Victorian Gilt Desk Tweezers with Engine-Turned Handle
Victorian Gilt Desk Tweezers with Engine-Turned Handle
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Additional Description: A finely decorated pair of Victorian desk tweezers featuring a richly ornamented gilt brass handle and steel gripping blades. The elongated handle is decorated with detailed engine-turned geometric ornamentation and cross-hatched motifs within a bordered frame, giving the piece a refine, architectural appearance typical of Victorian decorative metalwork.
At the end of the handle sits a pivoting steel tweezer mechanism, secured with a small rivet joint. The blades taper elegantly to narrow tips designed for precision gripping.
These types of tweezers were commonly used in the 19th-century writing desk or dressing table for delicate tasks such as: pulling small splinters or threads, adjusting watch parts, handling paper or seals, grooming tasks (such as removing stray hairs).
They were frequently included as part of gentleman's dressing sets or writing desk implements, especially in the Victorian period when elaborate desk accessories were fashionable.
The richly patterned handle indicates the piece was designed to be displayed as part of a writing table ensemble, rather than being purely utilitarian.
Era: Mid-to-late 19th Century (circa 1850-1890)
History: Victorian desk implements were often produced with elaborate ornamentation to match writing boxes, dressing cases, and desk accessories. Tools such as letter openers, tweezers, pen knives, and sealing implements were sometimes sold as coordinated sets or stored within fitted writing slopes.
Decorative gilt brass handles with engine-turning patterns were especially popular in England and continental Europe during the mid-19th century.
Provenance: Austin, TX
Materials: Gilt brass, steel, riveted pivot joint
Disclaimers: Minor wear to gilding consistent with age. Surface patina and small spots of oxidation present. Tweezers remain functional.
Additional Description: A finely decorated pair of Victorian desk tweezers featuring a richly ornamented gilt brass handle and steel gripping blades. The elongated handle is decorated with detailed engine-turned geometric ornamentation and cross-hatched motifs within a bordered frame, giving the piece a refine, architectural appearance typical of Victorian decorative metalwork.
At the end of the handle sits a pivoting steel tweezer mechanism, secured with a small rivet joint. The blades taper elegantly to narrow tips designed for precision gripping.
These types of tweezers were commonly used in the 19th-century writing desk or dressing table for delicate tasks such as: pulling small splinters or threads, adjusting watch parts, handling paper or seals, grooming tasks (such as removing stray hairs).
They were frequently included as part of gentleman's dressing sets or writing desk implements, especially in the Victorian period when elaborate desk accessories were fashionable.
The richly patterned handle indicates the piece was designed to be displayed as part of a writing table ensemble, rather than being purely utilitarian.
Era: Mid-to-late 19th Century (circa 1850-1890)
History: Victorian desk implements were often produced with elaborate ornamentation to match writing boxes, dressing cases, and desk accessories. Tools such as letter openers, tweezers, pen knives, and sealing implements were sometimes sold as coordinated sets or stored within fitted writing slopes.
Decorative gilt brass handles with engine-turning patterns were especially popular in England and continental Europe during the mid-19th century.
Provenance: Austin, TX
Materials: Gilt brass, steel, riveted pivot joint
Disclaimers: Minor wear to gilding consistent with age. Surface patina and small spots of oxidation present. Tweezers remain functional.