And I love looking at other people's mugs when I'm in their kitchen. It's not as good as snooping in their bookshelves, of course--but then, what is?
A Lily Among Thorns has a scene where my hero makes hot chocolate for my heroine after she wakes up from a nightmare. I knew if Solomon were living today, he'd be one of those guys who owns six mismatched plates and four mugs, all of which were given him by his family ("Team Jacob" from his little sister, "Chemists do it on a table periodically" from his uncle, and a Moulin Rouge souvenir mug from his twin brother's semester in Paris). But I wasn't sure what the Regency equivalent would be. Turns out the Regency equivalent is novelty mugs! Consumer impulses haven't changed much at all. There were commemorative mugs, mugs with political cartoons on, souvenir mugs from places...
I ended up giving Solomon one that said "A Present from Swansea" (he's from Cheshire, which borders Wales), and one with Nelson's portrait on it. I took the first one directly from this lovely plate in the Swansea Museum:
Nelson memorabilia was a huge thing. You can see lots more of it in this Molly Joyful blog post and this auction website, but here's one of my favorites (from that second link), a Staffordshire jug with Nelson on one side and Hardy on the other. The site gives it a tentative date of 1810, but all the other similar ones I've seen were released closer to Trafalgar, so who knows. (Any Nelson/Hardy 'shippers in the house? If you haven't seen this Kate Beaton comic, you definitely should.)
Here are a few of my favorites from Martyn Edgell Antiques, a great resource for these. This one was apparently put out for an election. The caption says, "Sir Philip Musgrave was elected M.P. for Westmoreland."
Here's one that I almost want to leave without any context because it's so amazing:
I'll end with a couple of cool Queen Caroline mugs:
As for the Green-Bag crew
Justice will have its due
God Save the Queen!
Confound their politicks
Frustrate their knavish tricks
On HER our hopes we fix
God Save the Queen!
("Green-Bag crew" is a reference to the royal divorce trial, when George IV submitted the alleged evidence of his wife's adultery to the House of Lords in two green bags.)
Tell me about your favorite mug!
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