
UNDER HEAVY CONSTRUCTION - FEB '06
An Australian magazine for bottle collectors has existed in some form or other for about 35 years. The original fifteen-page volume 1 number 1
was hand-made and issued in 1970 by Don & Melva Smart. It was called 'The Bottle Collector's Review' and contained information about clubs,
bottle age, tops and stoppers, avons, ginger beers and also some classifieds. This historical edition, which is very scarce and rarely seen
for sale, makes a fantastic read.

The elusive 1970 volume 1 number 1
The magazine format quickly evolved to B5 size with 2-colour covers and expanded to include roughly 30 pages each issue. Subscription costs were
$3.00 for 6 issues (bi-monthly) and this included postage!! The contents began following a certain format: an editorial section including letters;
information about newly released books on the subject; historical articles (often contributed by the well known Dennis O'Hoy, Karl Korju,
amongst many others); a section where people could write in and ask questions about their bottles; digging stories; simple price guides;
club news; show reports; and classifieds. Pictures were plentiful and it is amazing to think that all this was accomplished without the aid of
computers. In one edition, a price guide was included (as an accompaniment to a book written by Stephen Proh). Prices back in the early 1970s include $80
for a black horse ale, $45 for a Shamrock beer (for an extra $5, one could buy a Coghlan & Tulloch beer), $10 for a Hobbs Kyneton Codd (stretching
to a massive $20 for the amber-lip version), $8 for a Billson cordial (but $10 for an amber Pioneer), $15 for an Eckersleys Hot Punch, $48 for a
Philadelphia Hop Bitters (or $55 for the reverse version), $15 for the A. Palmer Ballarat pot lid, the list goes on. Imagine what you could buy
with a single paycheck these days with those prices.......... Anyway this magazine format continued until February 1974 when a new Volume 1 Number 1 began,
with a name change to 'The National Bottle Review', but the appearanace and content of the magazine stayed fairly consistent.

Example magazines from the early 1970s
In February 1975, David Westcott took over the magazine, and quite a few changes took place. Volume 1 Number 1 started again, and the quality of
the published magazine increased by at least 1 million percent. As David owned and operated a printing business, he was able to produce the magazine himself,
on far higher quality paper with equipment that could reproduce photographs exceptionally well. The magazine name was changed to the 'Australian Bottle Review'
and the format increased to almost A4 in early 1979. The excellent magazine quality was maintained and continually improved upon with each edition.

Example magazines from the mid 1970s

Example magazines from the late 1970s
From early 1982, full-colour front covers were introduced, the content increased to about 40 pages per edition, the name was changed again to the
'Australian Antique Bottle Collector', and a new Volume 1 Number 1 was issued. Subscriptions by this time were $16 for 6 issues. David Westcott was
the editor of the magazine for many years until handing over the reigns to Ken Arnold in 1986.

Early 1980s colour covers
TEXT UP TO HERE! STAY TUNED FOR MORE.

Mid-late 1980s

Early 1990s

Mid 1990s

1999 / 2000

2001 / 2002 / 2003

2003 / 2004 / 2005
By early 2006 there have been a total of about 240 editions released since 1970. Below is a link to a checklist for those very keen collectors who absolutely
must have every issue, as most will agree that the bottle magazine is the best reference out there!
Bottle magazine checklist
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