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Travel Bug Dog Tag BUTTON Moon

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Owner:
reafrs Send Message to Owner Message this owner
Released:
Monday, January 9, 2012
Origin:
British Columbia, Canada
Recently Spotted:
Unknown Location

This is not collectible.

Use TB49576 to reference this item.

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Current Goal

Hello fellow Geocashers

BUTTON Moon's mission is to travel the world starting from Lynn Valley North Vancouver, to where ever you take it so it can be under the moon in as many different locations as possible.  

When I was a child a programme for children came on TV called Button Moon and my mum also had a huge container of buttons which I enjoyed playing with so I have decided to send a button on its travels and allow me to hopefully follow it and look up the interesting places it visits.

Please help my button to travel around and if you have a camera with you please take a picture and add to my site so I can see where its travels takes it, and just for a laugh if you have any interesting buttons which will befriend my button (even buttons need button friends) take a photo of them together and show your buttons off to the rest of the geocachers who might find my button on they're travels.

Be safe and have fun on your way
Reafrs



 

About This Item

This entry will explore the history of the button. Not the chocolate button, or the button on your computer screen, or indeed the one you are said to be contemplating when being idle. This entry is about the button holding your trousers up or your shirt closed. Humanity invented the button well before its time; but, luckily for us, it hung around until someone invented the buttonhole.

Is it a Button?

Over 3,000 years ago, during the Bronze Age, the first buttons made their debut. While recognisably buttons, Bronze Age man didn't fasten anything with them, but simply wore them for decoration. The dandies of the day wore buttons fashioned from bone, horn, wood, metal or even seashells; but, in the absence of a buttonhole, were they anything more than just sew-on brooches?

At the time, man used belts, pins or brooches to fasten his clothes; even in extreme weather there was no practical use for a button. So the button just existed, waiting for the next big clothing innovation.

It is a Button

The Greeks, although they had no word for button, did, like the Romans, use them for decoration. However, at some point, someone thought the button might make a nifty fastener. To this end, they ran the button through a little loop of thread and thereby created a use for the button, alongside the pin or the brooch, to keep garments together.

As clothing became more fitted, the button and loop became more attractive since it was less likely to cause injury than a pin. By around 1200, the button and buttonhole arrived in Europe, delivered, like many other things, by the returning Crusaders. Not that they invented it themselves — no, they had 'freed' the idea from the Turks and Mongols encountered on their travels. At any rate, the button and buttonhole were to become a driving force in clothing design.

So Button it

The first buttonholes were slits made in fabric just big enough to pass the button through, and this was enough to hold clothes fast and inspire a fashion revolution.

The word button appeared at around this time and stems from either the French bouton for bud or bouter to push. Whatever the basis for the word, the French were quick to spot the potential of the button and by 1250 had established the Button Makers Guild. The Guild produced beautiful buttons with great artistry, much to the delight of the aristocracy. The peasants, however, weren't allowed to join this button fest, even if they could afford it. The aristocracy passed laws to limit buttons permitted for common usage to thread- or cloth-covered buttons. As a result, the button became a status symbol, and it wasn't discrete; buttons were being used like there was no tomorrow - not just for fastening clothes but, once more, as adornment.

By the middle of the 1300s buttons were big business and people loved them. Tailors produced garments with row upon row of buttons with matching buttonholes. France, by this time, was the button capital of Europe and the Guild made considerable profit producing buttons for coats, dresses and anything that looked as if it needed a button. Europe was so button crazy that even the Church got in on the act and denounced them as 'the devil's snare', seemingly referring to the ladies in their button-fronted dresses.

This attraction for buttons resulted in some outfits adorned with thousands of buttons, all of them with accompanying buttonholes. Dressing and undressing became a chore, but created a niche for the employment of professional dressers. Button mania ran on unabated, and in 1520 reports tell of a meeting where King Francis I of France, his clothing bedecked with some 13,600 buttons, met King Henry VIII of England, similarly weighed down with buttons.

The button thing couldn't last forever though, and with the Puritans condemning it as sinful, in the 16th Century its popularity began to wane to more sensible levels1. That's not to say they weren't still very much in vogue; it's just that the number of buttons required to be at the height of fashion diminished. In response to this, the button-makers took to making more and more elaborate buttons. These artisans made their fancy buttons from precious materials like gold, ivory and even diamond.

Diamonds would seem more than a little excessive for buttons, but in 1620 the First Duke of Buckingham reputedly had a suit and cloak covered in diamond buttons, although most were purely decorative. Not everyone, however, could afford such a lavish display, so button-makers also used silver, ceramics and silk. Even artists of the day filled their time hand-painting portraits or scenery on buttons.

Louis XIV adored his buttons and returned to the excesses of previous ages, but he also encouraged others by having his army wear silver-coloured bone buttons on their tunics.

If you are in any doubt as to the importance of buttons in the 17th Century you could do worse than check out la Guerre des Boutons— not the film, but the actual war. French tailors started the war and won the first battle with the use of thread buttons. These were basically little balls of thread which worked admirably as buttons. The button-makers were furious, and in response they lobbied the government to help them. A law was passed and the war was won with the tailors being fined for the production of the thread buttons. Not satisfied with this, however, the button-makers went on to insist on the rigorous enforcement of the new law. They wanted homes and wardrobes searched and even suggested the arrest and fining of people for wearing clothing with thread buttons. It is unclear how far they got with their demands, beyond the authorities fining the tailors for their ingenuity.

Around this time the United Kingdom, America and Germany were muscling in on the French Button-makers' Guild's lucrative market.

Towards the end of the 1700s big metallic buttons were in vogue and this resulted in uniforms and outfits needing fewer. It also saw the introduction, apparently by Napoleon, of sleeve buttons on tunics2. This didn't, however, halt the development of the double-breasted jacket. These jackets were much like the chef's jacket of today. When the outside of the jacket was soiled the wearer just had to unbutton it and place the soiled surface on the inside then button the clean side outermost. Now that is practical.

Gallery Images related to BUTTON Moon

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    Tracking History (7539.9mi) View Map

    Mark Missing 5/9/2016 Sir BFG marked it as missing   Visit Log

    This is an automated message. This Trackable has been marked 'missing' by a cache owner or site administrator. Trackables are marked missing when it is determined that they are no longer located in the cache they are listed in or in the hands of the current holder. Review the most recent logs on this Trackable to learn more information about its current state.

    Dropped Off 5/6/2016 Claireavaissy placed it in 14. WirralWallaces (playing leap-dog) West Midlands, United Kingdom - 4,044.65 miles  Visit Log

    We have dropped this trackable along this lovely walk, enjoy Shropshire! X

    Retrieve It from a Cache 4/26/2016 Claireavaissy retrieved it from Bike or Hike - Ant89 North West England, United Kingdom   Visit Log

    Button moon was one of my childhood favourites too! 🌝
    Found the trackable near our home in Capenhurst, Chester, and will move along soon 😀

    Dropped Off 4/24/2016 The Haywood Hornet placed it in Bike or Hike - Ant89 North West England, United Kingdom - 58.55 miles  Visit Log
    Retrieve It from a Cache 4/18/2016 The Haywood Hornet retrieved it from Bob 9: Ye Olde Oak West Midlands, United Kingdom   Visit Log

    Picked up in Shropshire today.

    Dropped Off 12/31/2015 dadu 13 placed it in Bob 9: Ye Olde Oak West Midlands, United Kingdom - 96.72 miles  Visit Log
    Retrieve It from a Cache 10/28/2015 dadu 13 retrieved it from #38 - AWD Southern England, United Kingdom   Visit Log

    Will move on soon 😉

    Dropped Off 10/27/2015 misty's muskateers placed it in #38 - AWD Southern England, United Kingdom - 4,133.98 miles  Visit Log
    Retrieve It from a Cache 10/21/2015 misty's muskateers retrieved it from 15 Footsee 100 Southern England, United Kingdom   Visit Log

    will move on asap

    • Autumn starting
    Dropped Off 10/19/2015 qrang placed it in 15 Footsee 100 Southern England, United Kingdom - 4,165.61 miles  Visit Log
    data on this page is cached for 3 mins