Cut Glass Sterling Humidor
Antique 19th Century Cigar Boxes and Humidors
Sterling Silver
Vintage 1970s Italian Art Deco Cigar Boxes and Humidors
Sterling Silver, Enamel
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Vintage 1930s American Art Deco Tobacco Accessories
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Antique Late 19th Century Art Nouveau Tobacco Accessories
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Antique Late 19th Century Swiss Decorative Boxes
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Antique 19th Century Russian Empire Boxes
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Antique 1880s English Victorian Decorative Boxes
Mother-of-Pearl, Birdseye Maple, Ebony
Late 20th Century Decorative Boxes
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Mid-20th Century Italian Art Deco Decorative Boxes
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Antique Early 19th Century English William IV Jewelry Boxes
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20th Century French Mid-Century Modern Jewelry Boxes
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Antique 17th Century Italian Baroque Bookcases
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Antique 19th Century Louis Philippe Glass
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Vintage 1930s English Art Deco Sterling Silver
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Vintage 1980s Italian Art Deco Cigar Boxes and Humidors
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Antique Late 19th Century English Late Victorian Decorative Boxes
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20th Century French Art Nouveau Jewelry Boxes
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20th Century American Cigar Boxes and Humidors
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Antique 19th Century English Victorian Cigar Boxes and Humidors
Sterling Silver
Vintage 1920s French Art Deco Trunks and Luggage
Leather, Canvas, Glass, Wood
1990s Italian Empire Cigar Boxes and Humidors
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Antique 19th Century English Victorian Barware
Crystal, Sterling Silver
Finding the Right cigar-boxes for You
Cigars were not always packaged in what we now know as the antique cigar boxes and humidors that have over time become eye-catching decorative objects as well as collector’s items.
Outside the United States, cigar boxes are said to have originated in the 1840s when a German businessman, Hermann Dietrich Upmann of H. Upmann Cigars, bought a cigar factory and opened a bank in Havana, Cuba. Upmann reportedly handed out cedar cigar boxes branded with advertising for the bank as gifts to his banking clients. In the early 1860s, after years of cigars being shipped in big crates or barrels, cigar boxes became a requirement when the United States passed a law that mandated the use of boxes for tobacco producers, which was part of a broader effort to regulate the tobacco industry and generate revenue for the war effort. Humidors, which are moisture-controlled storage boxes that allow a cigar enthusiast to store, organize and preserve a larger collection of cigars, were very popular accessories during the early 1900s onward.
As the use of cigar boxes and humidors became widespread, all kinds of options materialized over the years, with particularly vibrant editions of these decorative objects emerging during the Art Nouveau, mid-century modern and other eras. Visionary designers like Isamu Noguchi popularized the idea of tobacco accessories as art with projects such as his decorative ashtrays.
Today, not unlike antique and vintage ashtrays, cigar boxes are more than practical objects. In fact, there are many uses for an old cigar box even after the cigars are gone. They can be used as planters, tissue boxes or can support your long-delayed effort to organize your sewing and craft supplies. During the Great Depression, an emptied cigar box — perhaps a walnut Art Deco-style cigar box with inlays in bronze and hand-carved decorative geometric patterns adorning its exterior — was occasionally repurposed as a jewelry box.
Antique and vintage cigar boxes — made of wood, metal or other materials — are valuable treasures in some corners of the collecting world, and in your home, they’re exquisite desk ornaments and colorful flourishes to add to your bookcase or mantel. On 1stDibs, find a variety of antique and vintage cigar boxes and other decorative boxes today.
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