Share your favorites on Show & Tell

The Earliest Existing Commercial Paint Box Set? Collection Jim Linderman

In Bottles > Show & Tell.
Collectables59's loves207 of 2718Coca cola watch fob,fake or find!Handmade Folk Art Miniature Plow collection Jim Linderman
15
Love it
2
Like it

auraaura loves this.
ho2cultchaho2cultcha loves this.
RadegunderRadegunder loves this.
Collectables59Collectables59 loves this.
SpiritBearSpiritBear likes this.
lisalisa loves this.
shellshock283shellshock283 loves this.
purpledogpurpledog loves this.
miKKoChristmas11miKKoChristmas11 loves this.
VolDeNuitVolDeNuit loves this.
WhimsiestudioWhimsiestudio likes this.
VintageArgentinaVintageArgentina loves this.
rocker-sdrocker-sd loves this.
ThriftStoreAddictThriftStoreAddict loves this.
vanskyock24vanskyock24 loves this.
officialfuelofficialfuel loves this.
JSoudersJSouders loves this.
See 15 more
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 13 years ago

    JimLinderman
    (203 items)

    The collapsible tin paint tube was invented in 1841, and by 1860 or so they were in general use. Early watercolor paint sets with powered cakes are seen on occasion, but sets like the one above with corked and bottled colors to be mixed by the artist are scarce indeed. In around 1827 (?) the British company Ackermann sold a paint box, but an auction catalog indicates "early marked pigment bottles are almost unheard of to be found..." so certainly an entire set such as this is scarce indeed.

    "PIGMENT ANALYSIS OF EARLY AMERICAN WATERCOLORS AND FRAKTUR" by Janice H. Carlson, & John Krill is an analysis of the composition of early American Fraktur paints published in the Journal of the American Institute for Conservation in 1978. It concluded fraktur painters used commercially available pigments and illustrates a similar kit (without bottles) a paint set from the Mercer Museum of The Bucks County Historical Society. It is called a Fraktur Painter's Box. The article has been cited frequently, but I find few other examples of sets this early either illustrated or discussed.

    Certainly the earliest painters had to mix their own pigments with oil, and some materials were even stored in bladders. It was apparently dangerous work...the chemicals were toxic when inhaled. Considerable study has been done on British painter J.M.W. Turner's paint box which also includes analysis of dry pigments found in test tube like bottles after his death.

    I welcome comments or contributions to the history of a set like this. Could this be one of the earliest commercial paint sets existing?

    Unsolved Mystery

    Help us close this case. Add your knowledge below.

    logo
    Bottles
    See all
    BALL 1/2 HALF PINT BLUE MASON Jar ~ Antique Zinc Lid
    BALL 1/2 HALF PINT BLUE MASON Jar ~...
    $9
    BALL Quart Rose PINK MASON JAR Regular Mouth Antique ZINC LID Collectible
    BALL Quart Rose PINK MASON JAR Regu...
    $12
    Vintage Cherub Doll Flask 8oz Stainless Steel Pink
    Vintage Cherub Doll Flask 8oz Stain...
    $14
    BALL PURPLE MASON JAR ~Antique WIDE MOUTH PRESTO Glass Lid ~ QUART Canning Fruit
    BALL PURPLE MASON JAR ~Antique WIDE...
    $27
    logo
    BALL 1/2 HALF PINT BLUE MASON Jar ~ Antique Zinc Lid
    BALL 1/2 HALF PINT BLUE MASON Jar ~...
    $9
    See all

    Comments

    1. JSouders, 13 years ago
      Beautiful!!!
    2. cokefan, 13 years ago
      Is it marked?
    3. Jim Linderman, 13 years ago
      No marks at all! It clearly is a commercial made box of sorts (little brass hinges) but there is no makers mark or logo. The only text is found on the bottles themselves.
    4. cokefan, 13 years ago
      Have you tried sending pictures to any major auction houses?
    5. Jim Linderman, 13 years ago
      Nope. It's just happy parked behind me where it can cause no damage. when I first opened it up, I guess after a century....colors of I am sure virus containing dust surrounded me, but it's just sitting there now. I haven't shown it around other than my blog post. Someone wrote in to say it was Chinese (which seemed way off base to me, given the names the colors) So that's the status.
    6. cokefan, 13 years ago
      What label is on the large bottle at the far left?
    7. cokefan, 13 years ago
      It looks like you collect unusual photographs. Do you know anything about my Alfred E Neuman photo?
    8. Whimsiestudio Whimsiestudio, 13 years ago
      There have been later sets sold on e-bay with pigment in bottles. These were mostly for painting / glazing china, porcelain, or in illumination ,where gum is placed on the parchment or paper as a glue and powder is sifted on to get a saturated color.

      Though some artists , after the paint block and tube was invented, would get pigment to make their own paint. I know of no sets of pigment other than above.

      This box has the look of an early box .There are clues to its age in the use of the word "Patent" ,that labels are in english, and the names of the colors and the use of "spangles" it seems that they were used for decoration not watercolor or oil.

      you can see my collection of paint boxes at

      http://www.whimsie.com/antique%20art%20supplies.html

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.