buckles.

asecretforest



After World War II, new types of plastics such as acrylic, vinyl, Lucite and fiberglass were invented.

Today, vintage bakelite items are highly collectible. 
I wouldn't mind owning a bracelet or two myself!