Superman cut-outs, 1940 | more
“Amaze everyone” | via
wisdom | via
Unai no tomo
Beautiful collection of Japanese toy catalogues from the 1890s through 1920s via the ever-brilliant Public Domain Review:
Superman cut-outs, 1940 | more
“Amaze everyone” | via
wisdom | via
Beautiful collection of Japanese toy catalogues from the 1890s through 1920s via the ever-brilliant Public Domain Review:
During Culin’s visits to Japan, Seifu Shimizu — director of a major Tokyo trading company, artist, calligrapher, and leading Meiji Era collector of omocha (toys) — was in the midst of publishing the ten-volume Unai no tomo, comprised of charming woodblock prints of traditional objects of play. The founder of Odomokai (十八番クラブ), a Connoisseur's Club to advance the appreciation of tomo (“playfellows” or “companions”), Shimizu treasured Japanese toys. He created the Takeuma-kai (Hobbyhorse Club) for their study in 1880, and curated the first known exhibition in 1906. After Shimizu’s death in 1913, his friend Nishizawa Tekiho completed the final volumes of the Unai no tomo series. Browsing through these catalogs we meet: jack-in-the-box chickens; whales on wheels and magnetic mice; a clay sumo wrestler grappling an orange carp; and popguns, hobbyhorses, and noisemakers galore.