Vintage 1950’s Evans Concinnum Cigarette Rolling Machine – SOLD

$119.00

Vintage 1950’s Evans Concinnum Cigarette Rolling Machine

Out of stock

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Description

Vintage 1950’s Evans Concinnum Cigarette Rolling Machine

The Evans Patent Concinnum cigarette rolling machine is a hand-operated device made primarily in metal (often brass or nickel-plated) that was used to roll your own cigarettes. You’d place a sheet of rolling paper and a measured amount of tobacco into the machine, then turn the crank to roll the tobacco into a finished cigarette.


History & Age

  • Origin & Maker: Typically marked “Evans Patent Concinnum Machine” and made in London, England.

  • Era: Although you mentioned the 1950s, examples of these machines date from the early 1900s into mid-century. Many surviving pieces on collector markets are described as 1920s–1930s, and others could easily have been owned and used through the 1950s.

  • Use Period: These were popular through the first half of the 20th century when hand-rolling tobacco was common, including during both World Wars and into the 1950s.


How It Works

  • The machine is cylindrical with multiple grooved rollers inside.

  • You open the hinged cylinder, lay in abrasive tobacco and a rolling paper, then turn the knurled wheel at the end to compact and roll a cigarette.

  • Many collectors describe seeing lettering and arrows engraved on the surface to guide operation.


Construction & Markings

Typical physical features include:

  • Metal construction (brass, nickel-plated steel or similar).

  • Clear “Evans Patent Concinnum Machine” stamping or engraving.

  • Six serrated rollers inside a hinged cylinder to shape the tobacco.

Additional information

Weight 0.15 kg
Dimensions 7 × 2 × 3 cm

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