Description
A circular enamel badge advertising Weatheroak Brewery and its Weatheroak Ale, featuring a distinctive tree motif with layered green and yellow foliage. The warm colour palette and countryside imagery reflect the brewery’s rural Midlands identity and the traditional ale culture it championed. The lettering is clear, the enamel retains strong colour, and the overall design has that classic independent‑brewery charm collectors look for.
Condition is very good: no chips, no cracks, and only light surface handling marks. A clean, display‑ready example of small‑brewery promotional work.
Weatheroak Brewery – Independent Midlands Ale with a Local Heritage Focus
Weatheroak Brewery operated as a small Midlands microbrewery producing traditional English ales during the rise of Britain’s independent brewing revival. Their branding often leaned into natural imagery — trees, fields, and seasonal colours — to emphasise locality and craftsmanship. In the 1980s–1990s, breweries of this scale frequently issued enamel badges, pump clips, and bar‑top advertising to build recognition in free houses and regional pubs. Surviving pieces like this badge offer a snapshot of the era’s grassroots brewing culture and the early microbrewery movement.
Weatheroak Brewery – Independent Midlands Ale with a Local Heritage Focus
£10.00
Description
A circular enamel badge advertising Weatheroak Brewery and its Weatheroak Ale, featuring a distinctive tree motif with layered green and yellow foliage. The warm colour palette and countryside imagery reflect the brewery’s rural Midlands identity and the traditional ale culture it championed. The lettering is clear, the enamel retains strong colour, and the overall design has that classic independent‑brewery charm collectors look for.
Condition is very good: no chips, no cracks, and only light surface handling marks. A clean, display‑ready example of small‑brewery promotional work.
Weatheroak Brewery – Independent Midlands Ale with a Local Heritage Focus
Weatheroak Brewery operated as a small Midlands microbrewery producing traditional English ales during the rise of Britain’s independent brewing revival. Their branding often leaned into natural imagery — trees, fields, and seasonal colours — to emphasise locality and craftsmanship. In the 1980s–1990s, breweries of this scale frequently issued enamel badges, pump clips, and bar‑top advertising to build recognition in free houses and regional pubs. Surviving pieces like this badge offer a snapshot of the era’s grassroots brewing culture and the early microbrewery movement.