Two keys, one will be a spare, but the fact
they've been kept together suggests the possibility of a bit of theatricality
on the part of the salesman, grandly opening both at once with all the flourish
of an early J. Bond about to put a secret sniper-rifle together!
Opened; it at first provides little in the
way of clues! Being covered with a sheet of stiff card with two pull-handles
from black ticking, I know it's called ticking because Richard Gere is told by the shop
assistant that that's what it's called in the Woman in Red, or was it Mickey Rourke in 9½ Weeks? One of them was buying a bed
with ticking!
Open with two keys (and a flourish!), disappoint with a plain
cover . . . then the reveal! It would be hard - in the austerity of post-war
Europe - to know where to look first as all this colour was revealed in its
plethora of little compartments.
We'll look at them all in separate posts,
but suffice to say the size of the sample [case], coupled with a small number
of aeroplanes and vessels (2 each) point to the whole being a salesman's sample-case,
rather than a set.
Under the smaller parts is a second, deeper
tray of buildings two of the larger being marked-up as a school and hospital,
a third - clearly - a hospital, larger scenics which includes two bridges and a
tunnel and some base-boards; meadow, pond and river/stream section.
Some of the larger pieces are marked with
an ink-stamp, which represents the interlocking building-blocks the company is
still making today.
The company still exists, and the logo is
basically the same, but, it seems; partly as a brand, owned by or licensed-to someone
in Dubai, where the English Language website is, and seemingly supplied or part-supplied by a
factory in Hong Kong.
The German company now being a major
wholesaler to the trade with a 1,400-page German-language catalogue of craft,
art and educational supplies, toys, game, puzzles and early-learning/teaching
aids along with library, classroom and gymnasium furniture, play equipment and
stationary, and covering 'rival' brands - Lego,
Brio and Schleich - among others.
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