About Me

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No Fixed Abode, Home Counties, United Kingdom
I’m a 60-year-old Aspergic gardening CAD-Monkey. Sardonic, cynical and with the political leanings of a social reformer, I’m also a toy and model figure collector, particularly interested in the history of plastics and plastic toys. Other interests are history, current affairs, modern art, and architecture, gardening and natural history. I love plain chocolate, fireworks and trees, but I don’t hug them, I do hug kittens. I hate ignorance, when it can be avoided, so I hate the 'educational' establishment and pity the millions they’ve failed with teaching-to-test and rote 'learning' and I hate the short-sighted stupidity of the entire ruling/industrial elite, with their planet destroying fascism and added “buy-one-get-one-free”. Likewise, I also have no time for fools and little time for the false crap we're all supposed to pretend we haven't noticed, or the games we're supposed to play. I will 'bite the hand that feeds', to remind it why it feeds.
Showing posts with label Objets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Objets. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 18, 2017

C is for Cloisonné



Not quite up to Peter Carl's famous jewelled 'Faberge' eggs of Imperial Russia's Czars, but pretty nevertheless. My favorite type of decorative object - if I have just one! - as cloisonné tends to very rich colours due to the depth of the enamel - powdered glass - while the little trails of metal always give it an outlined, cartoon-like, quality.

Cloisonné is a method of enameling, especially curved objects, by reducing the area to be covered by breaking it into lots of little areas or chambers, using thin metal wire or ribbon which is then soldered into place.

The chambers are then filled with enamel powder (or on something as curved as this; a paste) and when fired it won't flow beyond the 'walls' of the chamber (which on these eggs; is formed of fine brass ribbon) due to a type of 'water tention' keeping them within their bounds.

From a distance we can see it's a mass of blue chrysanthemums (a typical oriental or 'chinoiserie' motif) with the odd green leaf sprinkled among the blue.

This one is a mass of butterflies or moths flying hither and thither! I don't know the significance of the holes both these eggs have, but suspect it's related to the firing; as in somewhere to hang the egg in the oven without leaving a mark in the enamel? It may be for more straightforward, decorative 'hanging' purposes?

And . . . is that the Cherilea hen we looked at the other day? It makes a good painting guide!

Monday, April 17, 2017

E is for Eggtastic Eggstravaganda of Erzatz Easter Eggs



After the conservative nature of stone eggs, we're looking at all sorts in this post, as faux eggs or decorative eggs like other collectable miniature 'favourites'; frogs, bears, rabbits, owls, cats & dogs, barrels, pigs, elephants, turtles & tortoises, hedgehogs, gnomes, and - these days - bloody meerkats (seemples!), they come in all sorts of materials and sizes, and various things can be disguised as 'them'.

So we'll start with the oddest, an egg timer, perhaps not so odd but rather obvious! I bought this in Lidl years ago as a present for my mother (who's just celebrated her 80th!), while I bough myself a cow (to match my - free from Argos with my works van petrol points card - mookie sandwich-maker!), but they had several other designs, once you have a standard mechanism for a decorative but practical item, it's a matter of imagination and its limits as to how many versions you chuck-out . . . note to self; must look out for soldier (probably guardsman) egg-timer! Or robot?

Shot with it is the original 'Faux Egg'; a basic ceramic (in this case bisque) egg, used on the farm to keep a broody-hen sitting until you can get some fertilised eggs under her. This one is hollow, but I've seen solid clay or earthenware ones, and even glazed ceramics.

These wooden ones ('Treen') probably served the same purpose as the ceramic one in the previous shot, but could just as easily be 'apprentice pieces', showing skill with the turning or carving and sanding of wood. I feel that an apprentice piece would probably have a better grain with contrasting colours or some interesting feature or something and these are just for hen's nests?

As they are painted it's hard to tell if these are wood or papier mâché underneath? What is clear however is that three of them follow a trope, in that while they came from different places at different times, and are painted by different artists on slightly different-shaped eggs; they all have a song-bird on one side and a crested hoopoe (or something!!) on the other.

I think they are oriental, and there will be more to them; culturally speaking, some tradition with an attached story or something? The floral/geometric, salmon-pink one is about half the size (bantam egg) in real life, but was cropped to fit!

Equally colourful, but a cheaper technology (who says progress has to mean better? 'Progress' is only inevitable, directional but not necessarily an improvement!), these litho-printed tin ones would have had a small toy or confectionary in them in the same vein as Christmas crackers, and pre-date Kinder by decades!

By my childhood they were being replaced by decorative paper-veneered, 'stock-card' eggs (there's a larger one which would have held a full-size chocolate egg - as a card 'box' - in storage so we will return to these again one day) and now - as we know - have been replaced completely by plastic gift eggs, available all year round.

I think the cat's probably slightly earlier (overall quality) and I like that the rabbit is painting a giant egg, on a tin egg that might have contained mini chocolate or sugar-candy eggs!

These might actually be trying to be acorns, but they were with the other eggs, so I shot them all together! The larger one is for a pot, the smaller one for a single-cup serving and they are charged with tea-leaves and used to infuse the hot water to make tea! Both are plated brass.

Coming back to ceramic for a full circle on this post, we have a stenciled 'Blue & White' pattern china egg sitting in a 'Red & White' pattern china egg-cup which is transfer-printed - the reason model kits have transfers not 'decals' (whatever they are - some Franco-American, Cajun-Quebecois, I wouldn't be surprised to learn!), the water-slide transfer being historically much older than the model-kit!

The china egg may even be from China, but it's a modern one (you can tell by the less defined or fuzzy edges of the colour) and there is an attempt at a crackle glaze - created by flicking damp sawdust at the items while they are in the oven.

Sunday, April 16, 2017

P is for Part Two - More Marble Sample Eggs



As well as the tourist 'standard' size eggs, you also find smaller ones (definitely knocked-up from off-cuts or chips off larger projects), which tend to be 'any old size', so long as they can be finnished in an egg shape, and here's a few with a couple of glass eggs!

Three medium sized eggs, I love the green and white one, it really does look like a slightly squashed planet, while the white one is - presumably - a piece of top-notch alabaster marble? I don't know; just guessing again!

These are real tiny ones; the biggest may be 'blood agate'? The middle one looks like a real egg! The smallest is so small I don't know why anyone bothered with the effort of making it . . . apprentice piece maybe? Hosepipe O-rings make great display stands for these little'uns.

Four of the above in their section of the display cabinet, along with three actual marble marbles, originally known as 'Taws' they are much prized in the world of marble playing for use as a 'shooter' or shooting-marble, some being made of semi-precious stone.

The reason I had hoped to start these posts on Friday is because Good Friday is an important day in the marble player's calendar, but most of the significance is not good - various clubs allow for the confiscation of any marbles played after certain times on Good Friday, usually 12-noon.

Also a small, clear, glass-egg paperweight is to be seen (bottom left), the plinth is also glass, but as black as the devils cloak!

This is also glass, I can't remember the name of it and Google won't help while I'm writing this away from the Internet, but it's a special type of Victorian glass made with arsenic (probably pretty dangerous - or even deadly - for the makers), which produces this smoked, faux opal effect. It is also a paperweight with a flat portion to sit on.

What passes for a pontil-mark hints darkly at the lethality of the material used. The little blackened 'V' looking like something you might find on a wizard's forehead!

Another perfect sphere, this one is too big for a playable marble; I suspect, so more of a decorative item, and also looking very planet-like.

Saturday, April 15, 2017

T is for "They're Eggs Jim; But Not as we Know Them!"


Time for some seasonal 'other collectables' and I've been meaning to post these every year for the last 9 years and just never got roung to it, I see them in January/February time and think 'Must do the eggs this year at Easter', then suddenly Easter's gone and I haven't even photographed them!

Nice powder-coated cast-iron egg rack (trivet?), probably French and cleverly made to take a dozen eggs. Only in this case - loaded with stone eggs! I'm sure you've all seen these about the place a great favourite of antique shops, touristy 'emporiums' and the like, a basket or bowl of marble or other polished stones.

They look like misshapen planets!

The black one is - I think - proper basalt, but I don't know, this is all guesswork and I'd hate for someone to think I was making it up as I went along! I know next to nothing about rock types!

Is the one on the left an igneous, volcanic rock of some type? It looks to have different elements which might have been 'cooked' together, while the one on the right might be the only falsely-coloured one here? The bulk of these are marble (or other stone) 'samples', using off-cuts of other jobs or smaller fragments to produce a collectable.

I know the one on the left is of sedimentary rock, disruption has lead some of the layers (particularly the thick 'ginger' layer) to bleed down cracks or faults toward or through lower layers, the older layers being the green to the left.

The one on the right is a mass of fossils, I don't know what any of them are, but I'm guessing it's from sea-shallows from all the leech-like blobs. It almost looks like a shot through a microscope at bacteria!

More fossils in this centre example which may be a nice piece of Portland sandstone. A lot of the bridges and other major structures of 'Wren's London' are Portland sandstone and it's always fun to find the fossils in the stonework. The floors of Basingrad's shopping centre are tiled with the same material and there are several places where you can see trilobite halves!

To the right is a red marble which I think is what they call 'striated' with white? This is another igneous rock, but one which has crystallised into sharper, geometric shapes than the types which cool; leaving the fluid shapes of the brown one, above.

The basalt one again contrasting with what I think is obsidian (?) carved into an egg-cup. I could Google all this and appear cleverer, but times not caught-up with the last fortnight's doing real-life stuff, and indeed it'll be close to get these posted for the holiday, I've already had to throw something into Friday's slot (where this post was supposed to go!), and it's just for fun, this is supposed to be a toy blog!

More of the believed 'obsidian' marble, here cleverly carved to fit itself, if you see what I mean? People do the same with nicely grained wooden ones. Purely decorative, but - of course - you can use the egg-cup for a real egg!