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Thimble Collectors Club thimbles |
Build and share your knowledge about thimbles - new topics added regularly
THERE ARE 32 "LEARN MORE ABOUT..." TOPICS
Brass Advertising |
British Placenames |
British Royalty on Thimbles |
British Silversmiths |
Charles May |
Christmas |
Coalport
Dorcas Thimble Boxes |
Easter |
Gadgets |
Francesca |
Hallmarked Thimbles set |
'Mother' |
The World's Greatest Porcelain Houses
Royal Albert |
Royal Crown Derby |
Royal Doulton |
Royal Worcester Handpainted Thimbles
Royal Worcester Decal Thimbles |
S + H Foskett |
Silver Advertising Thimbles |
Spode |
Stratnoid |
SylvaC
Thimble Books |
Thimble Collectors Club |
Thimble Societies |
Thimbles with Slogans
Thimblefuls |
Victorian Silver Scenic Thimbles |
Wedgwood Jasperware |
Wedgwood Bone China
THERE ARE 22 PAGES OF THIMBLES & OTHER ITEMS TO BUY
aluminium 1 -
books 1 -
brass 1 -
china 6 -
display cases 1
gold 1 -
needlework tools 2 -
other collectables 1 -
pewter 1 -
plastic 1
silver 3 -
steel & metal 1 -
unusual materials 1 -
wood 1
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y - z
LISTED IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER WHERE POSSIBLE
CLICK ON A LETTER TO GO THE CORRESPONDING PAGE
The Thimble Collectors Club [TCC] came to my attention quite early on in my thimble collecting days - 1986. The glossy pamphlets that they issued promoted the idea of collecting "good" brands of china or porcelain from famous or often unheard of thimble china manufacturers. The added appeal was that on joining the Club one would automatically receive a new thimble every month. What a selection of high quality thimbles!!
I lived in South Africa when I made my first enquiry about joining the Club, but I had no response to my application. I put this down to being where I lived. I have always enjoyed collecting Royal Doulton thimbles and once I knew that TCC had issued a thimble featuring Balloon Seller, I approached them again and was able to purchase this lovely thimble as a one-off, in October 1987.
I became interested in the scheme again in late 1989 when an English penfriend sent me two she had bought for me - the uniqueness and quality of the thimbles really appealed, but I only joined the [English] Club in April 1993. At that time the free gift on joining was Oakley's Little Owl. An amazing facility was that one could return thimbles, if they were not suitable, within one week of receipt. Did these returns form the basis of the 'free gifts'?
In September 1995, the Club switched from supplying thimbles each month, to sending out a batch of twelve at a time, for each year - though they were still paid for on a monthly basis. From 1996, the individual certificates stopped, in preference for one booklet brochure.
There were at least three Thimble Collectors Clubs - one in Chessington (Surrey, England - they were affiliated with the Danbury Mint), another in Norwalk (Connecticut, USA) and another in Germany (Der Fingerhut-Sammler-Club). The Club logos are different (see above). Which Club was established first and when? I presume that the Clubs started in the early 1980s. There are over TCC 550 thimbles in this listing, so my theory is that different thimbles were made for the different Clubs - otherwise TCC would have been going for 36 years!! Were the same thimbles issued to all members worldwide at the same time? No. From information I have received, newer members got thimbles that had been issued in the past. I have included the earliest date of issue where known. If yours is earlier, please let me know. The USA Club closed in 1998. It seems that the English Club ceased to exist in 2003.
Each thimble is boxed and has an accompanying leaflet giving a brief history of the china house and the name of each thimble and in the case of the US certificates, there is an illustration of the thimble's backstamp. The certificates are great to have and are even more important now that the Clubs no longer exist. Sadly none of the pamphlets are dated. There is no way of linking the thimbles back to TCC or dating the thimbles once the certificate has become separated from the thimble. There are exceptions: where the thimbles have a "Thimble Collectors Club" backstamp as well as the maker's mark - eg Moriken, Oakley, Shibata, Kiyomasa. Now you will be able to link your thimbles to TCC, with the marvellous photos supplied by Cathy and Jenny. We hope to fill the missing dates and certificates with help from other collectors. If you were in the TCC, you may have kept the dates?
Now that I have seen the certificates from both the USA and UK Clubs, it is easy to tell the difference. The USA Club certificates have the maker's backstamp on the certificate; the thimble information is on the other side, whereas the English TCC certificates are all printed on one side and there is no illustration of the backstamp. For ease of use, we have consolidated the USA Club certificates into one page each. The same thimbles have differing descriptions on the certificates (see Longton Hall's Rustic Castle). Both are included where possible. The German certificates follow the UK Club's style.
In compiling these pages, we have followed the name of the thimble design as mentioned in bold lettering on each certificate - and done the same for each china house. Where there are discrepancies, there will be linked cross-references. I have ignored the text on each certificate [except the thimble patterns descriptions] as it is often has conflicting information.
As well as offering thimbles by the month, TCC also offered sets for sale. I have compiled a database for you to download. TCC sets
Requires Adobe Acrobat download
download Adobe Acrobat
China and porcelain thimble collecting came to its zenith during the 1980s and there were hundreds of different maker's marks or backstamps to collect. The Thimble Collectors Club fostered this passion and found many new "thimbles makers" for their Club members. In 1986 Royal Worcester stopped making thimbles to be followed by Wedgwood (1991 though this was revived in 2000), Spode (1992) and Caverswall (1993).
It must have been very difficult for the Club to continue to find new sources with this trend of closures. Was this when the practice began, of one thimble manufacturer using new backstamps other than their own, to inflate the number of new makers? MAYBE they were even selling their backstamps, tho no longer interested making thimbles themselves? Doesn't this make a bit of a mockery of the whole scheme?
Anyone who has tried to follow the takeovers and amalgamations of china manufacturers in the 1980s, in the wider field outside thimbles, will know that this is a vast field even for the experts. Royal Doulton has a huge list in their stable, but they have never been prolific thimble makers. For thimbles, shape is predominant and the dominant makers have specific thimble shapes that identify them immediately.
Welsh thimbles, made by Heritage Coast China, include the following backstamps:
Afan Valley
Ammonite Studio
Avonvale
Celtic Cross
St Donats
St Illtyd
Vale
Westbury Studio
Wyeside
Yr Fejn Wynt
Some of their patterns - Blue Satsuma, Welsh Poppy, Brambles/Blackberry Bush, Old Mill, Hazelnut - even appear with the differing backstamps of Avonvale / Heritage Coast, St Donats / Glyn-Coch, Afan Valley / Wyeside, Heart of England / Westbury and Celtic Cross / Wyeside respectively.
I imagine that the decals created were jealously guarded by their creators, but some are in the public domain. I presume that Gien first made the design Lilypad, and that this was purchased by Vale? What about the identical Songbird produced by both Revol and Carl Schumann?
Sutherland China can be identified by thimbles with crystals or their thimbles made in distinctive shapes, or shaped apexes. They have used the additional maker's marks:
Accorn
Bell & Co
Bell Vue
Blossom China
Blyth Works
Bow
Branksome Ceramics
Brimstone Fine China
Britannia China Company
Brown-Westhead, Moore & Co
Cambellfield
Castle Pottery
Ceramart
Chelsea
Davenport
Don Pottery
Dorset
Dublin Pottery
Empress Porcelain
Fenton
Francesca China
George Jones
Hanbridge Fine Ceramics
Herculaneum Ceramics
Hilditch & Son
Ironstone China
Isle of Wight
John and Richard Riley
Kingston Pottery
Lockhart
Longton Hall
Mercia Crown
Nautilus Pottery
Nouveau Pottery
Northfield Hawley
Oak Tree China
Orb Pottery
Ralph Stevenson
Rockingham
Rose China
Royal Westminster
Seacombe
Thomas Greene
Tulip Fine China
Whieldon Ware
I am sure there are more!!
Bow and Chelsea both have Fluted Floral thimbles, though the flowers depicted are different; Davenport / Sutherland have Playing Cards; Sutherland / Rockingham's Still Life are the same decal. There is an identical decal and shape in the Tropical Fish by Sutherland and Whielden. What about Hummingbird with a backstamp for Ironstone China and for Swillington Bridge Pottery? Compare Unicorn for Britannia China and Chelsea!!
Another clue to this practice is the wording "produced in homage ..." - "a thimble in tribute ..." - "in the style of ..." etc. on the certificates. Maybe the maker's name was even fictitious?
In the 2002 range Sutherland would also have made the following "European" thimbles:-
Charmaine [France]
Empress [Czech Republic]
Fleur [France]
Katerina [Russia]
Tulip [Holland]
I am sure there are more of this type for earlier years too!!
I am more familiar with the English brands on china and porcelain thimbles, but if this practice was encouraged/abetted by TCC, what was to stop the prolific German and Japanese thimble makers, from doing the same? Check some of the German thimbles for yourself: Lindner - Eminence Ludwig - Gossel - Reutter. Then there are the Czechoslovakian Bohemia and Thun with identical decals for the Entertainers/Court Figures!! Stoke-on-Trent's equivalent in Japan is Seto, where most of Japanese porcelain is made. Iwasa in Tajimi (close to Seto) made thimbles for TCC probably with the additional backstamps of Shibata, Marutoyo and Yamasan. Did Sutherland China make some of these thimbles as well?
Another theory is that these thimbles, that were initially made for TCC, reached a wider market after their contract with TCC ceased. If the decals remained in their possession, there was nothing to stop them marketing them after TCC's closure, with whichever maker's mark they chose! Some of these designs are still being made today, even tho TCC has long gone.
Thimble boxes for the TCC thimbles are another clue to their origins and date. In the 1980s and into the mid 1990s, the thimble boxes supplied with the thimbles were the same brand as the thimble. Later boxes were the generic blue thimble boxes lettered with 'Thimble Collectors Club'. Was this because there was no manufacturer with the thimble brand's name?
To date, I estimate there were over 550 different thimbles issued by TCC, between the early 1980s and 2003. Because there are so many TCC thimbles, I have tried to keep to one view per thimble.
For those who were members of TCC, I wonder if you joined their thimble Club using one of these flyers?

This page would never have been possible without the generosity of two collectors who have collected this information to share with us all: neither collected them on a monthly basis, so the research they have both done is mind-boggling.
Over more than a five-year period, with the help of so many collectorw listed below, we are now only missing 4 photos. What we are now needing is more copies of missing Certificates!! Until we have all the certificates, some of the names may be little more than a description!! If you have the correct name, please share!!
Since the beginning of 2009 I have been sent many photos of thimbles for inclusion in these pages that have previously been unrecorded. Why is this only happening now? Most are in the blue TCC thimble boxes. I have included them in these pages - BUT BUYER BEWARE. Unless there is an accompanying TCC leaflet, I cannot substantiate that these were one of the thimbles included in the TCC. Hence my plea for the sharing of more TCC certificates!
Was it just the different countries' Clubs that led to the identically-titled thimble being produced slightly differently? Maybe both versions came out of the same manufacturing house but at different times - one for the UK market and one for the US market? So far this has been noticed in similar but different versions - Akemi | Gossell | Lin | Pickard | Royal Westminster | Thun. Your version may still be correct - it just was made for a different club??!!
a - b - c -
d - e - f -
g - h - i -
j - k - l -
m - n - o -
p - q - r -
s - t - u -
v - w - x -
y - z
LISTED IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER WHERE POSSIBLE
CLICK ON A LETTER TO GO THE CORRESPONDING PAGE
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DO YOU KNOW ANY MORE DETAILS ABOUT THE THIMBLE COLLECTORS CLUB?
DO YOU HAVE ANY OTHER TCC THIMBLES NOT MENTIONED? DO YOU HAVE ANY OTHER TCC THIMBLES NOT PICTURED? EMAIL thimbleselect@bigpond.com TO SHARE YOUR KNOWLEDGE. |
Contributors
Cathy Pezzotta and Jenny Yuhas with their passion for these thimbles
and
Linda Berkery, Margaret "Em" Boatwright, Sue Burt, Patricia Chisamore, Lynne Clark, Maggie Cooper, Nancye Crooks, Marilyn Curtright, Joy Earles
Jim Farrell, Margaret Hickling, Sue Hood, Hiroko Ito, Denise Jenkins, Barbara Levett, Lin, Pat Morris, Yuri Nakamura, Moyra Peckston, Sue Pickles
Linda Pullin, Wanda Ralston, Linda Samaripa, Kellie Schultz, Jeanne Simoncelli-Payne, Jean Taylor, Audrey Turner
Joanna Waciorski, Corrina Walker and Mave Wiskin
This listing of Thimble Collectors Club thimbles does not purport to be complete or accurate in all aspects. Rather it invites comment and contribution to add to our knowledge. My thanks to the other contributors
Enjoy!
© Sue Gowan
October/November 2003
THERE ARE 32 "LEARN MORE ABOUT..." TOPICS
Brass Advertising |
British Placenames |
British Royalty on Thimbles |
British Silversmiths |
Charles May |
Christmas |
Coalport
Dorcas Thimble Boxes |
Easter |
Gadgets |
Francesca |
Hallmarked Thimbles set |
'Mother' |
The World's Greatest Porcelain Houses
Royal Albert |
Royal Crown Derby |
Royal Doulton |
Royal Worcester Handpainted Thimbles
Royal Worcester Decal Thimbles |
S + H Foskett |
Silver Advertising Thimbles |
Spode |
Stratnoid |
SylvaC
Thimble Books |
Thimble Collectors Club |
Thimble Societies |
Thimbles with Slogans
Thimblefuls |
Victorian Silver Scenic Thimbles |
Wedgwood Jasperware |
Wedgwood Bone China
THERE ARE 22 PAGES OF THIMBLES & OTHER ITEMS TO BUY
aluminium 1 -
books 1 -
brass 1 -
china 6 -
display cases 1
gold 1 -
needlework tools 2 -
other collectables 1 -
pewter 1 -
plastic 1
silver 3 -
steel & metal 1 -
unusual materials 1 -
wood 1
Any questions or comments?
thimbleselect@bigpond.com
I do not offer any type of valuation or advice on prices.
| Last updated 21 October 2009 |