The ongoing commentary about
the condition of a western whiskey bottle that was offered at auction recently
- awakened thoughts about how western collectors grade the condition of
bottles and how picky they have become.
The auction houses all
grade their offerings on different platforms. Western collectors usually grade
bottles by the three “C’s”. Color, condition and crudity. Then there are the
folks that grade bottles as if they were coins. Phrases like “absolutely mint” “bold strike” and “PERFECT” are thrown about like loaded dice.
Let’s start right off with defining “mint”. Mint condition is an expression
used in the description of pre-owned goods. Originally, the phrase comes from
the way collectors describe the condition of coins. Mint is the place where the
coin was manufactured. Mint condition is the condition a coin is in as it
leaves the mint. Over time, the term "mint" began to be used to
describe many different items (including bottles) having excellent, like-new
quality.
For a bottle to be mint it must be in the same condition as when it left the
factory. Agreed? If you agree with the term mint condition then stress cracks,
annealing checks and other in making flaws are acceptable distractions to a
bottle, it came from the factory that way didn’t it? . Are you still with me on
this or are you collecting “perfect” bottles?
Perfection is a philosophical concept and not necessarily a condition of a
piece of glass. If you want a “perfect” bottle then just maybe you will need to
improve on what the factory manufactured. There are lots of people in the
bottle community that can take your bottle from mint to perfect and most all of
them charge for it. Cleaning, polishing, removing chips, gluing on tops…you get
the drift.
As a collector matures and becomes more sophisticated he starts to appreciate
the character of a collectible piece. Whether it is the unique handmade
appearance, apparent in-making flaws or just an honest wear pattern, the not so
perfect has become perfect in his or her eyes.
If you’re using a 30 power
loop looking for flaws in western glass you certainly are going to find them.
Early western glass is full of in-making flaws. Potstones, cooling checks,
stress cracks and a host of other imperfections plague early western glass.
If you are looking for
western whiskies without issues my advice is to start collecting turn of the
century tool tops. There are plenty of rare and desirable “perfect” western
tool top whiskies to put on your shelf.