Monthly Archives: July 2010

The History Of 1960s Interior Design Part 2

modernism_room_interiorIn the 1950s modernism began to be built into new houses by making the rooms larger and more spacious and this look was beginning to percolate down the housing scale as a new phenomenon developed.

Previously, houses were simply boxes, unalterable in shape and design and in which the occupants simply lived until the time was right for a move to another house. This is the way that houses had always been used but the 1960s saw the birth of something that was to have a ripple effect that still lasts to this day.

In the UK, at least, people began to change the design of houses by making them more open plan.

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Classic Car Volvo P1800

volvo_p1800_PD_photo1I remember seeing the Volvo P1800 used in The Saint TV series shown on the TV in the 60s and wondering just what sort of car that was.  It was a rare sight on British roads and those that did appear usually attracted a lot of interest.

Like so many people I always wanted one but never had the chance so it’s nice now to be able to look back and see how good the Volvo was.

I don’t have any figures to support this but I understand that Volvo were happy to let ITC Entertainment have a Volvo for the series because it was good advertising and I believe that many people purchased the car because of that.

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Pirate Radio Part 5 The Shivering Sands

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Part 1 : The birth of Radio 1 and Radio 2

Part 2 : Needle Time

Part 3 : Radio Caroline

Part 4 : Caroline has competition

Screaming Lord Sutch was a fabulous character who did much to liven up, first the music scene and later the political scene in the UK. And today we look at his contribution to the dreams of pirate radio off the shores of England.

Around the same time that Radio Atlanta began, David Sutch thought that, maybe, he would like to run a pirate radio station. After some thought he decided on a slightly different venue for his station, rather than a precarious boat anchored out in the North Sea.

Off the coast of the UK were several deserted army forts that had been built during the Second World War and Sutch decided to use the fort known as The Shivering Sands to mount his operation.

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The History Of 1960s Interior Design Part 1

modernism_room_interiorEvery period creates its own designs but the 1960s created them faster and more fervently than at any other time in the history of interior design, creating rule after rule and statement after statement faster than most people at the time could keep up!

Prior to the 1960s, in the period that stretched from the end of the First World War into the Post-War and late 1950s, the accent was on a style known as ‘Modernism’.

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Classic Car Austin Healey 3000

Austin-Healey_3000_photo_1The ‘big Healey’, as these models are always known, began as a development of the Austin Healey 100 introduced as far back as 1952.

In 1952 the first Healey was just over two and a half litre using an engine from the post-war Austin Atlantic in a neat two-seat bodywork.  The Austin Healey 3000 continued this trend but this time added a three litre engine to the already pretty two-seat body made, incidentally, by Jenson Motors.

The original Big Healey was called the 100 because it was capable of 100 mph but his car was to go far beyond that.

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Gravesend Classic Bus Day

Gravesend_classic_bus_dayI wrote an article about Wythall Transport Museum and their collection of classic Busses and this was quite a popular.

The article I link to here is from Kent Today And Yesterday, an excellent blog specialising in happenings past and present in the county of Kent in the UK. What caught my eye was the pictures from Gravesend Classic Bus Day from the meet on Sunday 11 July 2010.

Gravesend Classic Bus Day on Kent Today And Yesterday

This is a great article and well worth a look. Be sure, too, to chose the link to the photos on Flickr, they are well worth looking at.

I have been keeping my eye on the blog for a week or two now and it is also well worth a bookmark and a read, particularly if you live in that area. I have added the link to my 60s Resources list of sites on the right hand side of this page.

Hippy Fashion 4 Accessories

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Part 1 Introduction

Part 2 Tie-Dye

Part 3 The Military Look

It’s often the accessories, not the clothes, that make the style and last week we looked at Britain and the Military Look.  But that’s only half the story; at the same time Britain, like most other countries, was influenced by the hippie movement taking place in the USA.

This movement was based on a disaffection with the values and direction of society and wanted to see a return to traditional and older, seemingly more secure, values.  Thus, the three overriding considerations for the hippie look were:

1. Make it yourself.  Anything that could be home produced, like bead necklaces, simple metal finger rings, tie-dyed scarves or body painted artwork was extensively used and innovated.  It was all the better if these were revived ancient or medieval art forms.

2. There was great respect for ethnic art forms that were hand produced rather than mass produced and these were sourced from wherever they could be found.  In America, the art of the native Americans was valued while in Britain we looked towards the middle East and North Africa choosing leather work for belts and fastening and handmade bracelets along with all manner of jewellery as well as looking into our own past.

3. There was respect, too, for quality second-hand items.  People spent time searching for used clothing that was both unusual and of good quality and virtually anything could be worn with anything else.  I remember a girlfriend who had a very old but genuine fur coat which she wore throughout the year with anything, no matter how hot it was!

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Entertainment TV The Baron

Jensen_CV8_the_baronAn excellent classic TV series from the mid-60s, the writing was by John Creasey (of Gideon’s Way fame) and the television adaptation by the same team of Robert Baker and Monty Berman at British, ITC Entertainment.

Produced in the same mould as Danger Man and The Saint, this all action series was about a character known as The Baron (the character’s name being John Mannering).

In a change from the books, The Baron was created as an American, and not British, so as to appeal more to the American market but his sidekick, the character’s name was Cordelia Winfield, remained British.

The lead, The Baron, was played by an American, Steve Forrest while the character of Cordelia Winfield was played by the lovely Sue Lloyd (who went on for many years in the 70s to play Barbara Hunter in Crossroads).

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