Category:Strip-Work Construction Outfits
Toy Brands and Manufacturers |
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Strip-Work Construction Outfits |
1910s - |
1916: Hobbies Strip-Work [image info]
1916: Strip-Work Sundry Tools [image info]
1916: Strip-Worker's Cutting Table [image info]
1916: Strip-Work Set of Wheels and Gears for Travelling Gantry [image info]
Hobbies Ltd. produced the Strip-Work Construction Outfits and system in the 1910s.
The concept of Strip-Work was to create a new "genre" of hobbyist activity, for people who wanted to make models but weren't interested in full-scale carpentry.
Strip-work was also aimed at children, as an "educational" and "scientific" activity that could teach manual craft and woodworking skills in miniature, the packs containing small strips of wood and a small saw and tools sufficient to allow building model bridges, towers, and other scaffolding-style structures.
For more ambitious Strip-Workers, Hobbies had accessory kits including wheels, ready-made turned-wood parts such as railway buffers for users wanting to build the Strip-Work model railway designs, and a range of other more "Meccano-style" parts such as gears, that were shared with the Klipit construction system.
Sets
Branding
Hobbies seem to have had some trouble deciding on the perfect name, and seem to have referred to the system as Strip-Work and Stripwork (and every other close variation thereof), and on the box packaging,Hobbies Strip Wood Working.
1913 promotional text:
It is essential that parents should take every opportunity to make their son's education as complete as possible. To attain this object it is necessary to adopt a method which will be attractive to the boy and at the same time train his faculties in accuracy, steadiness and industry.
With this end in view Stripwork has been introduced, and has met with an enthusiastic reception from the leading Educational Authorities, and as a hobby it forms a supplementary home training of no mean order. Note the illustration of the excellent Model of a Pile-Driver here shewn: it is a stripwork construction entirely.
— , Hobbies Ltd., , Hobbies Weekly, , 13th August 1913
1916 promotional text:
Strip-Work: The most instructive hobby for children
Strip-Work as a hobby and as a training method, without doubt has a very great future before it, and HOBBIES LIMITED have taken all the necessary steps to provide adequately for the demand which is bound to come for tools, outfits and materials.
The idea of Strip-Work, as its name implies, is the measuring, marking, cutting-off and joining together of narrow strips of prepared wood of different scantings and dimensions to form simple figures and models. This work is chiefly calculated to train the young in habits of accuracy, steadiness and industry, and there is no doubt that it is effecting this purpose wherever it is in use.
With the march of progress and the general speeding up of life, parents are becoming aware that every conceivable means must be used to give the children a more instructive training than in the past. As a result of this feeling, it will be noticed that the toys of the modern child are far more scientific and calculated to make the youngster think, than the toys that were mainly in existence a decade ago. Children are not now satisfied with toys that were then in existence, and it is the experience of those who have to do with children that they are always wanting to "make something" themselves. Nothing keeps them quieter at home than the placing in their hands of simple tools.
One great difficulty had to be surmounted, namely, the need for instructing the children doing the work. at school, the Manual Training Master naturally supplies all the necessary help, but in the home it is impossible for the parent to be constantly showing, explaining and helping the child. HOBBIES LIMITED have surmounted the difficulty by the provision of a large number of supplemental sheets, which show the child at a glance just how each model may be constructed and give the actual size of the sections required for each.
There is a large selection of these sheets, which may be obtained for 3d. each.
— , Hobbies Ltd., , Hobbies Catalogue, , 1916
Pages in category ‘Strip-Work Construction Outfits’
This category contains only the following page.
Media in category ‘Strip-Work Construction Outfits’
The following 15 files are in this category, out of 15 total.
- Mechanical Parts for Klipit or Stripwork (Hobbies 1916).jpg 1,800 × 1,266; 395 KB
- Model Barrows and Trucks, Strip-Work (Hobbies 1916).jpg 1,800 × 518; 530 KB
- Strip-Work (Hobbies 1916).jpg 1,338 × 1,800; 457 KB
- Strip-Work for Model Railway Construction (Hobbies 1916).jpg 1,800 × 402; 175 KB
- Strip-Work logo (Hobbies 1916).jpg 1,800 × 382; 59 KB
- Strip-Work No1 Outfit (Hobbies 1916).jpg 1,800 × 1,069; 526 KB
- Strip-Work No3 Outfit (Hobbies 1916).jpg 1,800 × 993; 469 KB
- Strip-Work No4 Outfit (Hobbies 1916).jpg 1,800 × 1,127; 542 KB
- Strip-Work Rolling Stock (Hobbies 1916).jpg 1,800 × 578; 197 KB
- Strip-Work Supplies (Hobbies 1916).JPG 3,000 × 2,960; 2.88 MB
- Strip-Work Tools (Hobbies 1916).jpg 1,958 × 2,500; 1.44 MB
- Strip-Workers Cutting Table (Hobbies 1916).jpg 1,800 × 614; 220 KB
- Stripwork wheels and gears for Travelling Gantry (Hobbies 1916).jpg 1,800 × 1,179; 428 KB
- Stripwork, Hobbies (HW 1913-08-30).jpg 1,303 × 2,000; 1.35 MB
- Stripwork, Hobbies Weekly (HW 1913-08-09).jpg 1,353 × 2,000; 1.19 MB