Chatelaines

Chatelaine is originally French for “keeper of the castle” and eventually came to mean the mistress of the house and then to mean the cases that they wore on their belt to hold all of the objects needed for the mistress: spectacles, scissors, needles, thread, etc… In the late 1800s, chatelaines were an extension of one’s social status and personality. Here are a few examples.

Brass and papier-mâchè
Silver repouseè hallmarked, Birmingham 1879
Leather and brass with hand-painted miniature portrait
Close up of miniature portrait
Silver mesh with polished stone carbochan. Whiting and Davis, USA, early 1900s
Silver mounted tortoiseshell, London, 1899
Brass on Gunmetal, 1870s
Asian silver repouseè of zoo animals
Persian Brass
Moroccan leather and brass