Tuesday, 19 January 2010
Sunday, 3 January 2010
Tuesday, 22 December 2009
Monday, 7 December 2009
Saturday, 28 November 2009
Saturday, 21 November 2009
OLYMPIC
Friday, 20 November 2009
"ROCKET TRAM" AND TOWER, BLACKPOOL ILLUMINATIONS. ET.2259
Wednesday, 18 November 2009
The Invisible Man
Tuesday, 17 November 2009
Monday, 16 November 2009
How To Read A Postage Stamp
The subtle and not-so subtle meaning behind the placement on a postcard or envelope of a postage stamp. Many of the meanings are lost on today's audience so this key is a handy piece of reference for future posts.
This card was intended for Miss J. McGrath of 6 Riverside, Antrim. It was never sent. The epistle on the back reads; "Take this gift though poor. The token letting speak is indeed mine."
Sunday, 15 November 2009
Saturday, 14 November 2009
Glee Club!
There's not much I know about this picture except that there were others but they were expensive and I had to choose one out of a bundle.
This one stood out at the time for obvious reasons though the memory of the others will haunt me for a long time. They were about half a dozen in number, all taken in this same room and were of boys of various sizes astride what appears to be a brand new racing bike, the faces of the other boys looking on were reflected in the mirror on the wall behind. I suppose they were photographs from a very happy Christmas past.
Wednesday, 11 November 2009
bird man . . .
Collecting can be fraught.
There's a moment when you're torn whether to get something or not, regret can be costly and reason has little to do with a choice . . . this picture almost never made it . . . surprising really because its a great photograph and after a few moments its possible to place it, the location that is and therein lies the reward.
The town in the foreground is San Francisco because the island in the bay, the focal point of the photograph, is Alcatraz.
Doodling whilst waiting for Godot.
BE KIND REWIND . . .
Tuesday, 10 November 2009
GOD AND THE ATOM
This book was written in 1945 just months after Hiroshima and Nagasaki and is a very reasoned and eloquent appeal for humanity to step back from the atomic age, though the author accepts that the atom was the genie unlikely to return to its bottle. The fifties saw the introduction of iconic atomic furniture heralding the new age for consumers and the Cold War made shopping ideological.
John's Economy Cookery Book!
I bought this in 1997 probably for the magical sum of fifty pence. Most good things I've found (most things worth having) cost 50p. Of course to me its priceless, that's the quirk of the collector I wouldn't want to pay a fiver for it (but would because I have to have it) and now wouldn't part with it.
Its a beautiful Tate Gallery Diary from 1972, the cover is Peter Blake's brilliantly titled 'The Fine Art Bit' 1959. The legend, John's Economy Cookery Book is written in a thin flat-headed black felt tip.
Inside recipes have been added including 'Common Market Casserole' and 'Mock Cream' the latter written in the 1st of April entry.
H.M.S. HOMAGE
Edna Welthorpe hoaxer perhaps or a gorilla in the roses?
I bought this book for 20p at a bootsale.
The cover has been blacked-out in permanent ink and the title obscured by an ominous Malevich white square. The blurb on the back has been covered in a tall white triangle of paper, now yellow and slightly transparent.
The book is a trashy thriller called The Red Sailor by Patrick O'Hara and the fronispiece where the title appears has been blacked-out so that it now simply reads SAILOR in block capitals and below this in red ink and handwritten the year '1963.' followed by 'Reprinted 1965.'
At the time I thought it worth having perhaps because it might well be some further prank on the part of Joe Orton or a fan following the spirit of his library 'interventions' as inferred by name of the ship on the sailor's hat, the H.M.S HOMAGE
Rocket mail
The kid stays in the picture.
Apollo moon landing?
Monday, 9 November 2009
H.M.S. EXCELLENT
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