Sunday, 28 April 2013

Pink-Gingham (English version)

Pour la version française, voir article suivant...





When you hear Pink-Gingham... what does it make you think of ? 

In France, it immediately evokes Brigitte Bardot and the little dresses that she contributed to make fashionable in the 1950s... (Hang-on, you are thinking right now, this is not a blog about celebrity, isn't it ? Or even about fashion ? And if you do, you would be right, just read on and you’ll see...)

Vichy-Rose (Version française)

For the English version, please see post above...






Que vous évoque le Vichy-Rose... ? 

Ce tissu évoque presqu'immédiatement, en France, Brigitte Bardot et les petites robes qu'elle a contribué à mettre en vogue dans les années 50 ("Non mais attends", vous vous dites, "je croyais que c'était un blog sur les jouets vintage pour filles ?!"... Mais si si, c'est bien ça, vous allez voir...)

Saturday, 27 April 2013

Mystery Miniature Milk Crates...


bank street.jpg
Horse cart with milk crates (and a milkwoman for a change !) -
Doris Hudson delivering milk for the Co-op Dairy in Disraeli Street, Middlesbrough(UK) in 1956


If you are a vintage toy car collector, 
you might know where these miniature milk crates belong...

Milk crates
Miniature lead milk crates (1.9 x 1.6 cm)

I got them in a lot of 1930s-1960s dollhouse items... They are very well made and pretty heavy (made of lead ?) and also tiny... The white paint has rubbed off in places... I would love to be able to remove and replace individually the little bottles of milk (Mind you, they could have gone missing)... Still they would look good as a prop in any scene of that scale and they have a real 50s feel to them...  


I am quite sure they were not originally meant for a dollhouse but rather, I imagine, belong to a vintage miniature milkman's van or float ? Could they originally be from a large 50s Lesney horse drawn milk cart (Made in England) ? Some of their small scale milk crates look like these...

© blue-gold-angel.de
http://www.dream-tintoys.de/index.php?page=lesney


Well certainly, you Reader and Mrs Peel are needed to help solve the milk crate riddle... 
Careful, coming off the milk float though...


The Avengers - The Hour that Never Was (Series 4 - 1965)



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An exclusivity Tilt-Top Magazine - © Peinture Fraîche

Sunday, 21 April 2013

How to Re-string a Miniature Doll...

If the limbs of one of your articulated miniature dolls have come off and you want to repair it yourself, here is an original Ysé's tutorial and a simple way to do it...


First of all you will need : 
2 tiny elastic bands per doll - the tiny ones on sale at the hair department in supermarkets and stores - and 2 knitting metal crochet hooks (French size 3 & 1.5 - or for the second crochet hook, in fact whichever size fits in the tiny holes of the limbs...)


8.5 cm dolls & mini elastic hairbands
It is quite easy to do for limbs with joint hooks (you'll need smaller elastic bands than the one shown on the above photo, though), but it is another story for limbs with joint holes... Here is how it can be done...



Example of limbs with holes

Wednesday, 17 April 2013

Let's shed some light on...

I got this little lamp in a box of random dollhouse miniatures mostly from the early 50s...

It measures 10 cm
It is marked Made in England inside the base and "Not for mains use" on the outside of the base (here is a toy manufacturer taking security very seriously for the time). I think it also dates from the early 50s...

A thin metal fabric covered wire...
The lampshade and the base are both hard plastic, the bulb is screwed inside the top of the base and the lampshade is secured in place by two metal rings clipped around the bulb itself...

Later I saw the same lamp in a boxed set :

Multum Registered (Made in England)

As I wondered if Multum was a brand, I did a little research and I found that it is a line of miniature toys made by Ward & Goldstone, a big Lancashire electrical equipment company founded in 1892 which manufactured electrical accessories, cables and vehicle wiring looms and later plastics well into the 1970s ... This is the only example of a set for dollhouses I have found so far - their short lived 50s toy production seems to have been mainly aimed at boys (principally workshop models). 

On the box lid the illustration shows the family's father and brother grappling with the assembly, while the dollhouse owner is just watching... I bet that given the chance she could have set it up all by herself...

One of the many W&G Ltd factories (Frederick Rd, Salford, Manchester - Lancashire)

Another dollhouse lamp by the same company...



You have just read an article written by Ysé
An exclusivity Tilt-Top Magazine - © Peinture Fraîche

Tuesday, 16 April 2013

New Blog on the Block...


I have been building behind the scenes a whole website for the past two years now with all that it implies and I have finally decided that it should be just fine to carry on (or re-start and write new material) here on Blogger, so bear with me until I learn the ropes of this new tool... First of all transferring some of our website's original design features... And then writing my first post...



© Ysé & Stylb - Miss Twist (1963) and Miss Bonne Nuit (1957) by Peynet/Technigom



I don't know exactly where I am going with this blog yet... 
It should be all about vintage girl's toys with a twist but not only... Let us see...



Si vous aimeriez avoir la possibilité de lire ce blog en Français, 
n'hésitez pas à me le faire savoir en commentant ci-dessous... 
Si la demande est suffisante, je me ferai bien sûr un plaisir de publier
tous mes textes en bilingue...