Yvette Dardenne, 83, has accumulated almost 60,000 vintage tin
boxes from all over the world since starting her collection some
30 years ago.
The collection, which now occupies four houses, all began with a
Cote d'Or chocolate box illustrated with a painting of a blonde
girl in a blue hat, Dardenne told Reuters, standing amid the
carefully arranged tin boxes in the medieval watermill she owns
next to her home.
Later, the tins just came to her, she said.
"I haven't been anywhere. I was not travelling. People still
think I have travelled a lot. It quickly became known (that I
collected boxes). Sometimes, right after my husband left for the
office, someone would show up to offer me something," said
Dardenne, who lives in Grand-Hallet in Belgium's Liege province.
One of Dardenne's greatest treasures is an intricately patterned
box from 1868 showing an emblem with two horses on top, built to
hold biscuits made by Huntley & Palmers of Reading, England.
It is considered to be the first box to have been lithographed,
according to Dardenne, whose collection can be visited by
appointment.
(Reporting by Clement Rossignol and Yves Herman; Writing by
Sabine Siebold; Editing by Frances Kerry)
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