Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Odd English Teddy Bear

Purchased at an antique show this past weekend was one of the oddest teddy bears I've ever found, with definitely the biggest ears I've ever seen. He measures about 16 inches tall, and I believe he is British, circa the 1930s. His face, body, and limbs are similar to bears made around that time by Peacock, but I've never seen any with ears quite like these. He almost looks like a cross between a teddy bear and an elephant! But he's cute and I love him.


Antique Photo: Boy on a Riding Bear

As an accessory to antique toy collecting, I'm always on the lookout for interesting old photos of children with toys. I found this fabulous real photo postcard at an antique show last weekend. Dating from the early 1900s, it features a little boy in a sailor suit on a Steiff riding bear. The back of the photo has a penned note with the child's name (Frank) and the comment, "Pretty curls". And indeed they are.

Antique Show Report

Found some great things at an outdoor antique show this past weekend: a miniature Steiff bear circa 1908; a very unusual British teddy from the 1930s with the biggest ears I've ever seen on a bear; an American lithographed wooden dollhouse from the early 1900s in a very petite size; a fantastic old photo of a child with a toy bear; a small doll trunk; and a doll sized glider swing. A sneak peek is shown below, with details to follow!

Monday, July 12, 2010

1950s Marx Circus Sideshow Playset

Here's another carnival-themed vintage toy that is, by today's standards, generally considered egregiously offensive. But it was phenomenally popular back in its day (the 1950s), when it allowed children the opportunity to run their own freak show!


The Marx Super Circus was a huge playset of plastic figures and tin litho structures that included a big top, ticket booth, circus performers both human and animal, and visitors. It also came with a two piece sideshow, complete with lithographed banners and a variety of plastic freaks.
My sideshow has only one  left: Chang and Eng, the famous real-life Siamese twins after whom all subsequent "siamese twins" have been named. (There's a great article about Chang and Eng, with lots of historical photographs, here.




The tin lithography on these pieces is really great and worth a closer look:




Vintage Cracker Jack Prize: Sideshow Panorama

I was fortunate to grow up in the 1970s, the last decade of really good Cracker Jack prizes, before those pesky "safety regulations" took effect. The best Cracker Jack prizes, though, are even older, like this one which dates from around the 1950s. The tiny paper booklet, about the size of a matchbox, separates into individual pictures, which, when connected via tabs and slots, create an astounding carnival sideshow panorama.


The assembled panorama looks like this:



Here are some closeups of the pictures. Each has a description of the performer and some interesting historical information on the back:

All in all, a pretty amazing "free" prize!