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Showing posts with label fair organ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fair organ. Show all posts

Wednesday, 25 April 2018

Dollies visit Devon and Cornwall

Laura and Melanie had a short holiday at the weekend when they visited Laura H and her wonderful Dollies in Devon then spent a day and a half in Cornwall.  The weekend included a model railway, the Dollies in Devon dolls house, lots of Mechanical pipe organs and a trip to the seaside!

Bill shows how to operate the trains in his model railway

Melanie and Laura were looking at the model railway

"Hello, welcome to our miniature railway world" said Sasha

"It is brilliant Sasha" said Laura

Laura was right, the model railway was amazing and quite extensive

My girl had fun rearranging some of the furniture and dolls in Laura's wonderful Dollies in Devon dolls house, then Melanie and Laura Sasha dolls visited their Devon friends in their home.

Doing the laundry

Sewing and ironing

Spraying the fabric before ironing

Dollies in Devon at home

"You have such a cosy living room" said Laura

Relaxing and playing in the living room

Melanie visited the Dollies in Devon band

Bathroom with shower

An unidentified doll along with a Kids 'n Kats doll in the Dollies in Devon house

The Dollies in Devon house garden is good for camping, puppetry and cycling

The Dollies in Devon garden also includes the barbeque which Laura won in the raffle at the 2012 Sasha festival

Walking the dogs and pushing the baby in the pram

The Dollies in Devon bedroom with bunk beds and plenty of toys!

Melanie visited the kitchen to find out what was cooking

I had made Laura H's Studio Doll Sela a dress as a test for the resizing of a pattern from 16" to 20" Sasha doll size so I could make a shweshwe dress for Dorisanne's Studio Sasha called Emmalee Rose.  Melanie was still wearing her version of the dress when she visited Sela. We also enjoyed looking at some of Laura's doll collection on the display she had bought from Dee at the Chat 'n Snap last October.

Laura's mini dolls on their display shelf

Melanie and Sela in their summer dresses and hats which I made for them

Laura, Davy, Melanie and Sela (who looks much bigger than her brother because she was nearer the camera).  In the background are some of Laura H's felted artworks.

Davy, Melanie and Sela
Before we left Laura and Bill, we had a couple of photos in Laura's garden where we'd sat chatting the previous evening before dinner.

In Laura's garden
After saying goodbye we drove on to Cornwall for a mechanical music event at a private collection.  It was a glorious sunny day in furthest Cornwall (we were near St Ives) so there were several visiting organs playing outside the collection.

Melanie enjoyed listening to a small Limonaire fair organ in the sunshine

Melanie relaxed in the sunshine while serenaded by the organ music
Laura and Melanie loved the nautical / pirate themed Dean organ which had once lived in Aberystwyth, Wales where its first owner had created the most entertaining façade and figures for the organ.
Laura and Melanie with the Ralph Jenkins nautical organ

"Have you seen the conductor Laura" said Melanie, "I think his clothes almost match my outfit!" "Yes, have you seen all the bell ringer figures - they're pirates and mermaids" replied Laura

The conductor was a pirate!  He even had a parrot on his shoulder who flapped his wings when the pirate conducted the music with his sword!  

The organ trailer was suitably labelled for the piratical theme!

The dolls had fun riding a rocking horse in the park nearby

"Look no hands as we ride the horse"
Inside the barn were several organs of various sizes. The one which amused Laura and Melanie was the Palm Court Orchestra - it was rather louder than it looked and it had seated figures which were wonderful characters.
The Palm Court Orchestra café organ
Palm Court Orchestra café organ figures enjoying Champagne

Palm Court Orchestra café organ figures enjoying afternoon tea

Organ grinder monkey
A very warm sunny day with the happiest music on earth was followed by a cloudy Sunday morning at the rocky beach opposite Godrevy lighthouse just north of St Ives.  Laura and Melanie were fascinated by the rock formations and asked their geologist friend Laura in Devon to explain what they had seen:
"The rocks are Lower Devonian  slates with quartz intrusions about 400 million years old. The quartz was a later addition when there was a huge mountain building in the Carboniferous period called the Variscan Orogeny about 300 million years ago when the slate was formed. It is used like the North Wales slate but is not as thin nor strong. The holes believe it or not are simply created by erosion primarily wave action and sea creatures."  (Laura H)

Pebbles on the beach showing the quartz in the slate

Layers of Lower Devonian Slate, some of them were loose and friable from erosion

The weird holes in the rock - they looked like air bubbles

Laura and Melanie found someone's pet rock painted with a picture of a glass of prosecco!

Melanie and Laura rested on the rocks as they admired Godrevy lighthouse on its island

"Look Laura, the lighthouse don't seem very far way" said Melanie, "Yes, but you'd need a boat to get there, it isn't safe to swim to the lighthouse island" replied Laura
Thank you to Laura and Bill for their very welcoming hospitality and Laura for all the information about the Godrevy point rock formations.  We had a wonderful time in our quick visit to Devon and Cornwall.  Below is a 'behind the scenes' photo from the doll and organ weekend.

DollMum's daughter setting up Laura's Sasha in the model railway room, which was her bedroom for the night



Sunday, 16 July 2017

Music adventures in Waldkirch

The organ festival in the Black Forest town of Waldkirch takes place every 3 years, usually in June.  I've blogged about it before in 2011 and 2014.  This year, we only had 2 full days in the town as we didn't want to drive overnight as we've done in the past all across France in the dark.  So we arrived at 4pm on Friday afternoon after setting out from home in the middle of the UK soon after 2am (11 hours of car and ferry). 

Waldkirch sign

Emily, Jenny, Lexie, Annie and their dolls with the miniature music box organs we'd brought with us, in our hotel room
 On Saturday morning we went into the town with Laura and Edmund who discovered the most amazing Steampunk organ and scene they had ever encountered - the Orgelmeuh 'Muh Orgel'.
What is a Muh Orgel?

Laura and Edmund stared in amazement at the Muh Orgel

The Muh Orgel pipes and drum - steampunk at its musical best

Muh orgel head

The Muh Orgel plays the pipes by cardboard book music

Milking the Muh - this was linked to the carousel ride

The Muh Orgel carousel - every ride creature was cow themed - steampunk fun for children
In the square by the Muh orgel was a collection of lots of mechanical musical instrument toys - teaching the science and physics of sound in various ingenious ways.  We loved the welly boot organ!  It played the recorders (each of which was playing one note) by pushing up the welly toes and pushing air through the recorder.


Playing Ode to Joy on the Welly boot organ

organ pedals being used to play different length pipes by direct action
In the street a Dutch street organ called De Harmonica was being played - it is on its traditional handcart and is hand turned.  Street organs are wheeled up and down the street on the cart so only play in one place for a short period before moving further along to play in another place.
De Harmonica

DollMum's younger daughter, Laura and Edmund with De Harmonica in Waldkirch

Laura and Edmund with De Harmonica

Laura and Edmund with De Harmonica

DollMum's younger daughter handturned De Harmonica!  quite a feat as it is a big instrument.

During the afternoon Laura and Edmund visited the organ workshop of Achim Schnieder.  Some automata were on display - these monkeys were rather intriguing.
Monkey musician

Monkeys playing violin and cello

Large organ figure in Achim's workshop
Later an old fairground organ played while a monkey cuddled the traditional collecting tin (we have one of these tins for our little street organ).

Very old Limonaire fair organ with monkey

Edmund put some money in the tin for the monkey
In another organ workshop they saw some organ figures being restored, with their arms off!  The arms are animated so they move - usually to conduct the music or ring bells.  The animation mechanism is usually a small leather covered 'motor' with a spring which is operated by a puff of wind from the music.  Setting up the animation is always a fun, technical challenge to get it right.

Organ figures waiting to go back on an organ - bell ringers and bandmaster.
In the museum that evening Laura and Edmund discovered some fascinating instruments which were sometimes also furniture - this beautiful writing desk was also a barrel organ!

The barrel organ writing desk

Dancing figures in this organ

These miniature figures in this organ are musicians

Another organ with miniature figures in a scene
Upstairs in the museum is this incredible diorama of a procession to the nativity.  The figures are so detailed and filled with character and the whole scene is about 3 metres long.

The incredible procession of figures visiting the nativity in the Elzal museum

The front of the procession approaching Bethlehem

The Nativity

Such wonderful figures in the procession
Miniature nativity scene

Another miniature nativity scene

This 19th century automata was called Perriot l'Ecravain, he was made in Paris in 1875 and writes with his quill pen
Outside the museum there was a stage with a modern fairground organ made by the organ builders of Waldkirch, in front of this various groups performed throughout the day.  The last group of the day was an old favourite - Organo Caribe (Latin American style music played with a street organ).

Organo Caribe
On Sunday Laura and Edmund discovered a fun organ for children outside the organ workshop of Jager and Brommer.

Edmund and Laura squeezed the rubber bulbs to make different percussion instruments play on the street organ

The organ bell ringer on the fun organ with lots of interactive percussion for children to operate via the long hoses and rubber bulbs

Laura and Edmund with the organ they helped play
In the main street of Waldkirch there were lots of small street organs, this one had one of those animated monkeys which have levers to make them do various actions, including squirting water at the crowd.  This one also lifts his hat and makes a scary face.

Animated monkey on a street organ
The festival was over so quickly.  The following morning the smallest dolls joined us for breakfast as we enjoyed the view down the valley to Waldkirch.


Annie, Lexie, Jenny and Emily in Altersbach

Annie, Lexie, Jenny and Emily with a tiny music box and a Waldkirch biscuit

Beautiful Altersbach in the morning sunshine
Goodbye lovely Altersbach and Waldkirch