Vintage Buttons 2 Merchant Resource

2D Graphics released on Nov 26, 2021
Vintage Buttons 2 Merchant Resource by N/A

Requirements:
Any program that opens png files.
Departments:
Available Uses:
Standard License, Extended License, Merchant Resource

Formerly at YURdigital and Hivewire

Real buttons! Merchant Resource!

58 png files with transparent backgrounds, that may be used to create commercial products or freebies. Be sure to read terms of use below.

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All items are PNG format
BLACK AND WHITE -- Items #1-#29 -- 11 black, 18 white -- most are some form of plastic -- a couple seem to have been carved from some kind of seashell -- all at 180 dpi -- PNG sizes range from 380x381 pixels to 1234x1232 pixels
BUCKLES -- Items #30-#36 -- various colors -- one metal, the rest plastic -- PNG sizes range from 696x920 pixels to 1673x1665 pixels
DIRTY OLD BUTTONS -- Items #37-#42 -- 3 dark colors, 3 light colors, all are "grungy" -- all at 180 dpi -- PNG sizes range from 420x427 pixels to 763x792 pixels
STEM BUTTONS -- Items #43-#58 -- variety of bright colors -- mostly plastic, one metal -- all at 180 dpi -- PNG sizes range from 368x367 pixels to 1280x1220 pixels
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These are images of real buttons, mostly saved off of used clothing. Some were collected by my mother (1909-1991), which means that most of them are from 1920-1985. I'm sure that the bulk of them are from the 1950s onwards. However, she was raised by her maternal grandmother, so there may be some earlier than 1920. There are nicks and dings. I did wash and clean as best I could, and in a few cases photoshopped a little of the damage off. However, they all look like used buttons except for one or two that were still on the paper card they'd come on.

The buttons themselves range from about a quarter inch to several inches across.

The holes are all about the same size in real life. That means that the larger the holes look on the button, the smaller the button is.

The materials were a little different then, and many of the items might be bakelite or nylon or something else that looks like plastic, but isn't what we consider plastic today. Also, I can tell you by experience that many of the older buttons, especially plastics, did NOT go through a hot water wash or a dryer set on high without warping or melting. However, the ones in this set are mostly the more durable ones. They survived long enough to outlast the garment they were attached to.

Black and White Buttons
Back when, clothes were expensive, very expensive, and people didn't have many. They didn't have many "notions" (buttons, fasteners, other doodads that are attached to the garment) of any kind. To keep stuff simple, dark clothing took black buttons, light clothing took white buttons. I might add that for many years I only had black thread and white thread in my sewing kit. Black for dark colored items, white for light ones. Matching colors of thread to the fabric was useful only for top stitching.
These buttons would be for ordinary, every-day clothing.
#5 is mother-of-pearl, most of the rest are some form of plastic.

Buckles
These are not sturdy buckles for actually holding things on with, but the decorative buckles one finds on the little cloth belts for women's clothing. Those were in fashion in the 1940s through about the 1960s.

Dirty Old Buttons
These were buttons so grimy I was not able to scrub them clean, but hey, grunge is realistic, right? These would have been on older work clothes that saw very hard wear.

Stem Buttons
Decorative buttons where the button hole is on the stem on the backside and only the un-pierced front shows. #48 is gold-colored metal, the rest are some form of plastic.

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