Charm bracelets have been in
fashion for decades, right up until the present day; girls (and women!) still
seem to love them. But in the 18th and 19th centuries,
they weren’t necessarily for girls...and they weren’t bracelets, either.
Pocket watches began to come
into their own in the second half of the eighteenth century, thanks to
improvements in technology and metals science. A pocket watch usually is
attached to one’s person somehow; the last thing you want is your expensive and
delicate timepiece falling out of your pocket every time you chance to bend
over. A length of ribbon or cord sufficed, but a chain or strip of chain mesh was
both sturdier and offered more scope to show off with.
Originally, this
fastener for one’s watch was called a fob (likely from a German word meaning “pocket”.)
Then it was realized that hanging little dangly things from one’s fob added
enough weight to aid in keeping it closer to the body, and therefore made it
less likely for the fob (and watch) to catch on something and be yanked from
the pocket. It made sense for one of those dangly bits to be, say, the key that
wound the watch; then it was realized that the fob would be a useful place to
hang one’s seal...and then the decorative and (ahem) show-off possibilities dawned on everyone. Hanging other things from one’s watch chain became the
fashion...and in times, these gewgaws were referred to themselves as fobs.
Over
the course of the 19th century, a watch chain with fobs became a
peculiarly masculine fashion (and chains themselves known by other names: an albert was a chain worn horizontally
across the waistcoat from pocket to pocket, while a leontine was a short chain most often worn on dress occasions.) In fact, it became so fashionable that wearing a huge collection of fobs on one's watch chain probably meant that you were a dandy.
They could be senti-mental—a tiny
miniature of a loved one or a snip of hair in a locket. They could be practical—a
minute pencil or button hook for fastening one’s gloves, a tiny case for vestas
(matches) or a wee vinaigrette like those shown in these photos of fobs from my collection.
Those whose hobbies included mount-aineering or
ballooning might have a small baro-meter or altimeter or a compass; members of sporting
clubs or other organizations might have club badges or commemorative medals. Seals
of course remained popular...but really, almost any small object could be and
probably was turned into a fob and worn by someone somewhere.
The introduction of the
wristwatch during World War I spelled the death of the pocket watch...and the
delicious, tiny fobs often found their way onto women’s jewelry as necklaces
or...as charm bracelets.
Though I love to wear
bracelets and adore the concept of charm bracelets, I find them too clunky and
distracting to wear. But a watch chain with fobs...that is a practice I could
totally embrace.
How about you? Could you see
yourself with a collection of these tiny, jingly treasures hanging from your
watch chain? ☺
2 comments:
Beautiful fobs. I like charms bracelets for the clunkiness!
But they do get in the way when trying to type, alas. :(
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