This masquerading miss is a little late for Halloween, but she has a trick that is a treat. The German caption below the masked mädchen looking flirtatiously over a bare shoulder reads "Promenaden scherz" (promenade joke).
Turn the dish upside down and you see it is not just her shoulder that is bare! The fan-shaped pin dish is of good china and is 4.5 inches wide. Although unmarked, it is certainly of German origin.
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As the Victorian era passed into the Edwardian and Roaring Twenties, a market developed for bisque and china bawdy novelties and figurines of women in revealing outfits. Although now most of these figurines seem more coy and cute than ribald and risque, in their time they symbolized the casting off of the perceived restraints of the Victorian era.
These little lovelies included bathing beauties, who came clad in swimsuits of real lace or in stylish painted beach wear, as well as mermaids, harem ladies, and nudies, who were meant to wear nothing more than an engaging smile. Also produced were flippers, innocent appearing figurines who reveal a bawdy secret when flipped over, and squirters, figurines that were meant to squirt water out of an appropriate orifice.
Most were manufactured in Germany from the late 1800s through the 1930s, often showing remarkable artistry and imagination, with Japan entering the market during World War I.