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Antique Blue and White Chinoiserie Porcelain Snuff Bottle
Antique Blue and White Chinoiserie Porcelain Snuff Bottle
Antique Blue and White Chinoiserie Porcelain Snuff Bottle
Antique Blue and White Chinoiserie Porcelain Snuff Bottle
Antique Blue and White Chinoiserie Porcelain Snuff Bottle
Antique Blue and White Chinoiserie Porcelain Snuff Bottle
Antique Blue and White Chinoiserie Porcelain Snuff Bottle
Antique Blue and White Chinoiserie Porcelain Snuff Bottle

Antique Blue and White Chinoiserie Porcelain Snuff Bottle

Regular price $45.00 Sale

Gorgeous Antique Porcelain Snuff Bottle handprinted with Blue and White Chinoiserie Landscape Motif. Excellent Antique Condition. Perfect to start or add to your collection.

Please view all photos for condition, as our opinion may differ from yours. 

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DIMENSION: 3 1/2"h, 2" w, 4 1/2"d

ORIGIN: Chinese part of a collection purchased from an estate

CIRCA: The Qing Dynasty (1644-1912) and under Kangxi Emperor marked with the Imperial Artemisia leaf 

HISTORY & FACTS: 

Chinese snuff bottles were only made in the Qing Dynasty, which started in 1644 and ended in 1911, and contrary to what some people think, they were used only for holding powdered tobacco, usually with some herbs and spices in it, which was inhaled through the nose. 

They started in the imperial court. For the first hundred years of their existence, throughout much of the 18th century, tobacco was exceedingly expensive in China, so taking snuff was for the imperial family and the influential elite of Chinese Society. It wasn’t until the 19th century that you see a diffusion to the general population.

They stopped using snuff in China around the 1920s; however, there were still artisans who continued to make them, primarily for the foreign collectors market. You may notice that there’s an enormous collectors market going on now, both reproductions as well as 18th- or 19th-century bottles. While a bottle made for export or museum reproduction will range around $50 to $150, while authentic 18th century bottles can bring $5000 to $10000 each.

Source: Collectors Weekly; Maribeth Keane