
Collecting matchbooks is an exciting hobby and, as considered by some, an art form. Matchbook collecting is a global pastime, practiced and celebrated by individuals worldwide. It is stimulating as there are so many various matchbook covers and matchbook boxes that your efforts at collection are limitless. It is a great hobby for all ages as everyone can enjoy collecting matchbooks. It is easy to do and it can be very inexpensive, as friends and family members can pick up free matchbooks for you wherever they go, bringing you endless surprises.

There is a sophisticated name for matchbook collectors – and that name is Phillumenist. “Matchbook collector” is much easier to remember and pronounce. And it is so much fun! Trading matchbooks online gives you the opportunity to chat with fellow Phillumenists from all over the world, each who have access to a wide range of matchbook covers and matchboxes in their region. Talk about the diverse collecting possibilities! As well, if you have specific collecting aspirations and are grouping matchbooks into categories and find you are missing a few, searching for them and obtaining the long desired missing matchbooks is a joyful experience.
Early beginnings
Matchbooks had their beginnings as early as 1827, but they didn’t become widely known until the Diamond Match Company patented the matchbook from the inventor largely credited with the idea, Joshua Pusey, in 1896. The earliest commercial advertisements as matchbook covers came from the Mendelson Opera Company in 1895. The company bought about 100 blank matchbooks from Diamond Match Company and set about drawing their own illustrations and pasting cut-out photos on the covers to advertise the Opera Company. There is only one example of this work of art known to exist today and The Franklin Mint has it insured for $25,000.

In those early matchbook designs, the match striker was located on the inside of the box. The design was transformed later to what was believed to be a safer method, locating the match striker on the outside of the box. Matchbooks were intended to be sold in the beginning, but around 1945 they started being given away freely so as to better market the products or services the matchbook covers were advertising.
Educational experience
Besides the pure fun and joy of matchbook collecting, there are the educational and historical sidelights. You can learn a great deal from collecting matchbooks, about such topics as politics, history, geography, and businesses through the years. Businesses that have come and gone, and businesses who have been around for 100 years all show a progression through time that you can learn from.
Displaying your matchbooks
So many options exist to display your matchbooks; you are only limited by your imagination. Take daring and creative steps to come up with new and unique display ideas to show off your treasures. One way is to find a large, unusually shaped, glass container that can hold several hundred matchbooks and drop them in so they appear from the outside as a collage. It is great fun viewing from the outside, turning the glass container until you can make out all your treasures located inside.
The majorities of serious matchbook collectors remove the matches from the matchbooks and mount just the covers in either a photo or scrapbook album. Unused matchbooks are the preferred condition for collecting purposes. However, if you are looking for an exceptionally old matchbook and you find one, you take what you can get, as they will be rare and hard to find.
Matchbook collecting is a joy for all ages and a hobby that is readily accessible to everyone. Join in the fun, searching and collecting matchbooks and discussing your newfound jewels with new friends who share the same interest as you. You can have fun sharing your collecting stories with like-minded treasure-hunters like you.
Alana Morgaine
Alanas Books And Magazines










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