This antique Victorian pharmacy bottle stands like a quiet relic from a forgotten apothecary, its deep emerald glass catching the light with a muted, medicinal glow. The bottle’s vertically ribbed body gives it a sense of dignity and restraint, as though it was designed not for display, but for purpose—measured hands, whispered remedies, and careful rituals.

At its center, a hand-made label rests beneath glass, shield-shaped and framed in gilt gold. The red field has softened with age, its surface bearing the subtle scars of time, while the stark black lettering—DIGITALIS—remains solemn and authoritative. The label once served as both warning and promise of this heart curing medicine. Encased under glass, it becomes part of the vessel itself, inseparable from the history it carries.

The stopper crowns the bottle like a seal, thick and solid, suggesting the importance of what was once held inside—potent, controlled, and respected. This object was born in an era when medicine balanced delicately between science and alchemy.

Altogether, the bottle evokes candlelit shelves, wooden counters worn smooth by generations, and the hush of an old pharmacy where knowledge was guarded in green glass and remedies were as mysterious as they were powerful. Standing seven inches high.