
Vintage paper record bags turn up so rarely that even though this find was covered with a stuck-on sheet of lined school paper I still took a risk. The sheet looked to be quite old itself, and I had no way of knowing what glue was used, so the plan was to try and soak it off. This is not very scientific but just involved me dowsing the sheet in water, so that it soaked through the paper and the glue. Once wet enough, it was a case of slowly peeling the sheet off by hand, continuing to apply water to the new edge as I did so.

Happily the sheet eventually came away, and it was then a case of gently teasing any remaining glue off using wet tissue, before putting the bag on a tea towel with kitchen roll on top to help dry it all out over night. Once it had dried it really looks like new and now hangs in the office. I do have a Scotchers 78 rpm record sleeve as well so they will look great together. Date wise I would think late twenties for the bag although the shop itself was established in 1795 according to the text on the front …

Ta-da! The same design also appeared on a 78 record sleeve from the shop, so if I can find one with the record still inside that would help pin the date down better. I don’t know when the shop actually closed. The site was replaced with a (fabulous) large department store in the late 1950s, maybe Scotchers had a branch inside for a time? Doubtless Birmingham will put a bulldozer through even this, they are utter cretins when it comes to post-war architecture.

















