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@VaM@toot.garden  ·  activity timestamp 14 hours ago

Can a cookie tin be a work of decorative art? Yes.

When the UK's Licensed Grocer's Act of 1861 first allowed the sale of individually packaged groceries, decorative cookie tins ("biscuit tins" in the UK) got their start. These simple metal boxes were soon embossed with 3D detail, and decorated with colourful lithographic prints.

They sold as Christmas gifts for children. (UK grocer Marks & Spencer continues the tradition.) Later tins appealed to adults, and decorated middle-class homes across Britain's empire.

By 1890, the mass-produced tins mimicked other objects in shape—first baskets, then collectable art like Chinese vases.

The 1912 "Bell" biscuit tin below has a faux copper finish. It's in the Victoria and Albert Museum's collection, and was made for Reading, UK, biscuit makers Huntley & Palmers. See the image description (ALT text) for details.

Today's biscuit tins are sometimes sold in UK fundraisers.

#art #design #VictoriaAndAlbert #museum #cookie #biscuit #tin #container

A biscuit tin from V&A Museum's metalwork collection, mass produced with offset-lithography printed on embossed tinplate, in the form of a bell. The surface imitates oxidised copper. The handle of this bell lifts to reveal the container's contents. The bell is embossed with decorative detail and the text, "When Ye Doe Ringe, I Sweetly Sing". This tin was given by M. J. Franklin.

Dimensions: almost 20 centimeters or 7 inches high, and about 16 centimeters or 6 inches in diameter at the base.

Photo credit: Victoria & Albert Museum. To see part of its extensive biscuit tin metalworks collection, visit the V&A's South Kensington site, in London.
A biscuit tin from V&A Museum's metalwork collection, mass produced with offset-lithography printed on embossed tinplate, in the form of a bell. The surface imitates oxidised copper. The handle of this bell lifts to reveal the container's contents. The bell is embossed with decorative detail and the text, "When Ye Doe Ringe, I Sweetly Sing". This tin was given by M. J. Franklin. Dimensions: almost 20 centimeters or 7 inches high, and about 16 centimeters or 6 inches in diameter at the base. Photo credit: Victoria & Albert Museum. To see part of its extensive biscuit tin metalworks collection, visit the V&A's South Kensington site, in London.
A biscuit tin from V&A Museum's metalwork collection, mass produced with offset-lithography printed on embossed tinplate, in the form of a bell. The surface imitates oxidised copper. The handle of this bell lifts to reveal the container's contents. The bell is embossed with decorative detail and the text, "When Ye Doe Ringe, I Sweetly Sing". This tin was given by M. J. Franklin. Dimensions: almost 20 centimeters or 7 inches high, and about 16 centimeters or 6 inches in diameter at the base. Photo credit: Victoria & Albert Museum. To see part of its extensive biscuit tin metalworks collection, visit the V&A's South Kensington site, in London.
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