The Victorian Era blog is actually paying homage to a very specialized blogspot called Mustaches of the Nineteenth Century that showcases so many fascinating nuances of the ‘Age of the Mustache’.
Personally it would drive me crazy to have a mass of tangled hair growing on my upper lip, but that's me... and my Grandma. Yes, my Grandmother once told me that a man only grows a mustache when he has something to hide – and not just the skin on his face. Consequently I always shaved before visiting her.
MUSTACHE WAX
For a myriad of reasons mustaches flourished throughout the Victorian Age. At the height of this fashion, well born gentlemen would frequent upscale barber shops and saloons to procure mustache wax, which was stiff pomade they could apply to their moustaches to hold the hairs in place, especially at the extremities. Such wax would also have restorative properties, and of course that became more and more important as the length of the hair increased. No man could sport a ‘handlebar mustache’ without mustache wax.
COMPOSITION Mustache wax was quite commonly scented and sometimes color pigmented. Historically the product was fashioned from beeswax, coco butter, and petroleum jelly. More sophisticated recipes include gum Arabic and soap, essential oils for scent and all manner of colouring.
MUSTACHE CUPS
After bathing, and trimming his mustache, a gentleman would melt a ½ gram (a dab) of mustache wax in a pan. Using a special comb, the gentleman would then carefully apply the hot wax to his mustache to keep the curls intact. And therein lay the problem - a stiff upper lip would always soften during high tea.
Every time a man raised a steaming teacup to his mouth, the steam would melt the wax, and it would drip into his tea. And worse than that, after drinking coffee and tea, fair haired men's moustaches often became stained!
Harvey Adam's invention (look for maker's mark 'HA&co') spread all over the
The pretty red cup above is one from Saxon Germany and at the time of this writing, it already has three bids - the current bid is $26 bucks and there's still six days left in the auction.
Next is a very pretty mustache cup & saucer, painted with yellow flowers, green & brown leaves & stems with turquoise blue & white background and gold trim that has just appeared on the auction site at $9.99.
Anyone looking for more information on the history of this tableware innovation could read a comprehensive report on mustache cups from the respectable online resource, The Gavel.
Harvey Adams was not born until 1835...
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