Lino Cutting

lino cutting

These lino cutting tools include a Linocraft Pen-tools set which probably dates from my mum’s time at Ripon Teacher Training College, c. 1937-39. I have used these tools occasionally cto produce Christmas cards.

Linocraft Pen-tools
lino cutters

The Linocraft set was ‘Déposée en Suisse’, registered in Switzerland, but manufactured by Perry & Co. Ltd., London and Birmingham. Also from Birmingham are the set of Lino Cutters, presented to me by a fellow student at Leeds, who felt that I’d be more likely to use them.

lino pen-tool
Lino pen-tool, Perry & Co. Ltd.

Gladys Joan Swift at Ripon

Gladys Joan Swift at Ripon, 1938

Here’s my mum, Gladys Joan Bell, nee Swift, (1918-2015) at Ripon Teacher Training College. c.1938. She’s armed with ruler pencil and a stack of sheets of what could be card, leather or textiles, so obviously up to something crafty.

Oakleaves
Evolution of England

She won a prize for designing a Coronation Pageant in 1937, a project which fortunately I spotted in the kitchen waste bin at my mum’s one Sunday morning when we made our regular call on her for a coffee. She was able to choose her prize so she went for a serious Oxford University Press history book, The Evolution of England by J. A. Williamson.

‘I don’t know why I chose that,’ she said to me, ‘I expect it was because I thought it was the sort of thing that I should choose.’

Appropriate choice, but it does look like tough going. My mum loved history but, as her designs for the Oakleaves Pageant suggest, she preferred a more colourful subject, such as Richard III or mysteries of the Holbein portrait of Thomas More and his family.

A quote from The Pace Quickens, the final section of Williamson’s book, written in 1931:

“There are more violent deaths on the road in a week-end than on the railways in a year, and they are generally set down to accident, as if it was impossible to prevent them. . . Public hospitals are filled with the victims, and it is even worth while for a private speculator to open a nursing-establishment near a busy road under the sign: ‘Motor casualties taken in.'”

Mum's prize, 1937

2 comments

    1. When I was researching our family tree I was particularly interested to hear my mum’s recollections of the Victorian members of our family but now I wish that I’d asked her more about her childhood, college days and early career. I did once persuade her to do a sketch of two larger than life cousins of hers who were ‘buffer girls’ (cutlery polishers in Sheffield which was and still is to some extent a steel town) who turned up at my grandads one day in their fur coats.

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