Secret Life of Antiques | Dance Compacts

Today in another installment of the Secret Life of Antiques, we are exploring the beautiful world of dance compacts! Small, often richly enameled, sometimes hand painted or made of sterling silver or gold, these little “bags” or minaudiéres were meant to be carried on a lady’s wrist. I’m excited to share this post: The Secret Life of Antiques | Dance Compacts.

Secret Life of Antiques | Dance Compacts

 

History of compacts

 
The very first powder compact was created during Louis XIV’s reign in the 17th century. Long the darlings of only the very, very rich, beautiful decorative compacts, really tiny vanity cases for powder and rouge, became more accessible to more women in the 1800’s.

Women have had a centuries-old fascination with beauty, and have always used powders and paints, stored in glass, wood, or gold and silver containers to enhance what Mother Nature gifted them.

 

 

Often considered dangerous or extremely inappropriate and even vulgar, by the late 1800’s many women made their own rouge, rice powder and lip balm from “secret” formulas read in ladies magazines and even newspapers. As this became more and more accepted, jewelers began creating small compacts for rouge and powder to take on an evening out. I am including portable nécessaires with this group as well.

 

Secret Life of Antiques | Dance Compacts

 

Portable Nécessaires were small fashion accessories carried like a small handbag. Meant to be carried over a lady’s wrist by the sterling chain, the compartments varied depending on the kind bought. Often besides a spot for a powder puff and powder, or rouge, there were spring loaded holders for coins, and slots for paper money or calling cards.

 

dance sterling compact

 

In the late 1800’s, the age of opulence, these little cases or compacts were a mark of status. Especially beloved were the guilloche-enameled silver pieces made in beautiful enameled colors in France.

 

 

The 1920’s is considered the pinnacle of compact and compact manufacturing, as flappers wore beautiful examples on their wrists and made quite a show of applying lipstick and rouge in public. {Shocking!} Often called dance compacts or tango compacts, each one is a work of art!

 

Secret Life of Antiques | Dance Compacts

Secret Life of Antiques | Dance Compacts

 

Over time compacts became mass produced, and a woman might own several less expensive compacts. While there are collectors out there who collect compacts from 1940 on, most collectors cherish the early sterling silver and guilloche compacts the most. Beautiful, with hand painted roses, or engraved with the owner’s initials, they are a lovely way to remember the stories of the past.

 

Art Deco Dance Compact

 

Because of their quality and beauty, antique compacts and nécessaires make elegant gifts, and many of our clients often purchase a special one as a gift to mark a special occasion like a wedding, birth of a child or an anniversary.

 

Value of Dance Compacts and Nécessaires

 

Antique compacts and nécessaires vary in price depending on their rarity, quality  and condition. Because most of them were well used, those retaining their original components such as powder, rouge, puffs, mirrors and sifters are especially desirable.

 

Expect to pay anywhere from $350.- to $650.- for luxurious sterling silver pieces in good condition.  The more engraving or the more unusual, the higher the price. For enameled pieces, especially those with hand painted scenes or flowered, you can expect to pay around 350-800 and up for truly exceptional dance compacts.

 

 

Care of Dance Compacts and Nécessaires

 

Please use care when cleaning and maintaining your compacts and nécessaires. Usually dusting with a soft cloth is all they require. If your pieces are silver, a soft polish will work wonders.  Do be extra careful with the interior, I use Q-tips for the inside edges, because I have seen too many of these stunning pieces practically ruined because they have ages old thick caked-on silver polish on the inside.

 

 

How to Display Your Dance Compacts and Nécessaires

 

These little wonders are not only useful, they are quite beautiful too. We have many clients who actually use the ones they’ve bought from us. But most lovingly display their collection. We have a client who has framed her collection in shadow boxes and displays her beauties in her dressing room. And we have a few clients who display their compacts and sterling nécessaires in a glass case along with their precious other sterling silver.

One of the most beautiful collections I’ve seen at a client’s home was displayed in a glass topped table cabinet. There are so many ways to display these and enjoy their beauty.

No matter what you do with your compacts and nécessaires, they are a delightful reminder of the more glamorous, luxurious days of the past and a joy to behold! I hope you have enjoyed this post of the Secret Life of Antiques | Dance Compacts.

 

collecting antique dance compacts

 

Shop our latest compacts and nécessaires HERE>

 

For More Lady Like Antiques & Collecting READ THESE:

 


A Lady’s Sanctuary 

 

Collecting Vanity Antiques


Gilty Pleasures

 

Do you love and or collect these feminine luxuries of the past? We’d all love to hear about your collection!

A BIENTOT

 

Shop for the best in French Antiques, furniture with the patina of age, vintage accessories to delight you and your family & friends, and French Country utilitarian pieces. Treasures that make your home fresh, beautiful, inspirational and above all uniquely yours. Visit our shop FrenchGardenHouse.com

12 thoughts on “Secret Life of Antiques | Dance Compacts”

  1. Edie Marie

    I absolutely love your collection of compacts! They’re so exquisite! I have a gold compact that was a Christmas gift from my first boss. His wife was a very stylish lady and purchased them for all the ladies. I have a little rouge tin that was my mom’s and perfume bottles of my darling grandma. What treasures! They mean so much to me. Thank you for sharing the history Lidy. Bénédictions, Edie Marie

    1. Thank you – I love them too! How exciting to have such a beautiful compact gift, and then the rouge tin and perfume bottles from your darling grandma. Love to you Edie Marie.

  2. Gorgeous collection, absolutely adore them. Very interesting article.
    I’ve inherited a small silver purse or bag from my great-grandmother.

    1. Thank you Anja. Like you, I love all the old beautiful pieces. How lucky you are to have inherited your great-grandmother’s silver purse!

  3. Oh Lidy! These are my baileywick in collecting – dance compacts, beaded & mesh purses, chatelaines. I have more than I care to admit, and after three years of downsized storage, I have just last month started bringing them out again and displaying in our newest home. These are beautiful specimens, so are those not featured here but on your website.

    1. Rita, I knew you and I are secretly sisters. Lovers of the older pieces that were used for fun! I love that you are displaying your beauties once again, they are used to laughter, voices and admiration! xo

  4. I have a very small collection of vintage compacts, nothing as beautiful as the ones you’ve displayed, but charming. Compacts are just that, compact. Easy to store in a dresser drawer, portable and feel so nice to hold.

    Thank you for sharing these beauties!

    1. Mary, I am sure that your compacts are lovely. I hope that you have them out to admire their beauty!

  5. Marion

    Your compacts are lovely. We have a few bags and a few compacts. Lidy Thank You for sharing the collection.
    Marilyn,Joan and Marion

    1. Marion, thank you. Those ultra feminine pieces of the past are always a treat, aren’t they?

  6. Lidy, your collection is stellar. What a treat to see this post. I collection a wide range of things. but can’t claim a collection of these compacts. A close friend collected antique perfume flasks, so I would observe when we were shopping the markets of Paris.

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