Friday 1 May 2020

SLIDE RULE

A slide rule
Before there were calculators, before there were PC's......there were slide rules!  Whilst I'm old enough to have had one at school, I never really did get my head around how to use one!!!!

Saturday 1 February 2020

TEA TOWEL COLLECTION

TEA TOWEL COLLECTION
This week I'm sharing my grandmother's tea towel collection.  Once just about everyone collected something, and I suspect most people, one way or another, still do with minimalism and "decluttering" being so much in vogue at the moment its almost something one needs to "confess" rather than delight in. Tea towels aren't really my thing but I'm enough of a collector to have some insight into how Nanna would probably have felt about them.

For her tea towels were an affordable way to remember places and occasions, or the people who had given them to her. The tpwe;s are colourful and each one is in its way unique.  As an added bonus, they are easy to pack and store.   None of them have been used, and all were carefully folded and stored in individual bags, so Nanna could get them out and look at them whenever she wanted.   I felt a degree of responsibility to find them a new home with someone who would appreciate them in the same way and am pleased to report that I did locate another tea towel fan was just as excited as I'd hoped to add to her collection.


Saturday 25 January 2020

Luggage

Before a large carry-on bag became the way to travel, suitcases were the go. 

Looking at this tan coloured 1970s suitcase, its hard to believe it survived the baggage handlers of the time but it did!  I even seem to recall sitting on suitcases on more than one occasion just to fit one more thing in.  (There wasn't nearly as much weighing of baggage thirty years ago).  They are surprisingly sturdy, although a luggage strap was usually added "just in case."

The much-older hat box is another story.  It probably dates to the 1940s, and era when hats were a necessary article of clothing, and were treated with suitable respect!

Saturday 18 January 2020

VINTAGE VINYL

ORGAN AND ACCORDIAN MUSIC
It was my intention to show off this little selection of vintage vinyl and make the comment that musical tastes have changed...

HOWEVER...when I did a little research I found that lovers of organ music can still access the magic of Barry Hall on a number of on-line streaming services.  (As a St Kilda fan I'm still struggling with the name). 
"Happy Organ" was released in 1974.

 Leon Berry's album featuring bells, chimes and glockenspiels (pay close attention to the intensity of his gaze).  He was evidently a renowned organist at skating rinks, who released several albums, this one dating back to 1961.

Last, but not least "Love is a Piano AccordiOn" by the AccordiOnettes was released in 1977.  I donated this one to folks who are sometimes involved in quiz nights thinking along the lines of  "Complete this question - Love is a............." (with the instrument and relevant words covered.  Have to say, "a piano accordian" wouldn't be the most obvious answer for me!)

Saturday 11 January 2020

TELEPHONE TABLE

TELEPHONE TABLE
Speaking of things we don't really use in the 21st century......

A phone table used to be an integral part of many homes - somewhere you could sit comfortably (this one usually had cushions) and chat for hours on the fixed line telephone to your friends and family.

Now, of course, even non-mobile phones tend to be cordless so its normal to be chatting whilst walking around the house, an unheard of luxury until relatively recently. ( I say luxury because E.g. often only one room was heated in winter and that room didn't always have the phone connection).  The change in the way we communicate has been even more profound than that and is continuing to develop quickly.  Many people today choose not to have landlines at all, and there are a number of online options that by-pass the telephone network altogether. 

Having said that, the push-button phone in the photo was still in use this year, and the owners can remember when the only way to make a call was via an operator on a party line (a limited number of lines shared by several callers), and when the phone was only ever used to make important calls.  Calling anyone outside of one's immediate area needed some thought as it was quite an expensive undertaking, and phoning overseas was almost unheard of!

Saturday 4 January 2020

ENCYCLOPAEDIAS

ENCYCLOPAEDIAS ON THE SHELF
Before the internet, we had to look things up in books, and if we were lucky we had access to encyclopaedias, an alphabetically organized treasure trove of information about....well..just about everything really.

In the 1950s and 60s most homes at least aspired to have a set, be it the Funk and Wagnells, purchased in weekly volumes from the local newsagency or the weighty Encyclopaedia Britannica.  There was a real pride in the ownership of such desirable things.

It is sad that in 2019, I literally couldn't give the volumes in the photograph away - even the charity I contacted said that they did not accept donations of encyclopaedias.  Despite the little voice in my head saying "you really don't have the room to take these home" I did just that - (well the Britannicas and the Popular Mechanics anyway - I thought the medical volumes might just lead to hypochondria).  Wikipedia is amazing, as are many other internet sources but books operate in a different way, and I know I'll end up finding out all sorts of things I didn't even know I didn't know by randomly dipping into the volumes.  Besides they are things of beauty with gorgeous maroon binding and gold foiled spines, and very tactile - far too fine for the skip1


Saturday 28 December 2019

AN EGG SLICER...PERHAPS

WHAT COULD THESE BE?
I'd love to tell you more about these but other than the fact that we found them in the kitchen, I have no idea what they are, although they function much as tongs, springing open from the pivot on the end.

The best suggestion I've had is that one grips an egg between the two spoon shapes and by cutting into the slots, slice it into even pieces.  I think that would work so maybe it is, in fact an egg slicer??

I love kitchen drawers - they are a treasure trove of UPUOs (unidentified potentially useful objects)

Saturday 21 December 2019

VINTAGE CHRISTMAS LIGHTS

VINTAGE CHRISTMAS LIGHTS
These vintage Christmas lights are so cute, albeit really weird.  They were made in Japan and date, I think to the early 1960s.


Saturday 14 December 2019

PRE-SCHOOL TRAY

Pre-school Artwork
I'm not sure whether its still a thing, but even when my own children were young, pre-school teachers were supposed to come up with gifts for mothers day, fathers day, Christmas, Easter and other sundry occasions, that cropped up during the year, that could be constructed by a large group of 4 and 5 year olds with minimal supervision.  As if the poor teachers weren't stressed enough!!

Anyway, my pre-school teacher rose to the challenge way back in 1966, and had us all paint a piece of hardboard, and then (under supervision) nail on pre-cut edges.  She took them all home and varnished the surface.  End result - an actually usable tray that had (until with a degree of sadness I consigned it to the skip) lasted for over 50 years!  The funny thing was that when I found this at my parents' house, I remembered being really upset because I'd almost finished when I accidentally dropped a big white blob of paint when I was trying to add another white flower.  I also remember that the teacher advised me to just turn it into something else - hence the creepy white figure lying under the apple tree!  (Just goes to show that psychologists should show caution when interpreting childrens' drawings).  It was good advice though.......disguising one's mistakes is an essential skill for any craftsperson.