Clocks,
Watches, Music Boxes 3
Whereas a good Tompion will realize a thousand pounds
or more, clocks by less exalted makers can be bought
comparatively cheaply. An important factor is the
condition of the movement; of greater interest to
the collector than the case. Continual use during
the centuries will have caused wear and necessitated
replacement of parts; if this has not been done with
great care and by a knowledgeable craftsman much
of the value will have been lost, and it will be
found that it is a very expensive matter to correct
it. An apparently fine clock will sometimes disclose
on examination that the entire striking mechanism
has been removed, or that the old escapement has
been changed for a more modern, but less capricious,
one. Further, movements have been adapted to fit
cases, and vice versa; a long-case of small size,
known as a grandmother, should be treated with great
caution. Old examples do exist but are very rare,
and the majority of them have been manufactured by
unscrupulous fakers.
In France, clocks were placed in large and ornamental
cases, sometimes with matching wall-brackets, covered
in tortoiseshell inlaid with brass (Boulle work).
The fashion lasted from about 1690, through the eighteenth
century and later. In the early 1700's cases began
to be veneered with kingwood, tulipwood, and other
rare woods, mounted in ormolu and designed in styles
to match those prevailing
for furniture. Other clocks were given cases of ormolu
and bronze, sometimes set with Dresden and other
china groups and with Sevres porcelain flowers. Genuine
specimens are rare and expensive, and they have been
copied carefully and often. A feature of an old French
clock movement is that the pendulum is suspended
on a silk thread, which can be lengthened or shortened
to regulate the time.
German clocks often resemble closely the French.
Others had movements of which the framing was of
wood instead of the usual brass.
Watches
The making of pocket-watches may be said to have
begun with small ones of spherical shape about 1520.
These resembled pomanders and were worn similarly;
from a chain round the neck, or at the girdle. The
round flat watch Came later, and was enclosed in
a plain inner case, usually of silver, and an outer
case with elaborate ornamentation. The movements
are found to be most carefully made, and the cock,
or cover of the balance-wheel, usually pierced and
engraved in a complicated pattern.
The maximum decoration was given to watches by the
French and Swiss: cases of gold were enamelled or
set with precious stones, and intricate movements
with small automata that struck the hours were made.
The watches of Abraham Louis Breguet, born in Switzerland
and working in France, are among the very finest
ever made. He died in 1823 and it has been said by
an expert that 'all his watches show perfect workmanship,
originality in design and beauty in form'. Like the
early eighteenth-century work of Thomas Tompion,
that of Breguet has been faked, and the fame of both
makers was so great in their lifetimes that many
of the forgeries were contemporary with them.
Musical boxes
Musical boxes are nearly as old as clocks. They
operate by a barrel with protruding pegs striking
the teeth of a steel comb or operating bells. The
most familiar ones are those of small size, frequently
in the form of snuff-boxes, many of which are adapted
to play more than one tune. They are supposed to
have been invented by a Swiss, Louis Favre of Geneva,
and most of the good movements were made in that
country. Some are incredibly small and were fitted
into fob seals, sealing-wax holders, penknives
and other articles where they might surprise a listener.
A refinement was the fitting of a tiny bellows to
work a whistle, which led to the making of boxes
containing a small hidden bird. This would pop up
and sing, to disappear when the song was ended and
stay hidden until the operating button was pressed
again. Late in the eighteenth century clocks were
fitted sometimes with a
musical box in the base, which played when the hour
had struck. Grandfather clocks were made to play
a short tune on bells at the hour, and on some it
was possible to choose one of several melodies.
In the nineteenth century many large musical boxes
were made, some playing a number of tunes and fitted
with interchangeable barrels. Others played
principally on a steel comb, but had bells as well
and incorporated small drums played by coloured butterflies.
They were replaced finally by the gramophone.
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Abraham
Louis Breguet
The watches of Abraham Louis Breguet, born in Switzerland
and working in France, are among the very finest
ever made. He died in 1823 and it has been said by
an expert that 'all his watches show perfect workmanship,
originality in design and beauty in form'.
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