Thursday, 9 July 2020

Lockdown Library

 The devil will make work for idle hands and being stuck at home all day has meant that I have been able to search the net for interesting goodies. One of the many things I enjoy collecting are period space books from the sixties. Recently, I found Destination: The Moon, which was published in 1967 and what I initially assumed was a book, but which is actually a large magazine type publication. Produced by the American Science Service to presumably 'sell' the Apollo missions, its lavish and interesting with lots of beautiful painted artwork to supplement full page spreads of the previous Gemini and early Apollo tests.
 It was sweeping vistas of unexplored space and grand rocket launches that sold me as a child on the whole NASA adventure and this booklet is a prime example. Very much projected and proposed ideas, rather than cold factual data, its an exciting glimpse at the run up to the moon missions.

 Next up and at the other end of the scale is the Dennis Knight Activity Book, Space Flight. Essentially a booklet of info with a spread of Letraset Rub Down Transfers, I had this as a kid, but lost it along the way somewhere. On the whole, its unimpressive, with inaccurate and sloppy artwork, mostly copied from earlier books and a useless panorama on which to place the technically superior transfers.
 It seems to have borrowed the cover concept from Brooke Bond Race Into Space album, some five years earlier in 1971, and uses the Mars Mission craft in the transfer images too.
 Poor Yuri Gagarin is barely recognisable, but the artist has done a fair job representing the spacecraft. The moon on the rub down panorama looks like a McDonalds dessert however and any concept of relative scale has gone out the airlock window.
 However, the obligatory glimpse into the future pages are more interesting, showing the Brook Bond Mars artwork which has clearly been lifted from the rear of the album, a couple of rather busy looking space stations, a nice McCallesque space shuttle and tucked away in a corner, an ATS derivative.

 On the last pages, we see a photonic propulsion spacecraft and a rather clumsy drawing of the famous Wellsian Martian taken from the early french version of War of the Worlds.
 This was the very first time I saw the octopoidal Martians in this style and was part of the reason I bought the Takara Science Museum figures a couple of years ago, as the fleshy tentacled creatures fit in much better with my impression of the beasts from the story.


10 comments:

  1. Lovely 'books' Wotan.
    I have the tea card booklet, but none of the rest.
    I did a project for school about real spacecraft in the early 70s, based on similar books, all drawn in felt pen. I'll see if I can dig it out.
    Mish.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, dig it out Mish, it'd be great to see!

      Delete
  2. I love the saturn V rollout art, thats a new one on me as are the ATS and Photonic Space Station illustrations. Superb stuff Wote as always! Oddly enough, I bought in a large collection of loose tea cards last summer from a car boot. Not sure where I put them! They are beautiful things.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Yes Mish - dig it out and show us. Tea cards are such a brilliant idea, not unlike stamps, but more accessible. My dad collected Broke Bond cards for years, before I was born, so I have a few old albums. Such gorgeous graphics in a small format and all free. Why they stopped doing them is beyond me.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Paul Adams from New Zealand7/10/2020 1:50 pm

    No cards in packets of tea in New Zealand, just in breakfast cereals and packets of Gregg's Jelly (NZ birds, seabirds, birds of the world). Everything in Britain had a card or give-away toy. British children were very lucky, but then Britain was a much larger market for food products.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Did you get the Australian R&L plastic models in your cereals Paul?

      Delete
  5. Paul Adams from New Zealand7/11/2020 12:07 am

    We did not eat a lot of breakfast cereals in our house, so I only had a few cereal toys I think someone did give me some, way back in the 1960s, but they were easily broken - and I was careful with my toys. It was always toast for breakfast for us, and I have always (repeat always) had honey on mine. However, looking at the cereal toy posts on MC, several look familiar. There was also a series of boxed cereal toys available in the 1970s, four models to a box. These have also appeared on MC, but I never had any of these, as I was into proper kits by the likes of Airfix and Matchbox, by the time these came out.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Toast and honey is good Paul. I prefer set honey to the runny stuff. Would you say that its become a habit for you to just eat the one breakfast?

      Delete
  6. Paul Adams from New Zealand7/11/2020 11:07 am

    Do you mean one breakfast per day ? Yes. If you mean the same thing every morning for the last 59 years, also yes. With tea, not coffee. When I find something I like, I stick to it.

    ReplyDelete