Antique GUY’S Tonic Bottle – Early 20th Century Barber / Chemist Bottle
Lovely piece – these GUY’S bottles are such understated survivors of the barbershop era.
Possibly with original and rare glass stopper!!!
Antique GUY’S Tonic Bottle – Early 20th Century Barber / Chemist Bottle displayed with other bottles for sale separately not included
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16 cm tall
4 cm square
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A handsome and increasingly hard-to-find vintage GUY’S Tonic bottle, dating to the early 20th century, with its original embossed lettering clearly visible on the glass.
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The bottle is made from thick, aqua-tinted glass with a gently tapering rectangular form and a threaded neck, originally designed to take a screw or cork stopper. Its pleasing proportions and subtle colour make it ideal today as a decorative object, small vase, or styling prop – particularly appealing to lovers of vintage grooming, barbershop history, or industrial interiors.
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The glass shows gentle age-related wear consistent with its working life, including light surface marks and small imperfections typical of early machine-made bottles. No cracks or structural damage observed. The remaining paper label fragment adds to its authenticity and charm.
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History – GUY’S Tonic
GUY’S Tonic was a popular British hair and scalp preparation sold in the late Victorian and Edwardian periods, marketed towards gentlemen for hair grooming, scalp health, and general smart appearance. Tonics like this were commonly found in barbershops, chemists, and gentlemen’s dressing rooms, at a time when personal grooming products were becoming more widely commercialised.
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Such tonics often contained fragrant alcohol bases with herbal or botanical additives and were part of the daily ritual of shaving and hair care long before modern branding took over. Original bottles survive far more often than labels, making embossed examples like this especially collectible.
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Key Details
Origin: United Kingdom
Date: Circa 1900–1920
Material: Aqua glass
Markings: Embossed GUY’S
Condition: Vintage condition with age-related wear; label remnant present
Use today: Decorative display, prop styling, small vase, barberiana collection





















































