Christmas Cards

Margaid said:
Hen-Gen said:
Sorry too be the only one but what on Earth is Lametta?

Really thin metallic strips about two feet long. Not sure what they were made of in the 50s but they broke fairly easily. Now of foil/plastic so they are too light for throwing over paper chains etc but good for the tree or springs of holly tucked behind pictures. Google "lametta" - there are dozens of suppliers and also different colours DianeFairhall.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Decoris-Silver-Lametta-50cm-40cm/dp/B005HQYUNU/ref=asc_df_B005HQYUNU/?tag=googshopuk-21&linkCode=df0&hvadid=325027786517&hvpos=1o2&hvnetw=g&hvrand=15147212220261468724&hvpone=&hvptwo=&hvqmt=&hvdev=c&hvdvcmdl=&hvlocint=&hvlocphy=1006476&hvtargid=pla-555007101336&psc=1
 
I didn't realise you could still buy Lametta and it now comes in different colours.
Something else that has fallen foul of health and safety is making Santa's or angel's from the toilet roll tubes, as the kids could catch something really nasty from them. We used to decorate pines cones as well, garnered on Sunday walks.
Stirring the Christmas pudding mix ad making a wish. The decorating of the cake with little figures that reappeared for year after year. One was 2 little Robins on a log with springs that bobbed up and down
Best present ever my roller skates, closely followed by Spirograph, and my Uncle used to get me a Rupert annual every year
 
I think I got one because my mum liked reading it :lol: :lol: :lol:
My brother got Meccano one year and didn't get a look in. as dad and grandad spent all day making a working bridge. Prompting by brother to say to mum "I do love grandad, but I will be glad when he goes home and I can play with my present" I was driving everyone mad with my talking action man that Christmas, "This is your action man commander speaking" must be a trifle wearing after the first ten times. I can't remember what else he said
 
That's a new one on me, looks great reminded me of Stingray. Had all the Thunderbirds toys and Captain Scarlet.
Dad always got a Giles annual and we always wanted to meet someone who looked like the "grandma" in the cartoons.
 
bigyetiman said:
Dad always got a Giles annual and we always wanted to meet someone who looked like the "grandma" in the cartoons.

My nearly-ex-husband used to say his Grandma looked like her - not quite as grumpy looking although she did give up smoking when Wilson increased the tax on cigs and wanted more university places. Apparently she said she wasn't going to pay tax for all those people to go to school.

Giles sometimes drank in our local pub but I never saw him, One night all the ladies were escorted into the Gents so see his "cartoon". Do you remember the 1970s wall tiles called vein? If they were laid in a certain way you could see a chick in the pattern. Well they were on the wall random ways up and Giles had turned one into a cat - head to bottom right and bum at top left. it was the "chick"tile turned through 180 degrees. Not many place have them now but I can't look at them without seeing the chick and Giles' cat!
 
We still have that type of wall tile in our downstairs toilet ! They were there when we moved in and as the wash basin and toilet and flooring were brand new we have just kept it the same. Great believer in if it aint broke don't fix it. Pale blue tiles looks like a budgie to me.
just seen a Fudge in Bubbleville for sale on eBay £80 :shock: :shock:
Back on the Christmas card theme a favourite one we received was a Dr looking down a mans trousers and saying " I think you misheard the carol, its deck the HALLS with boughs of holly"
OH said did anyone out there have a Tressy doll ? She had a button you pressed and her hair grew or shortened, and she loved getting the Little Grey Rabbit books by Alison Uttley
 
You're all making me feel old (which I am). Most of the things you mention were after I was grown up, if I've heard of them at all. I vaguely remember Tressy but was way past dolls by then. Don't know about Little Grey Rabbit or Alison Uttley. I do remember Giles, of course, but not the wall tiles with chicks/budgies. The 'deck the halls' card sounds fun.
 
bigyetiman said:
We still have that type of wall tile in our downstairs toilet ! They were there when we moved in and as the wash basin and toilet and flooring were brand new we have just kept it the same. Great believer in if it aint broke don't fix it.

I'm with you there BYM. Unfortunately my downstairs toilet all needs replacing, including the ghastly big dark pink tiles and naff border. I'd quite happily keep the vein tiles if I had them!
 
bigyetiman said:
We still have that type of wall tile in our downstairs toilet ! They were there when we moved in and as the wash basin and toilet and flooring were brand new we have just kept it the same. Great believer in if it aint broke don't fix it. Pale blue tiles looks like a budgie to me.

I'm kind of the same. My bathroom, which is the worst designed bathroom anywhere (although so small, there's not a lot of scope!), and it needed complete redoing when we bought the house, 20 years ago. However, we could never afford it. It had 3 different types of white tiles, obviously done at different times. Then, around the bath had blue marble type tiles. I painted the lot cream, and it's been fine for several years. However, the room increasingly needs gutting. I'd love tile on the floor and the 1980 loo is on it's last legs. I keep having to pour buckets of water down to clear it, as waste usually doesn't disappear with a flush! I was told it would take at least two days to do the floor and change the loo. It's the only loo I have. So I've just procrastinated!
 
How odd. Just been reading through and my post at the top of the page had a paragraph about Ronald Dahl and Gremlins. It seems that someone else’s post was merged with mine.
And for those who remember it my husband was not born in the 40s. (Actually the 60s)
 
Still got my Little Grey Rabbit book, though not sure of the title offhand. In all seriousness, I think the beautiful illustrations and a vague sense of doom in the book may be a deep seated reason I am interested in small animals/birds, wanting to protect them. I don't remember Tressie though. And I didn't know those tiles (in my Mum's house when it was built in 1970, we had yellow ones in the downstairs loo and blue in the bathroom, I think you could also get pink and aqua) were called vein, they also reminded me of a budgie. In our family we seem to keep our Xmas cards for years and years. I used a whole bunch when I started quilt making, as the template for the squares, but it is quite distressing when you come across loving messages from long dead people, but somehow we don't seem to be able to bring ourselves to throw them away.

Onto more cheerful things, I'm not one for streamers and bunting, probably because I also have memories of having to make paper chains out of coloured paper, but I do love a well laden tree in terms of tinsel, baubles and as many (multicoloured) lights as you can find. Nowadays I just cut branches off a nearby tree (ours) and decorate that, rather than buying in a tree. Does everyone else have a tradition that most years you buy one new bauble? Actually the house in Portugal was fully furnished when we moved in, complete with somebody elses Christmas, which is a bit weird! The one thing I always do is collect pine cones, spray them with a mixture of silver/gold/glitter (the louder the better) and arrange them on the mantelpiece, on some greenery. I haven't been brave enough to light candles as I'll probably set the house on fire, but I'm sure that would look good. The other thing I always do is cut whatever flower/attractive greenery/berries I can find in the garden for the Xmas lunch table.
 
I know Hen-Gen if only I had my original Thunderbirds toys....
I am of 60's vintage as well. OH she hails from the 50's. I had fun googling Fudge the Elf.
We don't buy a new bauble each year unless we see one we particularly like. OH does collect pine cones and sprays them with glitter spray and she makes an arrangement of cones/holly leaves and ivy for the table. She says she always remembers the plant Crown Imperial featuring in the Little Grey Rabbit books and that was a must for her first garden.
I also googled Lametta which is German in origin and dates from 1610 and used to be real silver strips apparently. Very educational this forum.
I remember getting a Daktari annual one year, who remembers that programme about a vet in Africa ?
 
Hen-Gen said:
Who could forget Daktari. Clarence the cross eyed lion!
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And Skippy the Bush Kangaroo! I actually came across a dvd of Skippy a couple of years ago, and bought it for sentimental reasons. I was actually appalled at how racist and sexist it was! :lol: :lol:
 
Flipper another one and Lassie of course. Talking of sexism Lost in Space where the only the men were involved with the technical stuff, the women were always tending the plants or getting dinner.
Who remembers collecting milk bottle tops for Blue Peters guide dog or RNLI Christmas appeal. My friend has every Blue Peter annual from series one to present day
 
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