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Wikipedia

Button

A button is a fastener that joins two pieces of fabric together by slipping through a loop or by sliding through a buttonhole.

Brass buttons from the uniform of a Danish World War I artillery lieutenant
Modern buttons made from vegetable ivory

In modern clothing and fashion design, buttons are commonly made of plastic but also may be made of metal, wood, or seashell. Buttons can also be used on containers such as wallets and bags. Buttons may be sewn onto garments and similar items exclusively for purposes of ornamentation. In the applied arts and craft, a button can be an example of folk art, studio craft, or even a miniature work of art. In archaeology, a button can be a significant artifact.

History edit

 
Spanish button (approx. 12 mm) from ca. 1650–1675

Buttons and button-like objects used as ornaments or seals rather than fasteners have been discovered in the Indus Valley civilization during its Kot Diji phase (c. 2800–2600 BC),[1] at the Tomb of the Eagles, Scotland (2200-1800 BC),[2][3][4] and at Bronze Age sites in China (c. 2000–1500 BC) and Ancient Rome.

Buttons made from seashell were used by the Indus Valley Civilization for ornamental purposes by 2000 BC.[5] Some buttons were carved into geometric shapes and were pierced so that they could be attached to clothing with thread.[5] Ian McNeil (1990) holds that "the button was originally used more as an ornament than as a fastening, the earliest known being found at Mohenjo-daro in the Indus Valley. It is made of a curved shell and is about 5000 years old."[6]

Egypt’s Eighteenth Dynasty left behind ornate wig covers, fabricated through sewing buttons formed of precious metals onto strips of backing material.[7]

Leatherwork from the Roman Empire incorporates some of the first buttonholes, with the legionary Loculus (satchel) closed through the insertion of a metallic buckle, or button into a leather slit. A similar mechanism would later feature in early medieval footwear.[8] Buttons appeared as a means to close cuffs in the Byzantine Empire and to fasten the necks of Egyptian tunics by no later than the 5th century.[9]

As containers edit

Since at least the seventeenth century, when box-like metal buttons were constructed especially for the purpose,[10] buttons have been one of the items in which drug smugglers have attempted to hide and transport illegal substances. At least one modern smuggler has tried to use this method.[11]

Also making use of the storage possibilities of metal buttons, during the World Wars, British and U.S. military locket buttons were made, containing miniature working compasses.[12]

Materials and manufacture edit

 
Button stamping machine at the Henri Jamorski Button Factory in Paris, 1919

Because buttons have been manufactured from almost every possible material, both natural and synthetic, and combinations of both, the history of the material composition of buttons reflects the timeline of materials technology.

Buttons can be individually crafted by artisans, craftspeople or artists from raw materials or found objects (for example fossils), or a combination of both. Alternatively, they can be the product of low-tech cottage industry or be mass-produced in high-tech factories. Buttons made by artists are art objects, known to button collectors as "studio buttons" (or simply "studios", from studio craft).[13]

In 1918, the US government made an extensive survey of the international button market, which listed buttons made of vegetable ivory, metal, glass, galalith, silk, linen, cotton-covered crochet, lead, snap fasteners, enamel, rubber, buckhorn, wood, horn, bone, leather, paper, pressed cardboard, mother-of-pearl, celluloid, porcelain, composition, tin, zinc, xylonite, stone, cloth-covered wooden forms, and papier-mâché. Vegetable ivory was said to be the most popular for suits and shirts, and papier-mâché far and away the commonest sort of shoe button.[14]

Nowadays, hard plastic, seashell, metals, and wood are the most common materials used in button-making; the others tending to be used only in premium or antique apparel, or found in collections.

Over 60% of the world's button supply comes from Qiaotou, Yongjia County, China.[15][16]

Decoration and coating techniques edit

Historically, fashions in buttons have also reflected trends in applied aesthetics and the applied visual arts, with buttonmakers using techniques from jewellery making, ceramics, sculpture, painting, printmaking, metalworking, weaving and others. The following are just a few of the construction and decoration techniques that have been used in button-making:

Styles of attachment edit

 
Three plastic sew-through buttons (left) and one shank, fabric-covered button (right)
  • Flat or sew-through buttons have holes through which thread is sewn to attach the button.[24] Flat buttons may be attached by sewing machine rather than by hand and may be used with heavy fabrics by working a thread shank to extend the height of the button above the fabric.
 
An assorti of shank buttons
  • Shank buttons have a hollow protrusion on the back through which thread is sewn to attach the button.[25] Button shanks may be made from a separate piece of the same or a different substance as the button itself, and added to the back of the button, or be carved or moulded directly onto the back of the button, in which latter case the button is referred to by collectors as having a 'self-shank'.
 
Plastic studs for bedclothes
 
Shirt studs
  • Stud buttons (also push-through buttons or just studs) are composed from an actual button, connected to a second, button-like element by a narrow metal or plastic bar. Pushed through two opposing holes within what is meant to be kept together, the actual button and its counterpart press it together, keeping it joined. Popular examples of such buttons are shirt studs and cufflinks.
  • Snap fasteners (also pressure buttons or press studs) are metal (usually brass) round discs pinched through the fabric. They are often found on clothing, in particular on denim pieces such as pants and jackets. They are more securely fastened to the material. As they rely on a metal rivet attached securely to the fabric, pressure buttons are difficult to remove without compromising the fabric's integrity. They are made of two couples: the male stud couple and the female stud couple. Each couple has one front (or top) and rear (or bottom) side (the fabric goes in the middle).
 
Illustration from 1908 Chambers's Twentieth Century. Toggle, n. (naut.) a short bar of wood, tapering from the middle towards each end, placed in an eye at the end of a rope, to keep the end from passing through a loop or knot.
  • Toggles are stick-like, with a cord attached at the center. They are passed endways through a hole and then rotated sideways.
  • Magnetic buttons, as the name implies, are buttons that attach to each other by being magnetic.[26] The buttons can be attached either by sewing or snapping them into the fabric.

Fabric buttons edit

  • Covered buttons are fabric-covered forms with a separate back piece that secures the fabric over the knob.
  • Mandarin buttons or frogs are knobs made of intricately knotted strings. Mandarin buttons are a key element in Mandarin dress (Qi Pao and cheongsam in Chinese), where they are closed with loops. Pairs of mandarin buttons worn as cuff links are called silk knots.
  • Worked or cloth buttons are created by embroidering or crocheting tight stitches (usually with linen thread) over a knob or ring called a form. Dorset buttons, handmade from the 17th century to 1750, and Death head buttons are of this type.

Button sizes edit

The size of the button depends on its use. Shirt buttons are generally small, and spaced close together, whereas coat buttons are larger and spaced further apart. Buttons are commonly measured in lignes (also called lines and abbreviated L), with 40 lines equal to 1 inch.[27] For example, some standard sizes of buttons are 16 lignes (10.16 mm, standard buttons of men's shirts) and 32 lignes (20.32 mm, typical button on suit jackets).[28]

In museums and galleries edit

 
Peter Carl Fabergé buttons in the Cleveland Museum of Art

Some museums and art galleries hold culturally, historically, politically, and/or artistically significant buttons in their collections. The Victoria and Albert Museum has many buttons,[29] particularly in its jewellery collection, as does the Smithsonian Institution.[30][31][32][33]

Hammond Turner & Sons, a button-making company in Birmingham, hosts an online museum with an image gallery and historical button-related articles,[34] including an 1852 article on button-making by Charles Dickens.[35] In the US, large button collections are on public display at the Waterbury Button Museum of Waterbury, Connecticut,[36] the Keep Homestead Museum of Monson, Massachusetts,[37] which also hosts an extensive button archive,[38] and in Gurnee, Illinois, at The Button Room.[39]

Gallery edit

Positioning edit

Classic clothing has the button on the left side for women and on the right side for men. The reasons for this are unclear, but the choice for men's clothing is usually attributed to the need to draw weapons from the left to right; the weapon would then not catch on opening of the clothing. For women's clothing the common reason given is that in times when upper-class women's clothing was quite elaborate, servants were needed for dressing, and the left placement of the buttons was more convenient for right-handed maids.[40][41][42] Some Jews reverse this, following statements in the Torah that favor dressing first on the right side, or from the Kabbalah, in which the right side denotes goodness.[43][44][45][46]

In politics edit

The mainly American tradition of politically significant clothing buttons appears to have begun with the first presidential inauguration of George Washington in 1789. Known to collectors as "Washington Inaugurals",[47] they were made of copper, brass or Sheffield plate, in large sizes for coats and smaller sizes for breeches.[48] Made in twenty-two patterns and hand-stamped, they are now extremely valuable cultural artifacts.

Between about 1840 and 1916, clothing buttons were used in American political campaigns, and still exist in collections today. Initially, these buttons were predominantly made of brass (though horn and rubber buttons with stamped or moulded designs also exist) and had loop shanks. Around 1860 the badge or pin-back style of construction, which replaced the shanks with long pins, probably for use on lapels and ties, began to appear.[49]

One common practice that survived until recent times on campaign buttons and badges was to include the image of George Washington with that of the candidate in question.

Some of the most famous campaign buttons are those made for Abraham Lincoln. Memorial buttons commemorating Lincoln's inaugurations and other life events, including his birth and death, were also made, and are also considered highly collectible.[50]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Khan, Omar (1999). "Fired steatite button". The Indus Civilization. San Francisco, USA: harrapa.com. Retrieved 11 March 2010.
  2. ^ "A Day in the Neolithic: A Walk Through 5,000-year-old Scotland at the Tomb of the Eagles". Senior Hiker Magazine. 2018-08-27. Retrieved 2020-10-24.
  3. ^ Mamwell, Caroline Jane (2018). 'It Rained a Lot and Nothing Much Happened': Settlement and Society in Bronze Age Orkney. University of Edinburgh. p. 146.
  4. ^ Hedges, John W. (1998-04-21). Tomb of the Eagles: Death and Life in a Stone Age Tribe. New Amsterdam Books. p. 152. ISBN 978-1-4617-3268-6.
  5. ^ a b Hesse, Rayner W. & Hesse (Jr.), Rayner W. (2007). Jewelrymaking Through History: An Encyclopedia. Greenwood Publishing Group. 35. ISBN 0-313-33507-9.
  6. ^ McNeil, Ian (1990). An encyclopaedia of the history of technology. Taylor & Francis. 852. ISBN 0-415-01306-2.
  7. ^ Shaw, Garry J. (2008). Royal Authority in Egypt’s Eighteenth Dynasty. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 978-1-4073-0308-6.
  8. ^ "Viking Boot: History of York". www.historyofyork.org.uk. Retrieved 2020-11-14.
  9. ^ "The Westward Journeys of Buttons - AramcoWorld". www.aramcoworld.com. Retrieved 2020-11-28.
  10. ^ Dahl, Liz (June 5, 2008). "For a collector hooked on history, every button tells a story". The Oregonian: Homes & Gardens. Oregon, USA: Oregon Live LLC. Retrieved 11 March 2010.
  11. ^ Australian Government (12 November 2009). "heroin concealed in dress buttons". Australia: Customs and Border Protection Communication and Media. Retrieved 11 March 2010.
  12. ^ (Luscomb 2003, p. 126)
  13. ^ Peach State Button Club (2010). . Button Country. Georgia, USA: Peach State Button Club. Archived from the original on 6 June 2010. Retrieved 11 June 2010.
  14. ^ The United States Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, Paper and Stationery Trade of the World, Government Printing Office, 1918
  15. ^ "A look at China's "Button Town"". www.cbsnews.com. 8 October 2015.
  16. ^ "Chinese 'Button Town' Struggles with Success". NPR.org.
  17. ^ (Luscomb 2003, p. 53)
  18. ^ Victoria and Albert museum. . London, UK: V&A Images. Archived from the original on 24 August 2011. Retrieved 10 March 2010.
  19. ^ Victoria and Albert Museum (1880). "Elements of a German filigree button, made ca 1880". V&A Jewellery collection. London, UK: V&A Images. Retrieved 10 March 2010.
  20. ^ (Luscomb 2003, p. 104)
  21. ^ (Luscomb 2003, pp. 123–124)
  22. ^ Victoria & Albert museum (1992). "Jacket from bridegroom's outfit". V&A Jewellery collection. London, UK: V&A Images. Retrieved 10 March 2010.
  23. ^ "Coat - Victoria & Albert museum". London, UK: V&A Images. Retrieved 10 March 2010.
  24. ^ Colton, Virginia, ed. (1978). Complete Guide to Sewing. Reader's Digest. p. 352. ISBN 0-89577-026-1.
  25. ^ Button Country (2010). . GA, USA: Peach State Button Club. Archived from the original on 17 June 2010. Retrieved 11 March 2010.
  26. ^ US2397931A, Robert, Ellis, "Magnetic button", issued 1946-04-09 
  27. ^ "An Easy Guide to Button Measurement and Sizing". Sun Mei Button Enterprise Co., Ltd. 2019-06-19.
  28. ^ "STANDARD BUTTONS", Brain Browser, Elsevier, pp. 86–90, 1990, retrieved 2023-11-18
  29. ^ "Your Search Results | Search the Collections | Victoria and Albert Museum". collections.vam.ac.uk.
  30. ^ American Indian Buttons made with ivory, whalebone and ink 2018-12-21 at the Wayback Machine at the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian.
  31. ^ Domestic button collection, circa 1935, from Washington, D.C., at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History.
  32. ^ Uniform buttons 2011-07-23 at the Wayback Machine of the United States Postal Service at 'Arago', the Smithsonian National Postal Museum.
  33. ^ "Button | Smithsonian American Art Museum". americanart.si.edu.
  34. ^ "Hammond-Turner.com – Online Button Museum". hammond-turner.com.
  35. ^ "Hammond-Turner.com – Online Button Museum". hammond-turner.com.
  36. ^ "Mattatuck Museum | Art Exhibitions & Educational Programs in CT". Mattatuck Museum.
  37. ^ "Keep Homestead Museum". keephomesteadmuseum.org.
  38. ^ . keephomesteadmuseum.org. Archived from the original on 2020-01-19. Retrieved 2020-04-30.
  39. ^ . Archived from the original on 2020-11-27. Retrieved 2012-02-28.
  40. ^ Megan Garber (March 27, 2015). "The Curious Case of Men and Women's Buttons". The Atlantic. Retrieved November 6, 2022. On the left for the ladies and on the right for the gents
  41. ^ Danny Lewis (November 23, 2015). "Here's Why Men's and Women's Clothes Button on Opposite Sides". Smithsonian. Retrieved November 6, 2022.
  42. ^ Benjamin Radford (July 6, 2010). "Why Are Men's and Women's Buttons on Opposite Sides?". Live Science. Retrieved November 6, 2022.
  43. ^ Chaya Korb Hubner (1989). The Broken Magen David. p. 116. men button right on left .. Tznius
  44. ^ Danna Lorch (February 13, 2019). "Why Do Hasidic Men Button Their Shirts The Wrong Way?". The Forward. Retrieved November 6, 2022. Just like women, most Hasidic men button their jackets, shirts, and rekels (long frock coat) with the right side over the left
  45. ^ Madison Margolin (February 12, 2017). "In ultra-Orthodox fashion, you can tell a lot about a person by his button holdes". The Times of Israel. Retrieved November 6, 2022.
  46. ^ What's the Difference Between Hasidic vs. Orthodox Jews?, June 14, 2021
  47. ^ Cobb, J. Harold; Kirk Mitchell (Feb 2, 2005). "J. Harold Cobb's George Washington Inaugural Button Collection". USA: Kirk Mitchell. Retrieved 13 March 2010.
  48. ^ (Luscomb 2003, pp. 214–218)
  49. ^ (Luscomb 2003, pp. 33–34)
  50. ^ (Luscomb 2003, pp. 119–120)

Sources edit

  • Luscomb, Sally C. (2003). The Collector's Encyclopedia of Buttons (5th ed.). Atglen, PA: Schiffer. ISBN 0-7643-1815-2. LCCN 2003101645.

Further reading edit

  • Bunch, Bryan (2004). The History of Science and Technology. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin. p. 784. ISBN 978-0-618-22123-3.
  • Edwards, Nina (2012) (2012). On the Button: The Significance of an Ordinary Item. London, UK: I. B. Tauris. ISBN 978-1-84885-584-7. ASIN 1848855842.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  • Kohler, Carl (1963). A History of Costume. USA: Dover. p. 464. ISBN 978-0-486-21030-8.
  • Osborne, Peggy A. (1997). Button, button : identification and price guide. Atglen, PA: Schiffer. p. 167. ISBN 0-7643-0082-2. LCCN 92063104.
  • Peacock, Primrose (1978). Discovering old buttons. Discovering series; no. 213. Rosemary Godsell (illus.). Aylesbury, UK: Shire Publications. p. 76. ISBN 0-85263-445-5.
  • Wisniewski, Debra J. (1997). Antique & collectible buttons : identification & values. Charley Lynch. Paducah, KY: Collector Books. p. 168. ISBN 0-89145-711-9. LCCN 97122120.

External links edit

  • Button-making in Birmingham, England in the 1800s
  • Online collection of historical buttons at the Button Museum

button, other, uses, disambiguation, button, fastener, that, joins, pieces, fabric, together, slipping, through, loop, sliding, through, buttonhole, brass, buttons, from, uniform, danish, world, artillery, lieutenantmodern, buttons, made, from, vegetable, ivor. For other uses see Button disambiguation A button is a fastener that joins two pieces of fabric together by slipping through a loop or by sliding through a buttonhole Brass buttons from the uniform of a Danish World War I artillery lieutenantModern buttons made from vegetable ivoryIn modern clothing and fashion design buttons are commonly made of plastic but also may be made of metal wood or seashell Buttons can also be used on containers such as wallets and bags Buttons may be sewn onto garments and similar items exclusively for purposes of ornamentation In the applied arts and craft a button can be an example of folk art studio craft or even a miniature work of art In archaeology a button can be a significant artifact Contents 1 History 1 1 As containers 2 Materials and manufacture 2 1 Decoration and coating techniques 2 2 Styles of attachment 2 3 Fabric buttons 2 4 Button sizes 3 In museums and galleries 4 Gallery 5 Positioning 6 In politics 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory edit nbsp Spanish button approx 12 mm from ca 1650 1675Buttons and button like objects used as ornaments or seals rather than fasteners have been discovered in the Indus Valley civilization during its Kot Diji phase c 2800 2600 BC 1 at the Tomb of the Eagles Scotland 2200 1800 BC 2 3 4 and at Bronze Age sites in China c 2000 1500 BC and Ancient Rome Buttons made from seashell were used by the Indus Valley Civilization for ornamental purposes by 2000 BC 5 Some buttons were carved into geometric shapes and were pierced so that they could be attached to clothing with thread 5 Ian McNeil 1990 holds that the button was originally used more as an ornament than as a fastening the earliest known being found at Mohenjo daro in the Indus Valley It is made of a curved shell and is about 5000 years old 6 Egypt s Eighteenth Dynasty left behind ornate wig covers fabricated through sewing buttons formed of precious metals onto strips of backing material 7 Leatherwork from the Roman Empire incorporates some of the first buttonholes with the legionary Loculus satchel closed through the insertion of a metallic buckle or button into a leather slit A similar mechanism would later feature in early medieval footwear 8 Buttons appeared as a means to close cuffs in the Byzantine Empire and to fasten the necks of Egyptian tunics by no later than the 5th century 9 As containers edit Since at least the seventeenth century when box like metal buttons were constructed especially for the purpose 10 buttons have been one of the items in which drug smugglers have attempted to hide and transport illegal substances At least one modern smuggler has tried to use this method 11 Also making use of the storage possibilities of metal buttons during the World Wars British and U S military locket buttons were made containing miniature working compasses 12 Materials and manufacture edit nbsp Button stamping machine at the Henri Jamorski Button Factory in Paris 1919See also List of raw materials used in button making Because buttons have been manufactured from almost every possible material both natural and synthetic and combinations of both the history of the material composition of buttons reflects the timeline of materials technology Buttons can be individually crafted by artisans craftspeople or artists from raw materials or found objects for example fossils or a combination of both Alternatively they can be the product of low tech cottage industry or be mass produced in high tech factories Buttons made by artists are art objects known to button collectors as studio buttons or simply studios from studio craft 13 In 1918 the US government made an extensive survey of the international button market which listed buttons made of vegetable ivory metal glass galalith silk linen cotton covered crochet lead snap fasteners enamel rubber buckhorn wood horn bone leather paper pressed cardboard mother of pearl celluloid porcelain composition tin zinc xylonite stone cloth covered wooden forms and papier mache Vegetable ivory was said to be the most popular for suits and shirts and papier mache far and away the commonest sort of shoe button 14 Nowadays hard plastic seashell metals and wood are the most common materials used in button making the others tending to be used only in premium or antique apparel or found in collections Over 60 of the world s button supply comes from Qiaotou Yongjia County China 15 16 Decoration and coating techniques edit Historically fashions in buttons have also reflected trends in applied aesthetics and the applied visual arts with buttonmakers using techniques from jewellery making ceramics sculpture painting printmaking metalworking weaving and others The following are just a few of the construction and decoration techniques that have been used in button making Arita porcelain Cloisonne Daguerreotype 17 Electroplating Embroidery 18 Filigree 19 Intaglio 20 Lacquerware Lithography 21 Metallizing Metal openwork 22 Opus interassile Passementerie 23 Portrait miniatures Satsuma ware Vitreous enamel Styles of attachment edit nbsp Three plastic sew through buttons left and one shank fabric covered button right Flat or sew through buttons have holes through which thread is sewn to attach the button 24 Flat buttons may be attached by sewing machine rather than by hand and may be used with heavy fabrics by working a thread shank to extend the height of the button above the fabric nbsp An assorti of shank buttonsShank buttons have a hollow protrusion on the back through which thread is sewn to attach the button 25 Button shanks may be made from a separate piece of the same or a different substance as the button itself and added to the back of the button or be carved or moulded directly onto the back of the button in which latter case the button is referred to by collectors as having a self shank nbsp Plastic studs for bedclothes nbsp Shirt studsStud buttons also push through buttons or just studs are composed from an actual button connected to a second button like element by a narrow metal or plastic bar Pushed through two opposing holes within what is meant to be kept together the actual button and its counterpart press it together keeping it joined Popular examples of such buttons are shirt studs and cufflinks Snap fasteners also pressure buttons or press studs are metal usually brass round discs pinched through the fabric They are often found on clothing in particular on denim pieces such as pants and jackets They are more securely fastened to the material As they rely on a metal rivet attached securely to the fabric pressure buttons are difficult to remove without compromising the fabric s integrity They are made of two couples the male stud couple and the female stud couple Each couple has one front or top and rear or bottom side the fabric goes in the middle nbsp Illustration from 1908 Chambers s Twentieth Century Toggle n naut a short bar of wood tapering from the middle towards each end placed in an eye at the end of a rope to keep the end from passing through a loop or knot Toggles are stick like with a cord attached at the center They are passed endways through a hole and then rotated sideways Magnetic buttons as the name implies are buttons that attach to each other by being magnetic 26 The buttons can be attached either by sewing or snapping them into the fabric Fabric buttons edit Covered buttons are fabric covered forms with a separate back piece that secures the fabric over the knob Mandarin buttons or frogs are knobs made of intricately knotted strings Mandarin buttons are a key element in Mandarin dress Qi Pao and cheongsam in Chinese where they are closed with loops Pairs of mandarin buttons worn as cuff links are called silk knots Worked or cloth buttons are created by embroidering or crocheting tight stitches usually with linen thread over a knob or ring called a form Dorset buttons handmade from the 17th century to 1750 and Death head buttons are of this type Button sizes edit The size of the button depends on its use Shirt buttons are generally small and spaced close together whereas coat buttons are larger and spaced further apart Buttons are commonly measured in lignes also called lines and abbreviated L with 40 lines equal to 1 inch 27 For example some standard sizes of buttons are 16 lignes 10 16 mm standard buttons of men s shirts and 32 lignes 20 32 mm typical button on suit jackets 28 In museums and galleries edit nbsp Peter Carl Faberge buttons in the Cleveland Museum of ArtSome museums and art galleries hold culturally historically politically and or artistically significant buttons in their collections The Victoria and Albert Museum has many buttons 29 particularly in its jewellery collection as does the Smithsonian Institution 30 31 32 33 Hammond Turner amp Sons a button making company in Birmingham hosts an online museum with an image gallery and historical button related articles 34 including an 1852 article on button making by Charles Dickens 35 In the US large button collections are on public display at the Waterbury Button Museum of Waterbury Connecticut 36 the Keep Homestead Museum of Monson Massachusetts 37 which also hosts an extensive button archive 38 and in Gurnee Illinois at The Button Room 39 Gallery edit nbsp Clam shells used for making buttons nbsp Hand painted Satsuma ware self shank button nbsp Wedgwood button with Boulton cut steels depicting a mermaid amp family England c 1760 Diameter just over 32 mm 11 4 nbsp Thread Covered buttonsPositioning editClassic clothing has the button on the left side for women and on the right side for men The reasons for this are unclear but the choice for men s clothing is usually attributed to the need to draw weapons from the left to right the weapon would then not catch on opening of the clothing For women s clothing the common reason given is that in times when upper class women s clothing was quite elaborate servants were needed for dressing and the left placement of the buttons was more convenient for right handed maids 40 41 42 Some Jews reverse this following statements in the Torah that favor dressing first on the right side or from the Kabbalah in which the right side denotes goodness 43 44 45 46 In politics editThe mainly American tradition of politically significant clothing buttons appears to have begun with the first presidential inauguration of George Washington in 1789 Known to collectors as Washington Inaugurals 47 they were made of copper brass or Sheffield plate in large sizes for coats and smaller sizes for breeches 48 Made in twenty two patterns and hand stamped they are now extremely valuable cultural artifacts Between about 1840 and 1916 clothing buttons were used in American political campaigns and still exist in collections today Initially these buttons were predominantly made of brass though horn and rubber buttons with stamped or moulded designs also exist and had loop shanks Around 1860 the badge or pin back style of construction which replaced the shanks with long pins probably for use on lapels and ties began to appear 49 One common practice that survived until recent times on campaign buttons and badges was to include the image of George Washington with that of the candidate in question Some of the most famous campaign buttons are those made for Abraham Lincoln Memorial buttons commemorating Lincoln s inaugurations and other life events including his birth and death were also made and are also considered highly collectible 50 See also editKoumpounophobia fear of buttonsReferences edit Khan Omar 1999 Fired steatite button The Indus Civilization San Francisco USA harrapa com Retrieved 11 March 2010 A Day in the Neolithic A Walk Through 5 000 year old Scotland at the Tomb of the Eagles Senior Hiker Magazine 2018 08 27 Retrieved 2020 10 24 Mamwell Caroline Jane 2018 It Rained a Lot and Nothing Much Happened Settlement and Society in Bronze Age Orkney University of Edinburgh p 146 Hedges John W 1998 04 21 Tomb of the Eagles Death and Life in a Stone Age Tribe New Amsterdam Books p 152 ISBN 978 1 4617 3268 6 a b Hesse Rayner W amp Hesse Jr Rayner W 2007 Jewelrymaking Through History An Encyclopedia Greenwood Publishing Group 35 ISBN 0 313 33507 9 McNeil Ian 1990 An encyclopaedia of the history of technology Taylor amp Francis 852 ISBN 0 415 01306 2 Shaw Garry J 2008 Royal Authority in Egypt s Eighteenth Dynasty Ann Arbor MI University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 1 4073 0308 6 Viking Boot History of York www historyofyork org uk Retrieved 2020 11 14 The Westward Journeys of Buttons AramcoWorld www aramcoworld com Retrieved 2020 11 28 Dahl Liz June 5 2008 For a collector hooked on history every button tells a story The Oregonian Homes amp Gardens Oregon USA Oregon Live LLC Retrieved 11 March 2010 Australian Government 12 November 2009 heroin concealed in dress buttons Australia Customs and Border Protection Communication and Media Retrieved 11 March 2010 Luscomb 2003 p 126 Peach State Button Club 2010 Studios Section 23 11 Button Country Georgia USA Peach State Button Club Archived from the original on 6 June 2010 Retrieved 11 June 2010 The United States Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce Paper and Stationery Trade of the World Government Printing Office 1918 A look at China s Button Town www cbsnews com 8 October 2015 Chinese Button Town Struggles with Success NPR org Luscomb 2003 p 53 Victoria and Albert museum Man s suit Coat and breeches London UK V amp A Images Archived from the original on 24 August 2011 Retrieved 10 March 2010 Victoria and Albert Museum 1880 Elements of a German filigree button made ca 1880 V amp A Jewellery collection London UK V amp A Images Retrieved 10 March 2010 Luscomb 2003 p 104 Luscomb 2003 pp 123 124 Victoria amp Albert museum 1992 Jacket from bridegroom s outfit V amp A Jewellery collection London UK V amp A Images Retrieved 10 March 2010 Coat Victoria amp Albert museum London UK V amp A Images Retrieved 10 March 2010 Colton Virginia ed 1978 Complete Guide to Sewing Reader s Digest p 352 ISBN 0 89577 026 1 Button Country 2010 Back Types Shanks 23 3 GA USA Peach State Button Club Archived from the original on 17 June 2010 Retrieved 11 March 2010 US2397931A Robert Ellis Magnetic button issued 1946 04 09 An Easy Guide to Button Measurement and Sizing Sun Mei Button Enterprise Co Ltd 2019 06 19 STANDARD BUTTONS Brain Browser Elsevier pp 86 90 1990 retrieved 2023 11 18 Your Search Results Search the Collections Victoria and Albert Museum collections vam ac uk American Indian Buttons made with ivory whalebone and ink Archived 2018 12 21 at the Wayback Machine at the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian Domestic button collection circa 1935 from Washington D C at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History Uniform buttons Archived 2011 07 23 at the Wayback Machine of the United States Postal Service at Arago the Smithsonian National Postal Museum Button Smithsonian American Art Museum americanart si edu Hammond Turner com Online Button Museum hammond turner com Hammond Turner com Online Button Museum hammond turner com Mattatuck Museum Art Exhibitions amp Educational Programs in CT Mattatuck Museum Keep Homestead Museum keephomesteadmuseum org Keep Homestead Museum Button Collection keephomesteadmuseum org Archived from the original on 2020 01 19 Retrieved 2020 04 30 The Button Room Archived from the original on 2020 11 27 Retrieved 2012 02 28 Megan Garber March 27 2015 The Curious Case of Men and Women s Buttons The Atlantic Retrieved November 6 2022 On the left for the ladies and on the right for the gents Danny Lewis November 23 2015 Here s Why Men s and Women s Clothes Button on Opposite Sides Smithsonian Retrieved November 6 2022 Benjamin Radford July 6 2010 Why Are Men s and Women s Buttons on Opposite Sides Live Science Retrieved November 6 2022 Chaya Korb Hubner 1989 The Broken Magen David p 116 men button right on left Tznius Danna Lorch February 13 2019 Why Do Hasidic Men Button Their Shirts The Wrong Way The Forward Retrieved November 6 2022 Just like women most Hasidic men button their jackets shirts and rekels long frock coat with the right side over the left Madison Margolin February 12 2017 In ultra Orthodox fashion you can tell a lot about a person by his button holdes The Times of Israel Retrieved November 6 2022 What s the Difference Between Hasidic vs Orthodox Jews June 14 2021 Cobb J Harold Kirk Mitchell Feb 2 2005 J Harold Cobb s George Washington Inaugural Button Collection USA Kirk Mitchell Retrieved 13 March 2010 Luscomb 2003 pp 214 218 Luscomb 2003 pp 33 34 Luscomb 2003 pp 119 120 Sources editLuscomb Sally C 2003 The Collector s Encyclopedia of Buttons 5th ed Atglen PA Schiffer ISBN 0 7643 1815 2 LCCN 2003101645 Further reading editBunch Bryan 2004 The History of Science and Technology Boston MA Houghton Mifflin p 784 ISBN 978 0 618 22123 3 Edwards Nina 2012 2012 On the Button The Significance of an Ordinary Item London UK I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 84885 584 7 ASIN 1848855842 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Kohler Carl 1963 A History of Costume USA Dover p 464 ISBN 978 0 486 21030 8 Osborne Peggy A 1997 Button button identification and price guide Atglen PA Schiffer p 167 ISBN 0 7643 0082 2 LCCN 92063104 Peacock Primrose 1978 Discovering old buttons Discovering series no 213 Rosemary Godsell illus Aylesbury UK Shire Publications p 76 ISBN 0 85263 445 5 Wisniewski Debra J 1997 Antique amp collectible buttons identification amp values Charley Lynch Paducah KY Collector Books p 168 ISBN 0 89145 711 9 LCCN 97122120 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Buttons clothing Button making in Birmingham England in the 1800s Scans of original 1830 1940 US patents for buttons amp related tools amp machinery Online collection of historical buttons at the Button Museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Button amp oldid 1197438819, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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