Holiday Shopping In The Classifieds – In The 60’s


Thursday Thirteen

No, they’re not action figures, they’re Sport Star Statues. Eight inches tall, they feature such sport legends that only last names are needed for identification. (Apparently, the guy selling them was also equally famous for you send your $2.98 to “Manny”.)

Retro Sports Figures Ad

Wooden Polly Dolls: Reproductions of an antique doll — for a whopping $15! (This has to be for the ritzy folks!)

Polly Doll Ad

Christmas shelf-sitting trolls. Like those elves we all love, only more for the bingo-going crowd. At just $1 for a pair, I wonder why I haven’t yet had the pleasure of seeing such dolls at thrift stores…

Christmans Tolls

What could be more luxurious than putting cocoa on your face? Hershey’s cocoa and all-vegetable oil! I don’t think they should have sold this in a box and called them ‘cakes’ of soap… Me thinketh quite a few of these were mistaken for a box of chocolates…

Hershey Soap Ad

Ah, pocket handwarmers. I spy these in huge numbers at rummage sales & given my cold mid-west climate, I’ve always wondered why I don’t grab one… Oh yeah, the notion of pockets full of lighter fluid which are supposed to keep you warm – without a flame? My (cold) tukus! Well, then again, you can burn $5 without a flame buy purchasing one of these babies and warm a heart at holiday time. (Incidentally, they run about the same price at thrift stores, yard sales and even antique shops now.)
Vintage Handwarmer Ad

Put your own photo on a puzzle — in the 60’s?! Hey, if the technology’s been around that long, why doesn’t it still only cost us a buck or two?

Ye Old Photo Puzzle Ad

Gads, my BFF in high school, Mary, her dad had one of these. Green foam with lines, yippie! Boy we made fun of that. …Or maybe it was the white patent leather shoes and matching belt? If this game helped improve skill and wit, I wonder how much her dad started with?

Golf Ad

I knew folks were drinking plenty of wine in the 60’s (you had to wash your uppers down with something), but making it themselves? I thought only hippies did that — and with their feet yet. But for less than $10 you can get this kit and make 25 bottles of wine. I have no idea if that’s cheaper than the 25 bottles of store-bought wine… But hey, if it’s a gift, they got it for free.

Retro Wine Making Ad

Can you really put a price on what mom does? Well, at holiday you need to, so spend $1.25 and get her this rooster kitchen gadget. The rooster egg timer is a thoughtful gift which reminds mom that she’s best stop ironing now and bring you your egg, damnit!

Rooster Egg Timer

For some reason, there are far more dolls and girly ads in the classified section. Perhaps it’s because moms can scan and shop while the egg timer’s running? Here are two gems for girls.

An advertisement for Barbie and her “crew-cut boyfriend” Ken. Somehow, that just sounds mocking. But hey, Babs did eventually dump the dude. This ad tells the shopper to find the “Fashion Paks” at major stores. (Hey, mom needs to get a refill of doctor approved uppers at the pharmacy anyway.)

Barbie and Ken Fashion Paks Ad

The next girls toy ad is for Singer’s Trimhandy. This toy looks like a sewing machine, but cuts paper instead. I don’t know if it will “stir” and interest in sewing or not, but it should teach any member of the nursery set to keep their fingers clear of the up-and-down thingy on any similar looking item.
Trimhandy Sewing Ad

These duck decoys are for decorative purposes only & it is advised that you turn them into “lamps, bookends, etc.” I guess that’s the company’s way of saying they won’t fool anyone, let alone a duck. But, when you’re desperate for a gift for Uncle Simon, well, here ya go.

Vintage Duck Decoy Ad

I saved this one for last because it surprised me. The Sound Conditioner by C. P. Electronics is a “transistorized, batter-powered electronic instrument which creates a tranquil environment for the subconscious mind.” Dude, that’s a white noise machine! Or maybe it sounded like ocean waves or something… Anyway, it’s an ad for something I didn’t think existed until the 80’s — and in true psychedelic 60’s fashion, it uses the word “subconscious”. Dude! Psychedelic + Subconscious + Transistorized = $88. In 1965 dollars that must have been mind blowing all on its own.

Sound Conditioner Ad

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Kitsch in your yard: Collecting Lawn Art

07.20.07   by The Dean 9 Comments »
 

When the definition of kitsch is limited to tacky, regardless of price, there is no better place to display your poor taste than in your own yard.

Some folks call their expensive junk “artwork.” Welded together car bumpers and plumbing parts sprinkled with a hub cap and tire iron. And we all pass by and scream YAK. Somewhat upscale from that group are flame cut sheet steel objects, bent and twisted into almost recognizable shapes. Or concrete subjects in abstracts forms, filling the yards in artistic cities like Madison, Wisconsin or the East side of Milwaukee and surely some artsy community in your own area.

Today I passed by the rear end of an old finned Caddy, sticking up from the ground as if had run into a giant pothole, right in the middle of a front yard in a newly rediscovered, older neighborhood.

Over the years we have laughed at many kitschy fads for the yard such as trolls and mushrooms, cut-outs of cowboys, dogs and bent over gals. Cement everything from peeing boy fountains, flowerpots, animals, and especially deer, lots of deer. Wooden plaques of bunnies, flowers, sheep and little girls with sprinkling cans.

P1020137.JPG

Now we all probably have some or at least one of these objects of kitsch in our yard. We have friends in a gazillion dollar house with a moose cut-out at full size in their backyard, and do we dare point out the tackiness of it? No!

And another friend with a frog that croaks when approached. But that one is our fault, we placed the frog clandestinely in their yard one night.

We have all passed a nice display in tasteful kitsch and marveled at its artistic value, but at what point does one go from tasteful décor to down right tacky? I think I may have reached that point. Well, how could it happen, does one intentionally decide to become a garden kitsch addict? Is it the friend that urges you to – just try one, everybody else does it, what harm could it do?

Oh Woe Is Me!! In this case study, it was my own fault. When we moved into our house, and decided to have a big party so everyone could see the place, I wrote up an invitation suggesting the only gift acceptable would be tacky yard ornaments. Oh my, what a mistake.

Among the most notable, we received a painted concrete penguin with plastic bow tie, several birdhouses dressed up as other objects, a real tombstone, a concrete stepping stone, several wooden cut-outs of flowers, and pink flamingos, one that was anatomically correct with two pink golf balls. (Trading tacky flamingos is another day’s story.) All items were initially placed in our yard to scare our new neighbors.

But alas that is how it started. Oh, we took down many of the objects, but “stored” the tombstone behind bushes, stepping stone in the garden and birdhouses hung in trees. All other objects were placed on rafters in the garage for re-gifting.

Today! Well, let me mentally wander through the yard, and see if you agree we have reached the ultimate in Dictionary defined garden kitschy.

Roof Top Metal Pole

A five foot metal pole from the roof of an 1880s building with large finial at top and a deteriorating arrow to point the wind direction sits at the beginning of our driveway.

A four inch square, three foot long hunk of red marble sticking up out of the ground, an iron gate is a trellis for tea roses, the stepping stones, the tombstone, a sundial, bird bath bases holding colorful bowling balls and one with a huge round lathe turned wooden ball, are all along a garden fence at the drive.

Bowling Gazing Balls

Then in back we have two fire hydrants; one is a Watrus of St. Paul.

Fire Hydrant Plug Watrus

One corn planter, a dozen antique steel wheels of various sizes and designs many not visible in summer, a drinking fountain converted to a bird bath , a cement pond made from a discarded Bradley Wash Fountain with added cement egret.

Bradley Wash Fountain with Egret

Two wind chimes, a dinner bell, two bird baths, another gazing ball – this one official purchased from Abler Art Glass, near Elkart Lake, Wisconsin home of Road America.

Gazing Ball Abler Art Glass

A granite pathway made from a headstone company’s scrap, a wooden sign pointing to the “Garden Path”, several small metal pieces from the ends of antique foot treadle sewing machine stands now used as wall art on the garage, and a Heron weathervane on our garage. And a flamingo with clothing for each season and holiday.

My Garden Path

Not to mention two “art” pieces, one is a glass topped table with the base in the form of a sewer pipe and signed by the artist, Carl E Funk of Akron Ohio and dated 1945.

Sewer Pipe Art -Carl E Funk

The other looks like the chaps of a bowlegged cowboy that we placed a faux Roman statue head atop. Both purchased in the upscale area of Lake Geneva, Wisconsin at estate sales.

Bowlegged Cowboy Legs

There is the cement angel, several small gargoyles, and child’s head, all from broken statues rescued from an antique store back lot located in Iowa.

Now you judge, are we in need of treatment? Would a 12-step plan put us on the right path or would we stray back to our old garden path ways? Should we get an exorcist to pluck these demon objects from our yard or just learn to live with them, promising never to purchase another? Help us before we sin again.

 
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