We could be twins!!! Petite typewriter and Spirograph too x
LAST TWO LETTERS GAME 13 (Following game 12)
Lighthearted - How long do you display Birthday Cards?
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Carrying on from the Thank You letters thread, Can anyone recall presents they received in say the late 50’s made to write thank you for, same stuff every year, can anyone remember
Rupert Annual
Girl Annual,
Eagle for my brother,
tiara, necklace, wand for my little sister,
immediately fell apart, Made in Taiwan
tins Sharps toffees
manicure sets
ballpoint pens and retractable pencils in a long box
woolly hats, scarves, mittens, usually itchy
diaries, sometimes with teeny tiny locks
Bath cubes
flat boxes of hankies with embroidered flowers
Weekend assorted sweets and chocolates
pencil boxes/cases/colouring pencils/
games compendiums
bicycle accessories
boxes Morny soaps, Lily of the Valley
useful things of immense educational value,
globes, encyclopaedia, stamp album, presents
children despair of
there must be many more presents of a similar nature
in people’s memory, happy reminiscing.
We could be twins!!! Petite typewriter and Spirograph too x
6/8d each, the singles were! We had a great aunt who gave us a pound for the three of us which meant we could each buy a single!
Oh wow, what a fabulous thread! Thanks OP.
So many of the items listed above for birthdays and Christmas. I particularly loved my pink doll’s carrycot, Spirograph, Petite typewriter and those wonderful dolls with cut out clothes!
Anyone remember those oil paint by numbers sets? Bead sets to make your own jewellery? Cardboard sewing box with numerous drawers filled with sewing threads etc. once it was used up, I used the fancy box to store my paper dolls clothes in.
Look And Learn Annual. Plastic farm animals and fences to make enclosures!
A Build A Home Set which was extremely tricky and fiddly with girders and joists. The plastic roof sections were particularly difficult.
My brother had a wind up Winston Churchill. When he walked along, the tip of his cigar lit up. I remember manicure sets, also those little round plastic disc shaped things where you had to get the little ball bearings into the holes, skipping ropes, hoola hoops, roller skates.
There was a shop on the corner of our road which sold a variety of items. The shopkeeper had a 'club'. She would give you a card and you could pay in so much a week - usually a penny or two, then we would buy our mum something for Christmas. A vase or something (which we would take back if she told us off) 
John Bull printing set
An annual, would read it over and over again all year through
Book, where, if you painted over the pages with plain water, the colours would come through
Snakes and ladders
painting by numbers (the paint always dried up)
Another enjoyable aspect of this thread for me is seeing lots of unfamiliar names to me posting. Or maybe you all do post often but just not on threads that I’m interested in?
A mecanno set
A second hand bike which I had for years and cherished
Pogo stick
Wooden stilts
Enid Blyton books, loved them all particularly the Magic Faraway tree, and gave me a love of reading for ever.
Cadbury selection box
Writing set for those dreaded thank you letters.
A penknife 😱 yes, I did cut myself but only once!
Always a lovely new Vyella dress made by my mum who was an excellent seamstress. She was a divorced single mother and although money was very tight we always had a lovely Christmas. The above were not all given the same year! I was never into dolls..
I must have been very small indeed, because I still remember being put to bed in a (well padded) wooden drawer! We were staying at my maternal Gm’s house for Christmas and I have a fuzzy memory of a small doll, actually on the Christmas tree, which I really wanted - and which my granny eventually gave to me.
Does anyone else still remember (if you’re old enough!) the first time you actually had lights on the Christmas tree? We only ever had a very little tree, so there were maybe 12 quite big coloured bulbs - nothing like tree lights now. But those very first lights were so exciting!
"Little Mary Mouse" books and pictures by Margaret Tarrant
Lorna Drake???? My goodness that takes me back.
Yes I remember those big tree lights. Ours were in various shapes and colours, and inevitably needed new bulbs in each year or they wouldn’t light up! We always had a real tree with many of the decorations used year after year. And lots of home made paper chains made by me and my brother. No efforts at colour coordination in those days!
@calendargirl - I also had some brushed cotton pyjamas in a lovely dark blue box as describe so well: what a memory for detail you have. You've reminded me of the name Land of Nod as I remember asking my mum where that was.
Annuals, Beano, Topper and Dandy, then Bunty. A new dress - a rare event. One year an amazing 'Magician' game where a smart little man in the centre of the board pointed to the right answer every time, and a very special gift another year was a large 'Bayko' building set. I spent hours building the sort of house I would love to live in. An uncle bought me 'Little Women', and I became so lost in the story - the book had to be forcibly removed at mealtimes.
What lovely memories! Many of them resonated with me, especially the Floral Garden, which I loved. I made a garden to surround my doll's house. My dad made it and all the furniture by hand. That was in 1962, and I still have it! It even had electric lights and little "coal fires" which glowed when switched on! They still do, but the electrics need replacing as they are probably a fire hazard! Originally powered by battery, Dad later made a 12 volt transformer, which weighs a ton! Same principle as a modern mobile phone charger but the size of a house brick!
Such a lot of wonderful memories for those of us with a 50s childhood but do you think the reason we remember those presents so well is because we were only given gifts for Christmas and birthdays? Unlike my grandchildren today, I was never given presents at other times of the year, except perhaps the odd half a crown by relatives that I saw rarely. So Christmas, when I was allowed to write out a "wish list", was always very special and looked forward to with great excitement.
Yes, I agree. I can't help wondering whether modern children have the same sense of awe and wonder at Christmas. They have so much these days. The best presents, in my opinion, were the home made ones. Made with love and not mass produced. Although that might be a retrospective view, as I also coveted those high heeled sparkly dressing up shoes. My mother wouldn't let me have them. I'd probably have broken my ankle, so she was probably right. She usually was! Although one Christmas, I did feel cheated. I received a suitcase from my parents. Granted, it has a teeny tiny teddy in its silk inner pocket. But it was a "sensible" present, given to me prior to a school trip to France (yes, in 1969, and from a primary school on a London Borough of Redbridge council estate). I still have the case, although I don't use it except for storage. I was only ten, and I can remember being very disappointed. Of course, I said nothing, because I knew that I was lucky to be going on the trip. My first time abroad, but not my last! I ended up studying languages at university and then teaching them for my entire career. And my daughter caught the bug and is now married to a Frenchman! So maybe the present had magic powers. But when I was only ten, I felt robbed!
Although one Christmas, I did feel cheated. I received a suitcase from my parents
My parents gave me a suitcase for my 21st birthday - I think it was a hint 😀
I had a dear great-uncle who used to give me half a crown (2/6d) and always told me that when he came up on the Pools, he'd buy me a pony. 🐴
What a lovely thread so many memories!
John Bull printing set, colouring books, Bunty annual, selection box, bath cubes, books, embroidered handkerchiefs in a flat box,post office sets, compendium of games and always a stocking with tangerine and nuts at the bottom.
Yes, yes, yes. All of those above, also a cardboard cut out panto theatre. Happy happy Christmas to all.
The School Friend Annual
Witzend I remember real lit candles in metal holders attached by clips to the branches. My dd didn’t believe it until I found them recently.
I think as has been said already, we had just one present with a few sweets nuts etc which meant we cherished what we had becayse there woukd be no more until birthday or Christmas.
I hate to say it but the piles of gifts children get now are unwrapped put aside immediately as they look fir the next and the next. Until no more. Any of these would have been special but times have changed. It’s not children’s fault we have done this, but it is sad in a way. Too many things mean they won’t be as valued as they used to be. Unless it’s Lego of course... 
What a beautiful, beautiful thread. I remember my brother had a small train in a box, with a station and landscaping and a tunnel; it was battery-operated, and you could change the points to change the route. The box was made of tin, the train and carriages some type of early plastic; a real little work of art, and you simply folded it away when you were finished playing with it.
I remember most of the things mentioned, but one of my favourites from the 50s was a wind up dancing doll. You wound them up and they teirlled around and around. I played with them a lot. The only ones I can see when googling around seem to be the Cinderella and Prince Charming but my favourite had a black sparkly dress. Such simple pleasures.
OxfordGran. I remember a lot of these! Our favourite annuals were Oor Wullie, The Broons, The Bunty and Judy ! Best present for me as a wee girl was a walkie talkie doll that was bigger than me when I first got it. Had that doll for years, until my wee brother cut off all her hair!
Callistemon21
^Although one Christmas, I did feel cheated. I received a suitcase from my parents^
My parents gave me a suitcase for my 21st birthday - I think it was a hint 😀
I had a dear great-uncle who used to give me half a crown (2/6d) and always told me that when he came up on the Pools, he'd buy me a pony. 🐴
The first Christmas I was with what is now DH in 60's,
he gave me a wrapped present inside was a Co-op box saying women's vests. he'd obviously got his mum to buy my present.
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