Showing posts with label Dol-toi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dol-toi. Show all posts

Monday, June 4, 2012

Make your own 1970s chairs

I did buy a few other things at the fair - a book and a couple of magazines. The book was from the stand next to Anna-Maria's, and when I showed Anna-Maria the pictures, she said, "Why didn't I think of that!? Will you scan the pages?"
So here they are - with all the colour illustrations, because I love seeing how 70s style was represented here!



The book is called How to Decorate a doll's house, by Eve Barwell, published by Studio Vista in 1975 (ISBN 0289 70509 6). The 70s was when dolls houses and miniatures really took off as an adult hobby, but this book was written for children (as was the rest of the Studio Vista How To series - How to Amuse yourself on a journey, How to Disguise yourself, How to Mend your bike, How to Start using tools, etc ).

The introduction does explain about scales, particularly 1 inch to one foot and 3/4 inch to one foot, and recommends sticking to whichever scale you choose. It doesn't give measurements in the directions for making furniture, but suggests using the furniture in your own home to check the right size for your doll's house.

A lot of tips are given about how to decorate the house, based on who will be using the room, when and how often ...

The first room that visitors see is the hall, so it must be welcoming. However, it's a room where no-one spends much time, so the colours can be strong and dramatic:


An elegant, clean and bright hall, with its purple carpet and vase of red flowers giving a splash of colour ... (I have mentioned before the house which we rented in 1978, which had purple carpets and red curtains - or was it the other way around? - in rooms in which we spent a great deal of time. Clearly the decorators had not read this book.)

Postage stamps are one suggestion for pictures - an idea I have used myself (for example, here and here, although they would look better hung!!) - but personally, I prefer pictorial subjects to Willy Brandt and the Queen ...

The living room, of course, is where people spend a lot of time, and because of this it needs restful colours such as blue, brown or beige ...


Hello, Mr and Mrs Dol-toi!

This living room is decorated in beige and brown with splashes of contrasting green; orange or yellow would also have contrasted well ... A brown carpet and beige curtains would have worked just as well as a beige carpet and brown curtains, but not brown carpet and brown curtains - that would make the room seem dark and small (!).

Here are the instructions for making the living room chairs - of cardboard covered with fabric on both sides, with either pipecleaners or cardboard cut-out rectangles for the arms and legs:



For extra chairs in the living room, take some cardboard packaging (the kind which used to be used round fruit; is it still??) and make bucket chairs:


The colour scheme for the kitchen is yellow and orange, with a red Venetian blind - bright, warm colours making the room seem sunny and gay:


The cupboards and fitments are white, to make them look extra clean and bright - but the floor is patterned, as a plain colour would soon look dirty.

Here are the instructions for making this bright, white kitchen table and chairs - from polystyrene trays and cocktail sticks:



A pretty and restful colour scheme for the parents' bedroom:


and bright, primary colours for the children's bedroom / playroom:


Master and Miss Dol-toi happily playing in their bedroom

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Growing up with Galt


I recently bought a catalogue of Galt toys, and was delighted to find most of the Galt things I remembered from my childhood - and to identify some which I hadn't realised were from Galt! The photo above shows most of them in a group.

The cover of the catalogue. I can't find a date, but it's pre 1971, when the British currency was decimalised.

One of my favourites among our Galt toys is the Pattern Jigsaw:


This is cut along the edges of the different coloured shapes, so completing the jigsaw is a matter of fitting the shapes together - and matching the tiny edges of colour left on some pieces. It's painted directly onto the wood. I love the animal shapes, abstract designs and the colours.
Here it is in the catalogue, described as "difficult enough to occupy for a long time the child of 6 or over who is expert at jigsaws" (strangely, no designer is named):

On the same page, there are other jigsaws illustrated, including these Picture Book Jigsaws, from a children's book by A. and M. Provenson:


I have the first two, and I didn't know that they were also from Galt! They are Farm House and Old City, and they are printed on paper stuck onto the wood; a couple of bits have come away from the wood over the years:




Also among the jigsaws is my sister's Teddy Bear, on the bottom left among the Early Tray Jigsaws, designed by Beryl Coles and J. M. Miles:



(Teddy's foot has been missing for quite some time, poor thing!)

In the section of toys for the first three years, I recognise two which I can remember playing with:



10 coloured plastic nuts to screw onto a threaded rod, and pegs to hammer down ...

And someone I recognise well, but I had no idea he was from Galt -



Moppet! We also had the girl doll - she was probably my sister's - but for some reason we didn't keep her. Moppet is mine, and we still have him! (And, as my sister said, clearly his hair is meant to be as wild as it is!)

For children in their 3rd and 4th years, there is a cute little village:

I don't think we had this, though I can remember little carved wooden trees and people and sheep - perhaps from another, similar set ....

But this I do recognise - and not only did we have it, but we still do - I found it in a cupboard!

Noah's Ark - "specially made for us by hand craftsmen using the natural colour and grain of various woods." (And coloured wood for Noah and Mrs Noah, unless they found red and green woods ....) .... "A very beautiful toy to be treasured in the family for many years."

Yes indeed! You can see the wood grain even in the catalogue photo, and I hope you can see it in the photos (sorry about the rather ordinary background):



(The Noah's Ark box is at the back of the first photo in this blogpost, and still has part of its label.)

The middle pages of the catalogue are in colour, and show the wall charts available. Here I found an old friend:

Wanderland! This poster was on our bedroom wall - all I really remember of it is "She sells sea shells on the sea shore," which is at the bottom, just to the left of the sailing ship ("I saw three ships come sailing in!")
According to the catalogue, this was designed by Philippa Threlfall, and has a landscape peopled by characters from nursery rhymes and stories - to which I would add, Christmas carols and mythology ....

Not surprisingly, perhaps, we didn't have any of the Galt out of doors equipment or the storage and furniture - much too heavy to post to Australia! Galt made two dolls houses - or rather, one open-sided dolls house:


and a set of doll's play rooms, which could be arranged to make bungalows or houses or several storeys:


I don't remember our childhood dolls house well - I just have an impression of white walls inside and out - but I don't think it was from Galt. Perhaps some of our dolls house dolls were, however, as - along with the Erna Meyer dolls and Bessie and Darlow - we had some Dol-toi dolls, which were sold by Galt in Galt boxes:


The Barton dolls house furniture pictured here sometimes comes up on UK ebay packaged in Galt boxes; once or twice I have seen some Dol-toi dolls in Galt boxes too.

This Galt catalogue includes a Memory game for children of 7 and up, "greatly enjoyed [by them] not least because they nearly always win against adults"!


We have a set of Galt memory cards (though not the box) - but they must have been from a different catalogue, because the pictures are different. Here are some of the pictures on our set:







I had trouble getting some of the colours accurate - the red of the crab and behind the paint box is more of a vermilion shade, and the blue behind the sailing ship is a deeper teal colour - very rich and bright.

The set of smaller Memory cards includes other designs too, which we also have as a set of larger cards, perhaps for Snap? I don't know who the designer was, as the larger set isn't listed in this catalogue either.





We also have Galt Octons, which are not in this catalogue - and which I don't have here to photograph. I'll add a photo when I can.

At the end of the catalogue are Stocking Fillers, and here is one thing we had:

A mobile made with Japanese paper balls ....

and another which we still have:



Glass threading beads in brilliant colours!

Galt Toys is still going, and from the look of the 2011 catalogue, still brightly coloured - but not surprisingly, a rather different range from the late 1960s. I wonder if they're as strong and long-lasting?