1890? One FS button, 5/8" in diameter.
The conception of the scene seems slightly different here from both the 1" and the 3/4" FS versions. The defining line at the bottom of the scene is higher. The strong set of defining masses at the lower right seems to have been lost. It is not as clear that the fox grasps the neck of the vase. The fox sits back here, and the stork is well removed from the button's right rim. The whole rim has a copper hue. As with the other exemplars of this scene, that copper-colored band seems to be folded over a hook-bearing celluloid back and the bronze and metallic front. In all three types of button, a silverish circle surrounds the button's scene inside the enclasping ring. Wonders never cease! Apparently not in BBB.
1890? 2 FS buttons, apparently matched, 3/4" in diameter.
As with the 1" buttons with which these seem to be matched, a brass-colored band seems to be folded over the hook-bearing celluloid back and the bronze and black metallic front of the button. The stork has its long beak in the vase while the fox looks on. These two smaller buttons seem identical to me, though I do not think that they are identical with the slightly smaller FS button.
1890? 2 FS buttons, 1" in diameter, with celluloid background.
Here a brass-colored band seems to be folded over the hook-bearing celluloid back and the bronze and black metallic front of the button. The stork has its long beak in the vase while the fox looks on. Apparently in the same set as the two 3/4" FS buttons. Apparently #16 on Plate 152 in BBB.
1880? Two small FS buttons, 5/8" in diameter, brass repousse over a celluloid base with a circular metal loop shank.
Basically the same motif as the large 1.5" Larner FS button, but done in metal. Ms Bon Forte offered a dozen, but I could afford only two at this time. This particular button, aptly named "Tit for Tat" by Marcia, seems not to be listed in BBB.
1880? One large FS button, 1 3/8" in diameter, brass repousse over a celluloid base with a circular metal loop shank.
Identical in motif with the other FS buttons I have. This is a dramatic button! Slightly larger than, but identical in motif to, BBB Plate 152, #5.
1880? Small FS button, 11/16" in diameter, pressed wood set in a brass rim. Perhaps meant to match the 1.5" button I have from Robin Larner?
This exquisite little match to the larger button is a three-piece button at least. It is hard to believe that wood could have been carved or molded so intricately for a button! As so often happens on Ebay, this button came with three others that do not fit into my collection.
1880? Large FS button, 1.5" in diameter, pressed wood set in a realistic twig-like brass rim.
A really striking button! As Robin noted, there is a small sliver missing at high noon. The motif is well known to The Big Book of Buttons (Elizabeth Hughes and Marion Lester, Second printing: 1991, Plate 152, #5) but not in this unusual material. A wonderful acquisition!
1962? The Fox and the Grapes/The City Mouse and the Country Mouse. 78 RPM record 6" in diameter. Narrated by June Winters and the Speartones. Lionel 49730-114, Fairy Tales 3. $4.99 from Anthony Testa, Le Roy, NY, through Ebay, Jan., '01.
Lionel made recordings for kids?! In fact they made at least fourteen of them for 45 RPM, one of which offered fables, and twenty-five in 78 RPM, two of which presented fables. Now to look for those other two!
1930? 7" white plate from Sarreguemines, France. Inside a 1.5" rim there is a representation of Grandville's FG. The front carries two inscriptions: "Fables de la Fontaine" and "6. Le Renard et les Raisins." The back has a "Digoin" stamp. Two extra exemplars, one of them for $19.95 from my-store-store through Ebay, March, '20.
This is a rather unusual presentation of FG, since the fox is put into the mdist of a crowd. His gestures show dismissiveness. He wears a vest and a cap. Are those dogs and chickens that move away from him, perhaps suspecting his dishonesty?
1980? "The Fox and the Grapes" Tile. 6" square. Mosaic. Made in the USA. Unknown source.
This fox sits back with his chin in his paw, contemplating grapes on a vine that looks curiously as though it spells out a word (Cuzes?). Lovely two-color work!
1990? The Fox and the Grapes: An Aesop Fable. A Scherenschnitte design cut from a single sheet of paper and painted in water colors by Claudia Hopf. Five cards boxed, with envelopes. Beverly, MA: American Folklore: Kristin Elliott Inc. Gift of Margaret Carlson Lytton, from the Amy Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum in Williamsburg, 1994.
1985? "The Fox and the Grapes." 5" x 7". Colorado Springs, Co. Gift, '85?.
An eager fox assumes a posture like that of a begging dog just before some grapes hanging very near, so its seems, his nose. There is no message inside the card.
2020 Gratitude greeting card. "The grateful heart will always find opportunities to show its gratitude. Aesop." Sketches from "The Fabled Life of Aesop" by Pamela Zagarenski. No. 538. Signed by the senders, Paul and Ianthe Swensen, Dec., '21.
The scenes on the front and back of the card connect. Did the woman get the grapes for the fox?