Saturday, December 29, 2012

Pink & Green Peng Peng Bear

This funky teddy bear, just 5 inches tall, was handmade by one of my favorite artists, Peng Peng of Chicago. Wearing a pink dress made from a little sock, she is crafted from tie-dyed green and cream mohair and has tiny glass eyes. She reminds me of peppermints and wintergreen, and was a perfect Christmas present this year.



Friday, December 28, 2012

Antique Teddy Bear & Photographs

The first antique toys I began collecting years ago were teddy bears, and although my toy collection has become much more varied since then, I am still always in perpetual bear hunt mode. It's especially exciting to find an antique bear that comes with some provenance, like the photographs in this lot.




The bear is an unusual 10 inch American made ted, circa 1906-1908, with a handmade sweater coat. It came for Christmas along with a beautiful photograph of the little girls who originally owned it, and a picture of the house they all lived in, somewhere in Michigan long ago.

These three little sisters were the bear's first owners. Although the bear isn't in this cabinet photo, a doll and picture book are prominently featured.


 
And here's the house where they all lived. Can't you just picture them playing together on the front porch?
 
 
 
 


Thursday, December 27, 2012

Antique Schoenhut Alphies Blocks


One of my most longed-for antique toys arrived under the Christmas tree this year: a beautiful set of lithographed wooden Alphies blocks made by the Schoenhut Company.



 


Schoenhut was an American toy company based in Philadelphia which began production in 1872. They are famed for their toy pianos, Humpty Dumpty Circus playset and figures, and many other fine toys.

The Alphies, first patented in 1916, are five inch tall wooden blocks with lithographed paper characters on both sides. One side depicts "Alphie Dollies," the other an "Alphie Zoo." Each character bears a letter of the alphabet on its front.



The Alphies were intended as multi-purpose playthings, as depicted in the possibilities shown on the box cover. They could be used to practice the alphabet and spelling; for stacking and building; and could even be set up as a bowling game, using the included wooden balls.








The lithography on the character blocks is gorgeous; here are some of my favorite pieces.


A tiger sipping soda.
 
"O" ogles "P."



A frantic looking frog.


"D" is for dolly.
 

An alligator in an apron.

 



Wednesday, December 26, 2012

What Did We Get For Christmas?

 
 For the holidays, I  got a respiratory infection, an asthma flareup, and the flu...but I also got:
 
-an 1870s children's sleigh
-an antique German wooden toy village
-a 1906-1908 teddy bear with photographs of its original owners
-a set of 1916 Schoenhut Alphies blocks
-some antique photographs of children with their toys
-some beautiful Victorian scraps
-and a new Peng Peng bear
 
Pictures to come soon...
 
What did you get? Tell us in the comments!
 
 

Sunday, December 9, 2012

Vintage Snowmen

From my collection of vintage Christmas, these two little snowmen, just a couple of inches tall, are some of my favorite pieces. The smaller snowman has a peel off sticky label on the back: he was meant to be attached to a package as decoration. The larger snowman is made of mica-covered cardboard with a spun cotton head, and carries a pipe cleaner candy cane.