I think we should look at the video first,
although I'm afraid it's gone a bit jerky, and I don't know why; other video's
have worked perfectly, but I suspect it's down to the lighting on the day,
crating large- image size or something (this is the third save and it's still
25MB?), I like to think I know what I'm doing with all this digital malarkey,
but I suspect a closer truth is that I know what I'm trying to be doing!
There are many monikers for little-folk; Elves,
Gnomes, Dwarves, Fairies, Pixies and Trolls (of the Russ Berry verity, not the warty, live-goat eating, bridge-sitters
of European folk-fable!) and fail-not - for fear of something untoward
happening - to mention Leprechauns!
Peter has all of them in his little hamlet,
although there's not much to differentiate between Gnomes and Dwarves as
represented in popular culture (prior to Mr. Tolkien's intervention that is),
think Snow White . . . miners, bobble-hats, mushrooms, big boots, small
cottages . . . now Mordor's shenanigans and the Nottingham Mafia have rendered
dwarves as fierce armoured warriors in the popular imagination, I think we will
stick with 'Gnome' here!
They (the Ger'nomes) are living in an
eclectic mix of plastic infant toys, resin garden ornaments and novelty
bird-table/nesting-box type things in various materials, including wood, but
all to a pretty constant scale range between maybe 50-70mm? The overall-look is
stunning, and sympathetic planting has left them all in a delightfully [in-scale]
wooded setting.
Cake decoration taking to Tobar's chap.
Peter puts them out in the spring and takes
them in at the end of the summer, sometimes heralded on Faceplant, so their
fame is growing and the community can look quite different from year to year,
although I think they get added to constantly and might need to invade expand
next-door one day!
The other main point to make is the effort
which goes not just into setting the hamlet up each year, but the daily work
necessitated by such fiendish foes as urban foxes, cats, squirrels, falling
twigs, probably even large lorries catching the odd manhole-cover over the
fence on the way past!
There's a wooing going on!
While I was there, Peter had to errr . . .
'first respond' to a minor earthquake which had occurred at the East end of the
village; a sandy-whiskered assassin was the main suspect, fortunately all was
restored with a practiced hand . . . and an over-practiced mutter about foxes!
I rather liked this chap; at first glance
while doing the video I thought he was a Tellytubby,
but he's just had a very long hat knitted for him by his Nan' and rolls it up
to keep it out of his eyes!
A couple of more fairy-like or pixy-folk,
they looked like they were old ceramic or bisque figurines, but true to the
cause of the hobby (certainly truer than me, I collect any old material!), they
are plastic. I think it was a styrene, but as you can see they are very finely
done with a glaze-wash and still look ceramic.
I also loved this chap (seated) as he can
only be used on a surface which will allow his right leg to hang over the edge,
a clever pose really? I seem to have cropped-off the target of more wooing . .
. it's quite a fertile village - obviously!
My favourite - "Wake me when the evening's start to draw in . . . or if somebody
fills me'bottle"
Many-many thanks to Mr. Evans, a real treat
and a joy to behold . . . and not a soldier in sight!
3 comments:
A delightful treat, gnomes in their natural environment.
Thank you Peter for letting Hugh share this with the wider world.
I see they are at it again.
Indeed Terra' and the shots here don't really do it justice. Jan - make hay while the sun shines!
H
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