Not much blurb, as the picture do speak for themselves and it's all someone else's efforts; as in previous years - Fleet Historical Society and their Christmas exhibition in the Public Library at the Hartington Centre. Upper-floor; and worth a visit if you're passing.
The first two shelves are showing the items
on the recent set of Classic Toy postage stamps, Fuzzy-Felt was fun, and Action
Man was boss, but I want a wind-up, clockwork, Spacehopper! That's too cool
for the school playground . . . although I suspect it's less contemporary, but
neither is the Action Man, that's a
modern re-boot one.
The rest of the sets are rather crammed onto one shelf with Spirograph, Cindy, teddy bears, Stickle Bricks (I don't remember stickle-brick horses . . . or people? Are these from another modern re-hash?), Britains (showing zoo not the Trojans on the stamp) and Hornby, although I think that's the Airfix kit of Stevenson's Rocket?
Meccano gets a corner of the third shelf
and then there is a farm feature with all sorts going-on, mostly Britains with
the separate play base, but there's Dinky and Corgi among others.
I know it's for kids but I spotted the two
'things' - it's Christmas, you have to enter into the spirit of this stuff!
The final shelf is a village scene with all
sorts of old favourites busily being busy! As well as the listed/numbered items
I can see Merit trees.
The table-cabinet this year has a
collection of craft kits and plans for making your own accessories for dolls
and soft toys - check out the Wonder Woman; front, far right.
Seeing the multi-coloured wool reminds me
of my favourite jumper when I was a kid (5 or 6), a friend of my mother's
offered to knit me a jumper (birthday?) and said I could choose the wool, so we
went down into Brecon, and there's all these colours, and I'm umming and erring
over the predictable dark reds and greens when I spot this multi-coloured wool,
it was very similar to the ball in the above shot, but the base colour was
black not red (so red was one of the rainbow-section colours) and I said "Can I have it made with that?" . .
. "Of-course you can" came
the reply, and sure enough a few days later I took delivery of a woolly -jumper
which looked like an explosion in a fireworks factory! Black as night but with
all these flashes of bright colour; I don't think I stopped wearing it until I
couldn't get it over my growing head (still growing huh . . . Vichy?), or it
fell apart, I can't remember which came first now!
A lovely collection of nostalgic bits and
bobs again this year and here's hoping they go at it again next year!
2 comments:
Actually, looking again, that building isn't modern Hornby after all, so 0 out of 10.
Oh, and they mis-spelled Bayko as Bayco elsewhere. And shouldn't they have used Betta Builder instead of Lego (or at least classic 1960s style Lego....)
Yes, yes and yes Bernard! They should ask me to help!
H
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