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Collecting Antique Hand Held Fans

By Pauline Abreu, published Feb 13, 2008
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I have always been interested in antiques. A few year's ago I decided that I wanted to start collecting some kind of antique. I was looking for something that was cheap to buy, and also decorative to look at. After much deliberation, as there is a lot to choose from, I thought antique hand hand held fans were the perfect collectors item for me.

I had a look on Ebay.com where there was a number of different antique hand held fans to choose from. My collection has been slow, I have only accumulated around ten of them over the past few year's. The fans that I have collected though are unique, and they look very decorative, which was the aim of my collection. I have some with floral designs, some oriental designs, and some very elaborate Spanish designs. I bought these for $5 - $10 for each fan.

Hand held fans have been in existence for hundreds of years, and are still commonly used in many parts of the world today. They have been used in the past as an ornamental piece or a fashion statement. They have been made from many different materials with all kinds of artwork displayed on the fan shaped or flat surfaces. Some of the most earliest fans came from the Egyptians, and were of a palm leaf design. Plumage of birds were a favorite art design on Egyptian and Native American Indian ceremonial fans. Bird feathers were also used as a material to make the fans. In Rome, Italy it was common for fans to be made of wood and elaborately painted.

The earliest Chinese fans were made from bamboo. They dated from the 2nd century BC. The Chinese fans were used as a status symbol, with specific fans being given to a particular individual, or group of people. The slats of fans made in China were made from sandalwood, mother of pearl, bone, mica, Ivory, or tortoise shell. These materials were carved and covered with paper or some type of fabric.

Collecting Antique Hand Held Fans

Hand Held Fans

Credit: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Five_fans.jpg

Copyright: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Five_fans.jpg

Comments
Comments 1 - 3 of 3
 
 
Fans are great for smudging in ceremonial usage. Great history for such a small price.

Posted on 03/01/2008 at 4:03:00 PM

 
I have 'ad fan' - from the old KATY railroad line, handed to my great grandmother when she boarded the KATY train bound for Texas during the summer of the Texas Centennial Celebration in Dallas - maybe not ancient Chinese, but a treasure to me.

Posted on 02/21/2008 at 12:02:58 PM

 
I really love the old Chinese plain sandalwood fans. When I was overseas, this was one of the presents I loved bringing back from the orient for female relatives.

Posted on 02/17/2008 at 5:02:59 PM

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