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Product Overview
The Piece
Mid-century ceramic novelty coin bank.
Figural elderly man seated in a high-back chair with pipe and dog.
Back of chair marked “RETIREMENT FUND” above the coin slot.
This vintage ceramic bank depicts an older gentleman seated in a brown chair, wearing a green robe or jacket, holding a pipe, and resting with a small dog on his lap. The reverse is molded as the back of the chair, with a horizontal coin slot and hand-lettered “RETIREMENT FUND” text above it.
The piece has the look of mid-century Japanese export novelty ceramics from the 1960s–1970s, made for gift shops, desk decor, retirement humor, and household coin saving. It is charming, worn, a little ridiculous, and honestly more emotionally honest about retirement than most financial planning brochures.
Condition + Updates
Well-worn vintage condition with visible age throughout. The ceramic shows heavy crazing, surface grime, scuffs, paint loss, and glaze wear across the figure, chair, dog, face, hands, robe, and raised edges. The reverse text remains readable, and the coin slot is present.
The underside is open and does not appear to retain its original stopper. The base shows staining, crazing, residue, and worn or illegible maker marks. No obvious major structural crack is visible in the provided photos, but the glaze crazing is extensive and should be considered part of the overall aged condition.
Historical Context
Novelty ceramic banks like this were common mid-century gift items, especially through the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s. Many were produced for the American market by Japanese export manufacturers, often featuring humorous domestic themes: retirement, rainy day funds, vacation money, drinking money, and other practical little human anxieties turned into ceramics. Commerce really looked at mortality and said, “Put a coin slot in it.”
This bank fits that tradition closely. The “Retirement Fund” text, seated grandpa figure, pipe, dog, and oversized chair all point to a humorous gift object meant for desks, shelves, offices, dens, or household coin saving.
Why This Belongs in Your Home
This piece works as a small vintage oddity, retirement gag gift, office shelf object, or characterful ceramic collectible. The worn glaze and paint loss give it a lived-in quality that makes it feel more like an estate-found object than a polished collectible.
It would sit well in a den, office, bookshelf, man cave, vintage ceramic collection, or as a tongue-in-cheek retirement gift. The dog detail adds warmth, while the heavy age wear keeps the piece from feeling overly precious. Grandpa has clearly seen things. Possibly compound interest.
Product Details
|
Detail |
Description |
|
Object Type |
Figural coin bank / novelty bank |
|
Era |
c. 1960s–1970s |
|
Style |
Mid-century novelty / Japanese export style |
|
Material |
Glazed ceramic |
|
Subject |
Elderly man seated in chair with pipe and dog |
|
Text |
“RETIREMENT FUND†on reverse |
|
Coin Slot |
Horizontal slot on back of chair |
|
Bottom |
Open bottom; stopper not present |
|
Colors |
Green, brown, cream, peach, black, white |
|
Finish |
Gloss glazed ceramic |
|
Maker |
Unconfirmed / unmarked or illegible |
|
Approx. Dimensions |
6–7.5 in. H x 4–5.5 in. W x 4–5 in. D |
|
Approx. Weight |
12–24 oz. |
|
Suggested Use |
Novelty bank, retirement gift, shelf decor, desk object, vintage oddity display |
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Product Overview