Button Collection at the Library...

On June 2nd, the Historical Button Club of northern Idaho placed antique button displays in the Coeur d’Alene and Post Falls libraries. This button lover was duly impressed.

The hope of this placement was to lure new collectors with this impressive display based on buttons made of natural materials.
The Club is described as, " An Antique and Collectible Button Organization dedicated to the hobby of buttons and furthering the knowledge and discovery of the history of these works of art in miniature. We endeavor to help anyone who has questions about button collecting or an inherited collection. We are affiliated with the National Button Society."
I was very intrigued and impress learning about the various items used to create buttons.







I had no idea that the Goodyear Rubber Company was in the button business. Wild.


I was surprised by vegetable ivory or tagua nut, a product made from the very hard white endosperm of the seeds of certain palm trees. Vegetable ivory is named for its resemblance to animal ivory. It can be dyed to be more fashionable.

I love the gourd buttons, too.
Included in the display was this devoted button collector, adorned in buttons, showing her glee after a button show! Hysterical.

“She opened up the glass jar she kept spare buttons in and began sorting through them. It was like handling bits and pieces of the past—buttons from loved ones’ dresses and suits and coats carefully gathered up and saved for future use. She had inherited many of the buttons from her mother and grandmother, even her Great Aunt Maggie. Each woman adding to the collection, like curators of a family museum. Now what would happen to them?” ― Elizabeth Jennings, The Button Collector

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1 comments:

Anonymous said...

Fascinating! Thanks for this information.

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