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Revision information, 1 April 2025 |
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Publisher: Brighton Toy and Model Museum, UK Editor: Eric Baird 9,928 Pages 12,048 Images and other files 71,389 edits since 2011-02 |
1860: "New-Year's Gifts: The Toyshop", by Mason Jackson [image info]
The Brighton Toy and Model Index
The Brighton Toy and Model Index is a regularly-updated knowledgebase for toys and models, and the general and social history of modelmaking and toymaking across the UK and Europe, from the industrial revolution to the middle of the Twentieth Century.
As of June 2017, the Index currently holds over seven thousand pages and a similar number of photographs and archive scans.
Although this encyclopaedia is powered by the same software that runs Wikipedia and (like Wikipedia), is a continually-growing "work in progress", editing is reserved for authorised Museum personnel.
The Early Toy Record
- The early history of toys provides a unique historical record of not only social and technological progress, but also of the collective psyche. Long before modern precision injection moulding and computer-generated tooling, early toys, made using comparatively crude processes, were by necessity highly impressionistic and somewhat abstract.
- The early "tinplate wranglers" were not just craftsman and engineers, but artists, striving to distil out the essential feel, identity and character of the originals in objects that might sometimes only have had a passing resemblance to their true proportions and shape. Early toy design was to some extent a form of three-dimensional cartooning or caricature, focussing on and emphasising a thing’s key identifying elements and discarding “unimportant” detail, the result being a slightly surreal and "dreamlike" record not of a thing’s physical shape, but of how it was understood and remembered.
- The result is a very human record of how humans saw, perceived and felt towards their surroundings through the period.
The Model Record
- In contrast, the history of models provides a more technical and exact record of buildings, styles and (in the case of model engineering) machinery and vehicles from other times. With past modelmakers having acted as "curators" in deciding what was and wasn’t worth recording in model form, old models provide a contemporary record of real life in miniature, allowing us to assemble, for instance, a tiny transport museum showing the breadth of designs across the early British car industry, within the volume of a small room. Static and working models capture details that might not be present in plans or photographs, such as the look of an oiled piston-rod, or actual colours that cannot be reliably determined from early colour photography or black-and-white images.
Updates:
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December 2017
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December 2016
November 2016:
October 2016:September 2016:
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1892: Parisian street toy-seller [image info] ~1948: A different world: Political globe, immediately post-WW2, made by Chad Valley [image info] 2016: Dollhouse Miniatures leaflet, back [image info] |
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