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TOTAL IMAGE SOLUTION

Display – Printing – Promotional Products
abc2000 logo

TOTAL IMAGE SOLUTION

Display – Printing – Promotional Products
abc2000 logo

TOTAL IMAGE SOLUTION

Display – Printing – Promotional Products

The Timeless Appeal of Personalised Hip Flasks: History, Use & Design

Personalised hip flask or some variation of hip flasks, have endured the test of time as both a functional and fashionable item to possess or present someone. Although the basic purpose of a Abc2000 Hip Flask is evident, it is noteworthy to note not just how features of its use and role in society have evolved throughout time, but also the visual changes that have occurred in its size and shape, as well as why.

Why is it called a hip flask?

The hip flask was also known as a ‘coat flask’, which may help explain why the vessel is called a ‘hip flask’. As previously mentioned in the history of the hip flask, its name arose when it evolved into a shape and use more akin to what we know today.

When our engraved hip flask Australia became popular during prohibition, its use as a concealed vessel for your alcohol impacted its curved design, allowing it to blend in with the curves of the body and be less noticeable.

The aforementioned designations reflect where the flasks were and continue to be stored: in a gentleman’s coat pocket or tucked into a hip pocket. This is also said to be the origin of the term ‘hipster’, since persons who wore a hipflask were referred to as ‘hipsters’. 

Hip flasks are used for what?

Abc2000’s Personalised hip flask is nearly typically used to carry hard alcohol, often known as spirits. Although this is normally what a hip flask is used for, many people still wonder if you can put wine in a hip flask. Can you put port into a hip flask? Can you put Baileys in a hip flask? Technically, you can.

This is because low-alcohol beverages do not keep as well. Cocktails, liqueurs, and wines degrade faster than higher-alcohol beverages and are more prone to combine with the lining/flask material. This not only ruins the flavour of your drink, but it also degrades the flask’s lining for future usage. As a result, the most common beverages stored in these flasks are whisky, bourbon, rum, gin, brandy and vodka.