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Vintage and Antique Gifts

Antique Big Five Cigar Label Embossed Collectible

Regular price 8.00 USD
Regular price Sale price 8.00 USD
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Description

Could a Cigar Label Really Be Worth Gold? ๐Ÿ…

Sometimes the answer is literal. This label carries genuine gold embossing, applied by hand-fed press over a century ago, to sell a five-cent cigar with the confidence of a much grander product. That gap โ€” between the humble nickel price and the lavish gold finish โ€” tells you everything about how seriously the American cigar trade took its packaging.


๐Ÿ… What It Is

This is an original New Old Stock (NOS) inner cigar box label for the Big Five brand, dating to approximately 1900โ€“1920, the golden era of American chromolithography. It measures a substantial 8ยฝ x 7 inches and was produced with genuine gold embossing โ€” raised, dimensional metallic detail pressed into the paper under real heat and pressure, not printed gold ink. The label reads plainly and proudly: "Big Five, 5 Cents."

This label never lined a cigar box. It survived instead as printer's stock, and it comes to you exactly as it left the press โ€” vivid, uncreased, with the embossed gold still catching the light the way it did the day it was made.


๐Ÿšฌ The Golden Age of the Nickel Cigar

The turn-of-the-century American cigar market was dense with competition, and the humble five-cent cigar was its most crowded battlefield. With tens of thousands of brands fighting for shelf space, the inner box label โ€” the image a customer saw the instant he lifted the lid โ€” was the brand's single best chance to signal quality before the cigar was ever lit. A gold-embossed label on a nickel cigar was a deliberate strategy: convince the buyer, through sheer visual weight and craft, that this five-cent product deserved to sit alongside cigars costing far more.

The embossing process itself required real skill and real expense: a heated die pressed the still-workable printed sheet into relief, with genuine gold flake dusted into the raised areas to produce the dimensional shine you can still feel today. Multiple color passes through the press โ€” each requiring its own stone or plate and careful registration โ€” built up the label's full palette before the gold pass finished the job. This was not an incidental flourish. It was a calculated investment in a nickel product, and it worked precisely because it looked like it belonged on something far more expensive.


๐ŸŽจ The Anonymous Artists

As with the great majority of cigar label art from this era, the specific lithography house and the individual artist behind the Big Five design were not credited on the finished piece โ€” a common and, frankly, unjust practice of the period. Skilled commercial artists, many trained in formal lithographic and illustrative traditions, produced label after label for firms across the country, and their names simply were not printed alongside their work. Displaying and preserving a label like this keeps a small piece of that anonymous craft tradition visible and appreciated, even without a name attached to it.


๐Ÿ–ผ๏ธ Display Ideas

  • ๐Ÿฅƒ Group it with other gold-embossed cigar labels for a gentlemen's den or home bar gallery wall.
  • ๐Ÿ–ผ๏ธ Frame it in a deep shadow box so the embossed relief catches light from an angle.
  • ๐Ÿ“š Pair it with a vintage cigar box for a layered display that gives both pieces context.

๐ŸŽ Who Collects These

Tobacco and cigar historians, advertising and ephemera collectors, and lithography enthusiasts all seek out gold-embossed labels like this one โ€” the combination of large format, genuine metallic embossing, and early-1900s printing craft makes it a standout in any collection of American commercial art.


โ“ Frequently Asked Questions

Is the gold real?

The embossing was produced using genuine gold flake applied under heat and pressure โ€” a standard premium technique of the era, distinct from flat gold-colored ink.

Was this label ever used?

No โ€” it is New Old Stock, meaning it was printed but never applied to a cigar box, which is why the color and embossing remain so vivid.

How old is this label?

It dates to approximately 1900โ€“1920, the peak era of chromolithographed, gold-embossed American cigar box labels.

Shipping

๐Ÿšš Shipping & Handling

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Returns & Exchange

Product Page Return Policy

  • 60-Day Returns โ€“ Items must be in original condition.
  • Refunds โ€“ Issued after inspection (excluding shipping costs).
  • Return Shipping โ€“ Customer is responsible unless item is damaged or incorrect.
  • Damaged/Incorrect Items โ€“ Contact us within 48 hours for a replacement or refund.
  • Easy Returns โ€“ Email [email protected] or call 802-356-9872 to initiate a return.

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