Tuesday, May 28, 2013

A Lovely Victorian

I saw this elegant bottle opener in the Victorian Trading Company catalogue.



"A most accommodating pose invites one to open a cold one. This delightful antique reproduction was popular among many of our grandfathers while grandmother would probably raise an eyebrow!"

It's labelled a best seller, and I can understand why. The pictures only show the lovely lady's front. You have to buy it in order to get a glimpse of her well-rounded derriere.


From Hermione's Heart

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

In Denmark any bottle opener is called a Madonna; the reason is hard to translate, it says that she is uplifting her eyes or capsule

Anonymous said...

Very nice.

Hug,
joey

BTW. I took the Red Ass wine to the SCONY party. It was similar to a Yellow Tail Sweet Red Roo.

bob said...

That would be a great conversational piece during dinner

Bob

Hermione said...

Anon - I didn't know that. How very interesting!

Joey - Thanks for the wine update. I have only had Yellow Tail white, so will buy a bottle of the red and see what it's like.

Bob - It would. I like the idea of having a whole box of them; one for each guest.

Hugs,
Hermione

Anonymous said...

cute... always nice as a conversation piece..
bottoms up
Red

ronnie said...

Nice and would be a different present to give a gentlemen though I don't suppose his wife/girlfriend would like it.

Love,
Ronnie
xx



Blondie said...

I really like this and I would buy it for my husband, even though he doesn't drink wine. He loves things like this

Hermione said...

Red - It would look cute in your man cave.
Ronnie - Maybe as a secret Santa gift, so no one need know the giver.

Blondie - Why not go for it? It would make a great gift.

Hugs,
Hermione

sixofthebest said...

Hermione, with such a beautiful sexy bottle opener. One can play to their hearts content. "Spank the Bottle Opener", Instead of "Spin the Bottle". "He He He"---

Anonymous said...

It is their sweet red which must have lots of sugar. The YT red is a blend of traditional reds.