Showing posts with label perfume collection. Show all posts
Showing posts with label perfume collection. Show all posts

Thursday, August 24, 2017

Collecting Green Glass Commercial Perfume Bottles

In this guide I will discuss the various green glass commercial perfume bottles and some of the rarest commercial perfume bottle colors of all---the opaque glass pieces. This is not a complete list as there are probably hundreds of others to be found, if you have one not listed and would like to share a photo, please let me know and I will include it here.

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Dolores Del Rio and Her Perfume Collection

Dolores Del Rio and her beautiful perfume collection.





In this photo I spy:
  • Lerys 6 bottle presentation in bronze caddy
  • Parfum des Champs Elysées/À Travers Champs/Guerlinade or Candide Effluve by Guerlain
  • Jungla by Myrurgia c1933
  • unknown early Elizabeth Arden
  • Secret de la Perle by Pleville c1926
  • two Prince Matchabelli bottles
  • La Jacee by Coty
  • Sans Adieu by Worth c1929 (Lalique bottle)
  • Les Lys by D'Orsay c1922 (Lalique bottle)
  • Hattie Carnegie c1925 (Depinoix bottle)
  • Lentheric (Baccarat bottle)
  • Elizabeth Arden
  • She is holding an early Lancome bottle, possibly for Kypre or Bocages

I cannot make out all of the bottles, nor can I make out labels, but if you can, please comment below. 

SA Hanlin, Collector of 2500 Perfume Bottles

Samuel Albert Hanlin arrived in Newton in 1890 and started a store known as Hanlin Supply & Mercantile Company. At one time, he supplied provisions for the Santa Fe Railway commissary cars. He also operated a grocery and mercantile with JJ Lewis. Hanlin's store eventually took up the entire building at 601 North Main and was advertised as the "largest cash department store in the state".  In the 1920s, the store became the Cayot Mercantile.

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/37717639/samuel-albert-hanlin


Photo from 1935 showing perfume bottle collector SA Hanlin, who believes that "perfume bottles are exquisite things" and has been collecting for 14 years. Among his collection of 2500 bottles are gorgeous Czech, Baccarat, jeweled examples and atomizers, some DeVilbiss and others. I don't believe there are any commercial bottles in the cabinet shown.





There is a passage in a book, Romance in a Junk Shop, from 1938, mentions, SA Hanlin:

"Perfume bottles, in the designing and manufacture of which attempts have been made for ages to create a beauty that would please the sight and touch as much as the aromatic contents please the smell, have long been favorites with collectors. One young lady I know collects them in pairs. The king of perfume bottle collectors patronizing my store — he has called regularly twice a week for four years — is S. A. Hanlin. 
Hanlin, a prominent merchant in Newton, Kansas, after operating the Hanlin Department store for more than 25 years, along around 1910 retired from the merchandising business and started out to see the world - America first. In Cairo, Egypt, in 1921, he became fascinated by native perfume bottles, which he bought as a nucleus for a collection  to represent the different countries of the world. Little did he think at the moment that it would assume the proportion it has and that later he would make a second trip around the globe in search of more bottles.  
Mr. Hanlin called for perfume bottles. Showed him five. Three he had, two he bought. The actual number of bottles in his collection to date, he says, is 3215. Reports having made a fine acquisition while in Pasadena this week — a quaint and beautiful Chinese bottle reputed to be 150 years old.  If I could supply everything that is called for I would soon be rich."



In 1940, he hosted a tea for the members of the Matinee Musical Club where he showed off his collection of 4600 perfume bottles.













Sunday, February 24, 2013

Evelyn Brent's Perfume Collection

Actress Evelyn Brent was known for her love of perfume bottles, although she stated she didn't wear perfume. During two 1930s interviews, she claimed to have 147 bottles, another claimed 500! The star's boudoir featured a special three tiered glass cabinet in which she displayed her flacons. Also displayed amongst her bottles are the fragile glass animals by the Bimini glassblowers. You can see these at the corner closest to her face, a white swan stands up regally amongst the other fauna.



Welcome!

This is not your average perfume blog. In each post, I present perfumes or companies as encyclopedic entries with as much facts and photos as I can add for easy reading and researching without all the extraneous fluff or puffery.

Please understand that this website is not affiliated with any of the perfume companies written about here, it is only a source of reference. I consider it a repository of vital information for collectors and those who have enjoyed the classic fragrances of days gone by. Updates to posts are conducted whenever I find new information to add or to correct any errors.

One of the goals of this website is to show the present owners of the various perfumes and cologne brands that are featured here how much we miss the discontinued classics and hopefully, if they see that there is enough interest and demand, they will bring back these fragrances!

Please leave a comment below (for example: of why you liked the fragrance, describe the scent, time period or age you wore it, who gave it to you or what occasion, any specific memories, what it reminded you of, maybe a relative wore it, or you remembered seeing the bottle on their vanity table, did you like the bottle design), who knows, perhaps someone from the company brand might see it.

Also, if you have any information not seen here, please comment and share with all of us.

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