RARE Irish Language Dublin Guinness Pub Label c1960

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RARE Irish Language Dublin Guinness Pub Label c1960 Album EXTREMELY RARE Irish Language Guinness Pub Label c1960. Very unusual to have all the label in Irish and using old Gaelic script. Literally translates: Double Black Stout D.Ó'Sheehan, 68 Lower Dorset Street, Dublin. Genuine Bottle Label of this Period and From This Pub NOT a reproduction. Extremely fine paper was used on Guinness Labels. It is not possible nowadays to reproduce this very fine thin paper. Whenever required, a ream of labels was posted to the publican - each of these reams contained approximately 660 labels. Guinness labels were never pre-glued. The publicans prepared their own wall-paper paste. T was a knack in holding the label - butterfly fashion and dipping into the paste - and slapping it on to the bottle! Guinness labels (1880-1968) Guinness labels were first put on bottles in 1880s The first recorded pub to be issued official Guinness trade-mark labels (using the Brian Boru Harp symbol) was Clarkes public house, Capel Street, Dublin in 1897. The practice of putting the publicans name on Guinness labels officially stopped in 1968. This was mainly due to new Health and Safety rules that were introduced in 1968. These were strict rules compelling the publican to have a tiled room off the bottling area for labeling and other hygienic rules that read more