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Antiques! => Antique Questions Forum => Topic started by: mariok54 on August 26, 2013, 04:32:30 AM
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I came across one of these in an Auction room a few weeks back and could not for the life of me work out what it was for, without looking in the catalogue, and even then I had no idea that they had been used for that purpose. The one up for auction was prettier than the one in this photo (courtesy of Google Images) and the final hammer price was £105 + fees (so if you see one going cheap you might want to grab it ....)
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I know but costume and textiles are my bag ;)
I won't spoil the fun for anyone else who wants to guess.
Lovely thing Mario :)
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It's a ladies skirt lifter.........that is, it was used by ladies to hold up the hem of their skirt, NOT by the gentlemen who wished to peak under them :D
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It's a ladies skirt lifter.........that is, it was used by ladies to hold up the hem of their skirt, NOT by the gentlemen who wished to peak under them :D
Well done Sapphire .... But I really thought it was for the latter!! I'll cancel my Ebay bid in that case ;)
They certainly came in some wonderful designs!
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It's a ladies skirt lifter.........that is, it was used by ladies to hold up the hem of their skirt, NOT by the gentlemen who wished to peak under them :D
Well done Sapphire .... But I really thought it was for the latter!! I'll cancel my Ebay bid in that case ;)
They certainly came in some wonderful designs!
I only remembered that as I came across one in a picture I wanted to show tales some time ago........showing a ladies leg holster. With all the length and layers they really needed that extra 'hand' to access those holsters back then ;)
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I know but costume and textiles are my bag ;)
I won't spoil the fun for anyone else who wants to guess.
Lovely thing Mario :)
Very sporting of you Melodie!
When I think of all the costume dramas I've been exposed to over the years (and that is quite a substantial number ... of both) I don't think that I've ever seen one provided courtesy of the props department. I shall now become one of those bores, whenever I see, on screen, a refined lady trudging through the mud I'll be be crying out ... 'Where's her skirt lifter????'
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It's a ladies skirt lifter.........that is, it was used by ladies to hold up the hem of their skirt, NOT by the gentlemen who wished to peak under them :D
Well done Sapphire .... But I really thought it was for the latter!! I'll cancel my Ebay bid in that case ;)
They certainly came in some wonderful designs!
I only remembered that as I came across one in a picture I wanted to show tales some time ago........showing a ladies leg holster. With all the length and layers they really needed that extra 'hand' to access those holsters back then ;)
So it was never really a case of being fast on the drawer?
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It's a ladies skirt lifter.........that is, it was used by ladies to hold up the hem of their skirt, NOT by the gentlemen who wished to peak under them :D
Well done Sapphire .... But I really thought it was for the latter!! I'll cancel my Ebay bid in that case ;)
They certainly came in some wonderful designs!
I only remembered that as I came across one in a picture I wanted to show tales some time ago........showing a ladies leg holster. With all the length and layers they really needed that extra 'hand' to access those holsters back then ;)
So it was never really a case of being fast on the drawer?
Damn, there went a perfectly good mouthful of pepsi!! >:(
:D
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LOL !! Well I wouldn`t have guessed !! A bit before my time !!
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We have actually had one posted on here a LONG time ago. Have seen them in the past but they are getting fewer and far between seeing anymore. Most people don't know what they are and toss them! :'(
This is a rather ornate one with the shell on it! NICE FIND!!! Actually a fabulous find! So many are plain and people think they are a unexplainable tool of sorts!
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I know but costume and textiles are my bag ;)
I won't spoil the fun for anyone else who wants to guess.
Lovely thing Mario :)
Very sporting of you Melodie!
When I think of all the costume dramas I've been exposed to over the years (and that is quite a substantial number ... of both) I don't think that I've ever seen one provided courtesy of the props department. I shall now become one of those bores, whenever I see, on screen, a refined lady trudging through the mud I'll be be crying out ... 'Where's her skirt lifter????'
better a skirt lifter...than a shirt lifter..... ;D
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Great story Tales. My brother in law has an iron business that's been around since the 1920's. They bought out "Yellen" not to long ago. When I first met my husband he worked in a forge. That job will definitely kill you. The graphite goes right through your clothes. There's not to many iron companies left.
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It's a ladies skirt lifter.........that is, it was used by ladies to hold up the hem of their skirt, NOT by the gentlemen who wished to peak under them :D
Well done Sapphire .... But I really thought it was for the latter!! I'll cancel my Ebay bid in that case ;)
They certainly came in some wonderful designs!
I only remembered that as I came across one in a picture I wanted to show tales some time ago........showing a ladies leg holster. With all the length and layers they really needed that extra 'hand' to access those holsters back then ;)
So it was never really a case of being fast on the drawer?
Damn, there went a perfectly good mouthful of pepsi!! >:(
:D
you just don,t learn..do ya....methinks your...suffering from....something ..i,ve got....."old dog...or in your case....*****.new tricks ..syndrome.....mums the word....when reading with yer gob full of gas.... ;D
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This is a rather ornate one with the shell on it! NICE FIND!!! Actually a fabulous find! So many are plain and people think they are a unexplainable tool of sorts!
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Unfortunately I don't own this ... it's an image courtesy of Google Images.
The one that I saw at the Auction was much nicer than the one in the picture, and once I discovered what it was I thought it might be a nice Lot to bid on (thinking maybe £20 - £25 max), bidding started at £55 with commission bids !!! Hammer price was £105 + 20% !!
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I'm arriving late!! ;D I would love to have one of these someday, but it's not one of those things that you have to have to do your costuming right, so I haven't pursued them. Recently someone suggested I should add one to the 1883 riding habit.
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Hi tales,
I've found one in a job lot at a local auction with a very low estimate. If it gets missed it might go cheap, so I'm going to keep an eye on it. I'll let you know how it goes.
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;D I will have my fingers and toes crossed!
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Ooohhhh...let us know!!!
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Ooohhhh...let us know!!!
Didn't get it, and it was really annoying (well, mildly annoying). I'm back at work after the Summer break and logged on to the Auction site to bid on that Lot and a couple of others, but over the summer they tightened up on the IT system somehow and although I could Log into the Live Auction it did not 'follow' the auction (if it was on Lot 76 with a Room bid of £85, it remained on that) and this was using my own laptop. I realised when I was going home that if I went to the edge of the car park and away from the hot spot, then it would work!! But I can't be disappearing like that!!!
I know that I could have done it, but one thing I try not to do anymore, if I can help it, is to leave a commission bid. When bidding live, either on-line or at the actual Auction Rooms, I've won many a Lot at well below the Lower estimate. Whenever I've left a commission bid I've never for a long time won a Lot for less than the lower estimate, frequently it's been bang on the lower estimate. This is despite the fact that the Auction Houses insist that they will attempt to buy the item for you at the lowest possible price. What I've noticed is that many of the on-line commission forms only have a single figure, your maximum bid, whereas the 'old' paper commission slips gave you the opportunity to state a 'starting bid' and your 'maximum bid' including +1 (if your max bid is £60, but because of the the sequence of the bidding the auctioneer took a bid of £60 from another bidder, then they would bid once more on your behalf at £65). With this old system, irrespective of the fact that the estimate might have been say £40 - £60, if your lowest commission bid was £20 and max £65, then the Porter would bid £20 on your behalf, and you could be lucky!!
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Aw darn! Not worth getting into trouble at work over though!