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Brewster Historical Society

739 Lower Road
Brewster, MA 02631
508-896-9521
Established 1964

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Brewster Historical Society

  • Home
  • Events
  • Experience
    • Exhibits
    • Online Exhibits
    • Videos
    • In the Attic
    • Contact Us
  • Plan Your Visit
  • Antiques Fair
  • Support
  • Resources
    • Research Online
    • Captain Cobb House
    • Windmill Village
    • Historic Photos
    • Cobb Renovation
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In the Attic

Join us as we explore items in our collections both on and off display. Every other week we will feature a new-old item and share its story. We’re honored to be the repository for such wonderful Brewster treasures and thank our generous donors past and present for entrusting them to our care.

In the Attic - Shellwork Bouquet

December 23, 2021 Brewster Historical
Shellwork bouquet craft

This is a Shellwork bouquet (coquillage) c. 1850. Its medium is shells, blown glass, walnut.

Shells, once prized as rare artifacts that held magical qualities, became increasingly available in seventeenth-century England through maritime and colonial expeditions. In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the English used shells to decorate walls, furniture, picture frames, and to create freestanding figures and other items. Well-to-do women with the finances to afford the expensive tools and materials required used shells to fashion artistic ornaments, like this shell work bouquet, as one of many leisure-time activities. They learned such art—not yet deemed "craft"—through paid instruction or how-to manuals, especially by the 1850s and later. Less-skilled practitioners could purchase such ornaments ready-made. The works, protected from dust and curious fingers by a blown glass dome, would be placed on mantels or elsewhere in the parlor as part of the room’s feminine decor. The English interest at this time in naturalism and amateur botany, as well as a close attention to detail can also be seen here: the realistic-looking bouquet could even substitute for real flowers.

It was presented to the Society by the last Dillingham descendants to live in the home. Gift of the Ahlstrom Family 1998.755

Victorian shell craft
In In the Attic Tags discoverbrewsterhistory, Sea Captain, portrait, mylocalma
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Brewster Historical Society
739 Lower Road
PO Box 1146
Brewster, MA 02631  
508-896-9521
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In the Attic