Showing posts with label London. Show all posts
Showing posts with label London. Show all posts

Friday, August 5, 2011

So how did the scarves go???

Some of you asked for news of how our Festival of Britian scarves sold - I'm happy to tell you that the first one I mentioned sold for 16 pounds, and the second one is currently at 15 pounds 99 (I can't get a pounds symbol on my French keyboard here!). Also currently for sale is our last Festival item - personally I love this little leather box, and quite want to take it home with me... but I'd rather see it sell! My sister and I have decided that these items, collected by my mum over the years, will be sold to go into a fund to help our families visit each other. These first sales won't make much of a dent in our travel expenses, but it's a lovely start and I think that my mum would have found it a wonderful result for her little speculative buys over the years.
j
In other news, we're having a lovely time with our visiting friends - visits to the Natural History Museum in Toulouse and lots of garden salads and a little bit of ice cream seem to be the order of the day...

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Festival London, 1951/2011

It seems a long time since our bloggers' meet-up in London, but I've got great memories of the day, and I never really told you all about it when I got home, as things were so crazy at the end of term! Now is a good day to talk about this, though:As a very enthusiastic new subscriber to BBC Homes and Antiques (it's really good - have you tried it recently?), I knew all about the 60th Anniversary celebrations of the Festival of Britain, held in the original location at the Southbank Centre. H & A Mag had prepared the 1951 room, which was pretty good, except they'd reckoned without Ang, who spotted that they were playing 1960s music! Apart from that it was accurate - see her review here!The Southbank Centre was full of people being taught how to Lindyhop (what?), and as we had a little while to wait for Ang (it's a long story...) we sat and watched the dancers,
becoming progressively more accomplished and lively!
The Festival of Britian was a symbol of two things - the 100th anniversary of the Great Exhibition, and the rejuvination of Britain and British design after the Second World War.
Women from London who'd had no previous sewing experience were invited to join together for training and produced this commemorative quilt out of still-rationed fabric. I picked out two key dates which particularly spoke to me, as a teacher:
and as a woman!
I was intrigued by all the Festival memorabilia, as I'd found a fantastic leather box bearing the Festival logo in the piano stool at my father's house. Either my grandma or my mum must have 'picked it up', either at the Festival itself (I don't know if my grandma went, she may have done) or later. It had a plastic liner showing that it held something small and rather spherical. So, not either of these:
And not these either, although I thought it was worth getting a photo!
These are the things my mum and dad would have been given, if they'd ever gone there...
Here are souvenirs for men - really snazzy!
And here is the other thing I was really interested in: Festival Headscarves.
I snapped a photo of the explanition for why these were so popular - it's well worth clicking on the picture to enlarge it if you're interested in fashion history.
I was researching these in particular because my mum also left us two Festival of Britian scarves in her collection.
Neither look much like these examples, which shows how many, and how diverse, the headscarves were.
My mum used to pick up things like these ('unconsidered trifles' at the time) because she realised they contained design and social history, and had potential investment value. She did sell a lot over the years - horrible Victorian things she'd snapped up in the 1960s became charming Victorian pieces in the 1980s!
My sister was intrigued when I pointed out (thanks to BBC Homes and Antiques) that NOW was the time to realise the (probably small) investment value of the three Festival of Britain pieces we'd found. We decided to collaborate together to sell them on ebay - she's a registered seller, and, as you know, I can write Vintage blurb.
With this weekend seeing the Vintage at the Southbank Festival (it WOULD be lovely to be there...), my sister has posted the first of our vintage scarves on ebay. It will be most interesting to see how the bidding goes - it feels like we're continuing something for our mother here...

Thursday, June 16, 2011

I went to London - the short version!

I went to London.I met Serenata, Ang, Pomona, Lisa, Sue and Sarah. They were great.


We went to the V&A.

Then we went to the Museum of 1951.
It was all great! The next day I went to the British Museum. I met Horus.Then I went to Liberty.I didn't buy anything. But it was great.

j

The End

j

So that's the version influenced by too may years of teaching 7-year olds! Life is good but busy now I'm home so I think I'll take my blogging week off from tomorrow - if I have no time to blog it makes sense to coincide that with a week off! I'll still be in email contact, but I won't be visiting your blog or mine for a week. Have a lovely week, friends.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

London, Saturday 11th June...

I'm sorting through the maps of France and have found a Mini Atlas of London... I'm nearly ready!So far, the plans have been vaguely laid for Saturday 11th June. I'll be meeting up with blogging friends at the V&A at 10am or as soon thereafter as people can arrive. The plan is to visit the Cult of Beauty exhibition at the V&A and to go to the South Bank in the afternoon for the Festival of Britian exhibition. I imagine that food and chatting will also play a significant role in our day!
j
If you would like to meet up at any point in that day, and can get to the V&A or the South Bank, then email me and I'll give you my mobile number - it would be lovely to see you. Ang (Tracing Rainbows)and I will both be in London on the Sunday too, so I hope there will be the opportunity do do more things with blogging friends on that day - there was talk of a boat trip up the Thames but nothing is fixed yet. I'll be leaving for Edinburgh around 5pm that day. Do get in contact if you can come - it would be lovely to see you!