Garyd's Mucky Fingers

Button Page


A selection of buttons we have found on farmland.


The reason there are so many different types of buttons on farmland is thought to be because, people would sweep the floors of houses in the towns and Villages, it would pile up in back gardens, then it would be carted off to farmland were it would be spread over the land. How true that is I don’t know but there are a lot buttons !!!!!!!!!





Lead Button

This stud has a mother of pearl inlay






This is a lead hem dress weight





Lead hem dress weight



When I first turned over the soil and saw this button

I thought it was a hammered coin

But it’s a nice find all the same










This Button has a crude punched design.

Make me wonder if it’s not an early type from the 1500s





Small buttons



Floral design Buttons

18th Century Engraved Pewter Coat Button




Angie, Found this beautiful button






A nice Floral design button



Silver flower design button


These two came up about a yard apart they look the same

so I guess they were on an old coat that had been

discarded two or three hundred years ago.




The word "button" comes from the French word "bouton", meaning bud,
protuberance, or any round object.
Buttons didn’t originate as clothes fasteners. They were decorative, jewellery-like disks sewn on men and women's clothing And for almost 3,400 years, buttons remained purely ornamental; pins and belts were viewed as sufficient to secure garments. The practice of buttoning garment originated in Western Europe. In the 1200's baggy, free-flowing cloths was beginning to be replaced with tighter, form-fitting clothing. A belt alone could not achieve the look and while pins could (and often did), they were required in quantity; and pins were easily misplaced or lost.
With sewn-on buttons there was not daily concern over finding fasteners when dressing. Thus the modern, functional buttons finally arrive.
But they seemed to make up for lost time with excesses.
Buttons and buttonholes appeared on every garment. Statue, illustrations, and paintings of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries attest to button mania.
In 1520, French King Frances I, ordered from his jeweller 13,400 gold buttons, which were fastened to a single black velvet suit. During the 17th century silversmiths engraved buttons, cabinetmakers carved wooden buttons and weavers wove wonderful fabric buttons.
England in the 18th century began to demonstrate its own flourishing button industry, utilizing many of the new materials then becoming available. Birmingham became famous for its steel and shell buttons, the Midlands for horn buttons made from the antler of stag, and Dorset for their thread buttons.
In Burslem, Staffordshire, Josiah Wedgewood began creating his "Jasper medallions". England developed techniques for stamping, moulding, and casting and pioneered the mass production of buttons, making them available to almost everyone, not just the rich and famous. One of the differences between French and English buttons was that French buttons usually displayed scenes of romance or the arts, while the English buttons tended toward scenes of country life. Sporting buttons also became popular during this time. The 19th century brought about a sensible and practical way of thinking and this was reflected in buttons. The French Revolution swept away the extravagant. Buttons were now about half the size of 18th century ones.France was slow to mechanize, so England became the world's premier button maker because of their ability to mass-produce. England created the first great button sensation of the 19th century - the gilt buttons made in Birmingham between 1797-1800. They were elegant, yet affordable. Sporting buttons, military buttons, and even livery buttons for the household servants were all beautifully crafted and gilded.
In England during WWII, they had "blackout buttons" that glowed in the dark.