Sometimes an old box works better or is just plain cool to look at! The containers we offer are painstakingly cleaned and reconditioned to the best of our abilities, with the exception of items that we feel are xtra cool looking in their aged state and then they are only lightly cleaned for sanitary/disinfecting.

Vintage brown enameled cigarette box/tin. This is a never used(still in its original gold cardboard gift box) curved metal box that upcycles as a great wallet/card & money holder. It's 3" x 3.5" x .5 of an inch thick and has the spring-loaded bar holder on both sides.

Perfect as a gift or for any collector.

Shipping: Item will ship upon receipt of payment 

We no longer have free shipping on our items so that our prices reflect only the ITEM not hidden fees

All sales final (Please remember that this item is VINTAGE not "new repro" when reviewing the description. NOTHING we sell is in perfect condition, we believe in the bumbled, the botched and the bruised are cool and deserve to continue to be enjoyed. (Also when using or caring for the item!)

Please feel free to ask any questions regarding this item!


Please note that although all sales are final, we will always work with you in a professional manner to ensure that you are satisfied with your item. We only want great new homes for our items.

And now for a bit of knowledge: Introduced in 1934, Bunnykins tableware depicted Mr. and Mrs. Bunnykins and other rabbits dressed in human clothing, in colorful rural and small-town English scenes, transfer-printed on white china. The earliest pieces, signed "Barbara Vernon" (Sister Mary Barbara Bailey), are quite rare and highly prized. Bunnykins china was used by Princess Elizabeth and Princess Margaret and thus became a popular present given as christening and birthday gifts in middle-class English homes. In 1950 Sister Mary Barbara Bailey quit producing drawings for Doulton & Co. A succession of artists took her place providing designs for tableware and figures.

In the early 1950s designs by Sister Mary Barbara were discontinued. Royal Doulton art director Walter Hayward then began designing Bunnykins for production. Bunnykins drawings by Walter were published in the story book Picnic for Bunnykins published by Kestrel Books in 1984.