MUSINGS FROM THE BOWER 52
Now that the decorations have
come down, the baubles carefully wrapped in tissue and returned to the loft and
the last of the Christmas pudding donated to the sparrows, it’s time to look
forward to a new year. I was watching the news showing thousands of people
crammed into stores, determined to buy new clothing, furniture or ‘white goods’
– and it set me thinking.
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| !970s' Kenwood Mixer |
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| English Electric Cooker 1969 |
When I was younger, in the
1950s, 60s or even 70s, people didn’t seem to feel the urge to rush out and
replace their goods regularly. They bought only when something didn’t work, was
shabby or damaged. Even today, I tend not to buy an item unless it needs
replacing – and so items such as my fridge, washing machine and tumble drier have
been in use for many years. In fact my cooker, an English Electric, has been in
use since 1969 – we purchased it when we got married. At that time it was a top
design – it even had a double oven, which was the height of kitchen
sophistication! My 1970s’ Kenwood mixer still makes great cakes, too and the
Russell Hobbs percolator still percs! In the 1960s we tended to be better
informed than those who had set up homes in the immediate post-war years and
through most of the 1950s. No longer did you need to be posh to follow the
latest trends, or even to hear about them.
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| 1970s Russell Hobbs Percolator |
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| Ridgway Potteries Homemaker plate |
Admittedly the 1951 Festival of
Britain had introduced many exciting new designs and concepts, though the
majority didn’t filter their way into the average home till the mid to late fifties,
such as the ubiquitous Homemaker plate, designed by Enid Seeley and made by
Ridgway Potteries for Woolworths in 1957.This black and white crockery was
decorated with stylish pictures of coffee tables, lamps, chairs and cutlery.
But with the sixties came excitement, colour, change, and beautiful sleek
designs. Mixing with my fellow students at art and design school opened my eyes
to the stimulating new ideas which were pouring from the studios and workshops,
changing the way we looked at conventional objects. We were taught to view
everything from new angles and to lose our traditional concepts, even if this
did mean suffering the embarrassment of walking round a shopping centre wearing
a face-covering helmet of red, blue, green or orange cellophane in order that
we saw things in a different light.
However, it wasn’t just us art students who were made more aware –
everyone was. People all around were doing exciting things; it was as though
the air was supercharged, causing people to break free from their safe world
and dare to try something new. A teacher from my school suddenly upped and
founded a pottery, Tremaen, in Devon, while an acquaintance found a job helping
sculptor Henry Moore at his studio. Everyone, it seemed, was into art, music,
fashion or ‘doing their own thing’ – and people were discovering that however
ordinary you were, you could still have a fashionable home.
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| Ercol Rocking Chair 1969 |
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| A 1970s photo of our G-Plan when it was still new! |
When we had chosen our new
flat, my fiancé and I made a trip to Waring and Gillows, a renowned furniture
stockist in London’s Oxford Street. The company dated back to the late 1800s,
and we went there to choose a dining-room suite. We already knew that we wanted
our table to be circular, and soon chose a G-Plan model which we loved, not
only for the superb teak wood grain, but because the table was impressively solid.
It looked as though it would last. The accompanying chairs, with their circular
seats, were padded with a pineapple-coloured woven fabric, while the six foot
long, low sideboard featured a two-door cupboard at the left and a drop down
cupboard at the right. In the centre were four drawers. We were spot-on with
the assumption the pieces would last – we still use them every day! The sideboard looked super in
our flat against the pale orange walls, and the table was attractive, its
centre graced with a Poole pottery Delphis bowl which had been a wedding
present. The Ercol rocking chair looked good too, but we had no money for other
furniture so we utilised an old white-painted single wardrobe which we laid on
its side, padded with foam and covered with orange fabric to match the curtains
to give us a bench. Yes, you’ve guessed – we still have that, too…
One of our wedding presents
was a super orange fibreglass lamp supported on three dark wood legs, vaguely
resembling a blunt-nosed rocket. At the time it cost just under £10, and these
Scandinavian inspired lamps are once more finding favour, both the
floor-standing lamps – ours is 41inches high – and the smaller tabletop
versions. Although people used these coloured lamps to cast a warm glow, in
most houses in general the ‘main’ lighting was from a single ceiling light, not
the multiple lights we so often see today. Lampshades were often made from
paper slotted together, or woven from raffia, or perhaps colourful geometric
shaped shades moulded from thin plastic. Perhaps it’s worth mentioning that, if
the average person wanted to buy fittings, furnishings or china, we were very
much reliant on the chain stores – we bought lamps from British Home Stores,
(it wasn’t BHS in those days!), curtains and bedding from Marks and Spencer and
everyday china from Woolworths. ![]() |
| Poole Bowl 1969 |
Naturally, I do still buy new
things – I’m an avid mug collector and the kitchen reflects this, and only last
year I invested in a new kettle! (The old one coughed and died.) Modern electrical technology needs to be
updated regularly too. And I know that styles and tastes change. Luckily,
however, at the moment the retro/vintage look is in vogue, so I’m once more
living in a fashionable house, enjoying my Ercol, G-Plan, fibreglass lamp and orange
Nordic rug!








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