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Pair of shoe buckles

Smith, James

The Victoria and Albert Museum

The Victoria and Albert Museum
London, United Kingdom

Gold or silver buckles for shoes were in fashion for most of the 18th century. They gave the finishing touches to elegant dress and were one of the few pieces of jewellery worn by men as well as women. Gentlemen wore matching shoe and knee buckles.

Making buckles became a highly skilled craft at which English silversmiths and jewellers excelled. Exquisitely wrought designs, glittering pastes and precious stones reflected the status of the wearer as well as the occasion. Cheaper and plainer versions were made of steel, brass and other metal alloys.

Leather inserts for buckles were used from the mid 1780s onwards on men's buckles. As fastenings became more complicated black leather became a convenient covering for new mechanisms. By the 1790s black patent leather was also very fashionable for buckles. The fastenings on the buckles are stamped: BOULTON & SMITHS PATENT. The patent was granted to James Smith in 1792 and operated in conjunction with Matthew Boulton. Famed for his partnership with engineer James Watt, whom he assisted in the development of the steam engine, Boulton was also notable for the high quality of the silver, Sheffield plate and other metalwork produced at his Soho factory on the outskirts of Birmingham.

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  • Title: Pair of shoe buckles
  • Creator: Smith, James
  • Date Created: 1787/1806
  • Location: Birmingham
  • Physical Dimensions: Height: 1.25 in, Width: 2.375 in
  • Provenance: Given by Mr René de l'Hôpital
  • Medium: Cut steel and leather
The Victoria and Albert Museum

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