Hungerford Arcade The Lyre/Zitter

Don's Lyre/Zitter

Hungerford Arcade stallholder, Don Greenslade, came across this beautiful Lyre/Zitter on his travels and just had to buy it.  This one is German, made by Meinel’s.  Here is a short history of the instrument.

 

DSCN0637Lyre from various times and places are regarded by some organologists  as a branch of the zither family, a general category that includes not only zithers, but many different stringed instruments, such as lutes guitars, kantele and psalteries.

 

 

Others view the lyre and zither as being two separate classes. Those specialists maintain that the zither is distinguished by strings spread across all or most of its soundboard, or the top surface of its DSCN0642sound chest, also called soundbox or resonator, as opposed to the lyre, whose strings emanate from a more or less common point off the soundboard, such as a tailpiece. Examples of that difference include a piano (a keyed zither) and a violin (referred to by some as a species of finger board lyre). Some specialists even argue that instruments such as the violin and guitar belong to a class apart from the lyre because they have DSCN0639no yokes or uprights surmounting their resonators as “true” lyres have. This group they usually refer to as the lute class, after the instrument of that name, and include within it the guitar, the violin, the banjo, and similar stringed instruments with fingerboards. Those who differ with that opinion counter by calling the lute, violin, guitar, banjo, and other such instruments “independent fingerboard lyres,” as opposed to simply “fingerboard lyres” such as the Welsh crwth, which have both fingerboards and frameworks above their resonators.

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Hungerford Arcade BBC Filming Bargain Hunt

 

Tim Wanacott 2015

The one and only Tim Wonnacott

The BBC arrived at

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The very cheeky but lovely Mark Stacey

Hungerford Arcade to film two episodes of Bargain Hunt.  The programme, hosted by Tim Wannacott had the Blue Team advised by Hungerford Arcade’s dear friend, antiques expert, Mark Stacey, while the red team’s expert was the lovely Natasha Raskin.  Unfortunately, we are not allowed to tell you what they bought, but we can tell you that we all had a great time and everyone enjoyed themselves.  Natasha said that although it was an extremely hot day, the day before (Monday) they were filming at the Newbury Antiques Fair and the heat was almost unbearable so they were very grateful for the cool atmosphere of the Arcade.

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Arcade manager, Alex getting the best price for the Blue Team

Lovely Natasha Raskin with Arcade co-owner, Adrian Gilmour and Rita

 

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Hungerford Arcade A Very Special ‘Hair Day’

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Michael made Pauline’s day (probably year!)

Wow! what a ‘hair day’ we had at the Arcade when famous hairdresser from the BBC’s One Show, Michael Douglas arrived to do some shopping.  A member of our staff, Pauline Hawkings couldn’t believe her eyes when she saw him and got very excited. You will see how happy she is on the photos.  Michael’s quest in life is to bring joy to the lives of the unsuspecting public with surprise haircuts!  It really was great to see him.

 

 

 

 

 

Michael is at Edinburgh Airport tomorrow (4th August) filming for the One Show. Go along and see him.  Who knows, you may even get a haircut from this very talented hairdresser!  I wonder if Pauline will be there.

 

Thank you Michael for making Pauline’s day.

 

For all the latest news, read our Newsletter at www.hungerfordarcade.com

 

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Hungerford Arcade The Mystery of Samplers

Hungerford Arcade’s wonderful friend and author, Stuart Miller-Osborne has written this amazing article on Samplers.  It is a subject that has always fascinated me and the fact that lighting was so primitive in those days but the girls/women could sew so beautifully.

 

The Mystery of Samplers

 

Although I do not own a sampler I have always been fascinated by them as in my view, they open a window quite easily into the past.

Mystery of SamplersBefore writing this short piece, I explored the various antique outlets in Hungerford to see how many I could find.

In the short week of my review, I found some fascinating examples many of which I would have liked to have purchased.

 

But on the whole, they were out of my determined price range as their cost approached three figures.

Do not let this put you off, as if you purchase a sampler then you will have an item with a unique history hanging from your wall. 

 

Although they seemed to be purely decorative, samplers actually had a function and this was the reason for their genesis over six hundred years ago.

As most of us are aware, the first book was not published in England until 1477 when William Caxton and his Westminster press made an appearance. S7

 

But supposing fifty years previously you as a needlewoman were required to follow a pattern, then you had a problem.

You could not nip down to the local library and pick up a book on the subject.

But an answer was to hand, basically a narrow piece of cloth which was used to record the pattern required.

They were logically called samplers (from the French essamplaire which roughly means a work copied). 

In short, you were given (or maybe they were passed down in families) a pattern to follow and you progressed from there.

As books became more popular, it was not that long before the first pattern book was published (in Augsburg in 1523).

S4Others followed and by 1600 the sampler in its initial function was more or less redundant.

Books had had the impact that the internet has had on our everyday lives today.

But although without a job our friend the sampler was not gone and forgotten.

 

They retained a use for teaching girls the various sewing techniques which would help them in later life.

There were items such as darning samplers and sewing samplers which, as their name implies, were useful when making clothes or just committing repairs to others.

Earlier samplers were nothing like the ones we see in frames today. They were for the most part long and narrow (rather like a margin on an essay) and to some extent, were used for this purpose.

They were working items and it was not until the eighteenth century that samplers began to change their shape.

 

 They ceased to be long and narrow and became square. Their content was changing as well. Samplers were often used to record events (whether they be good or bad) within families and quite often celebrated God. S5

When visiting the V&A (which has a fantastic collection of samplers) I have found slightly later ones which contain moral verses and the like.

 

Poems began to appear and representations of birds and trees and houses to name but a few were to be found.

Celebrations of the monarchy and letters of the alphabet were also seen, the latter having a practical use as many people were quite illiterate.

Obviously, techniques changed and to some extent the quality of the materials used, but overall samplers stayed the same.

For some reason, nineteenth century samplers continue to attract my interest, although I have a great admiration for earlier samplers which I have seen in various museums in the UK.

I think my interest stems from the social history of the items. A great number of samplers made in the nineteenth century were executed by younger women as part of their education.

One has only to visit the Hungerford Arcade to see how exquisite these items are. The dexterity in the fingers of these young ladies is astonishing to say the least. 

The hours and days they must have spent on their samplers do not warrant calculation.

This is the attraction of samplers to me and I believe this attraction is shared by many others as samplers do not seem to remain in the Arcade for very long.

The Victorian samplers also act as family diaries recording (as I have previously noted) births, deaths and marriages.

They remind me of Victorian family Bibles which quite often retain these records.

Some are incredibly sad, a living record of their creation.

 

S1In a reference book I am reading, the author mentions a Martha Grant who appears to have started a sampler at the age of ten in 1833. This date is enclosed in a cartouche on the left hand side of the work.

 

But opposite there is a second cartouche which records her date of death which was on the 31st of October 1834.

 

Obviously, she could not have added the latter detail and one wonders whether Martha actually started the sampler as the technique is constant throughout.

Maybe the sampler was created by her sister or her mother in memory of Martha, this is hard to determine..

It is a mystery of time which will not be resolved.

At the time of writing (July 2015), there are a couple of lovely Victorian samplers in the Arcade that you can admire even if you do not purchase them. If my memory serves me correctly, one of them dates from 1821 and although not as tragic as Martha’s sampler, it is incredibly interesting and one feels that they are looking at life nearly two hundred years ago.

Queen Victoria would have only been two and the poets Shelley and Byron would have been at the height of their powers.

Poor Keats would have been in Italy in search of a respite in his terrible disease.

But somewhere in the United Kingdom, a young lady ( I cannot remember her name) would have been working on a sampler maybe as an education or maybe for her complete pleasure.

Little would she have known that her delicate work would be for sale in our small West Berkshire town in 2015.

As with Martha, this young craftswoman has faded into history leaving very few clues. 

That is the fascination for me, the obscurity of time. Each time I see a Victorian sampler I think of its creator and admire the beauty of their work.

 

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This said, some samplers from the period are charmingly eccentric in their presentation. You often find capital letters in the middle of words and very occasionally misspellings. I saw a lovely one in Dorchester about twenty years ago where there were a large number of spelling mistakes in a simple prayer (God grace, His keapimg etc etc).

 

 

 

I am sure that young Emma Simpson (I remember her name clearly to this day) was either dyslexic or was just rather bad at spelling or was doing the sampler as a punishment and was totally disinterested.

The overall presentation was charmingly chaotic and I wish that I had purchased the sampler at the time.

But I was on my way to Weymouth Sands and to have had a sampler plus two children in tow would have not been practical.

It was also raining at times that day and we spend a number of hours in nearby Preston drinking endless cups of tea.

I should have taken the plunge as the dealer was asking a very fair price for the item.

I will buy a Victorian sampler one day.

I will find the right one which attracts me instantly and I will behave foolishly with my wallet. But not for now.

Price wise, as I have already noted, you can expect to pay a good price for a Victorian sampler (I have not seen any created before 1800 for sale for many years).

If you budget around one hundred pounds then I think you will find an acceptable example to purchase. This said, you can pay a lot less or a lot more.

The cheapest sampler that I have seen recently was one that was created in 1927 which was a bargain at twelve pounds.

It was not as ornamental as the Victorian samplers but was a fine work.

In Henley recently, I found a rather crudely worked sampler dating from 1864 for sale for twenty-eight pounds which was good value.

It is a matter of searching around.

 When you find the sampler that really attracts, you will buy it even if it is a little out of your range. 

If I was successful with my lottery ambitions then I would start a museum for samplers for future generations to enjoy, from Miss Simpson’s mischief to the most exquisite Victorian workings. 

I think this would be fun and would inspire people to pursue this art which still has a following but in my view is a little under the radar at present.

But I may be wrong and happily so.   

 

 

Stuart Miller-Osborne

 

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Hungerford Arcade Russell Has Arrived

Sarah's Baby - RussellHungerford Arcade owners, Adrian and Hazel, managers, staff and stallholders send their congratulations and very best wishes to Arcade stallholders, Daniel and Sarah Cordory on the birth of their son Russell, weighing in at 7 pounds 13 ounces at 2.56 am on 26th July.

Mummy and baby doing very well.  Daddy needs a sleep (after wetting the baby’s head – of course!)

 

 

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Hungerford Arcade Jewellery Valuation Day Tomorrow

 25th July 2015 Free Jewellery Valuation Day

10.00 am – 3.00 pm

 

Frances Jewellery Valuation Day July 2015Hungerford Arcade stallholder, Frances Jones is holding one of her very popular Jewellery Valuation Day’s here at the Arcade on Saturday, 25th July from 10.00 am to 3.00 pm. Frances is very well known for her expertise in jewellery and precious stones, i.e. diamonds, which are one of her specialities.  So, ladies and gentlemen, do come along and bring all your jewellery with you for your free valuation.

 

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Hungerford Acade – J’adore Hungerford!

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Is this hungerford or an Italian Piazza?

As I walked down Hungerford High Street to open up the Arcade this morning, I was met with the smell of freshly baked croissants, sizzling crepes and perfectly ripe summer fruits.  The High Street had been taken over by a bustling Continental Street market and although I knew it was going to happen, I didn’t expect it to be quite so big.

 

It wouldn’t be a French Market without Garlic

 

The weather really turned out for the occasion too with the sun beating down like it also believed we were actually in the south of France! 

 

 

 

 

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Every different type of food you can imagine, from cured meats, delicious stinky cheeses and oven fresh baguettes, to huge pans of paella, new potatoes in tomato sauce and chicken provencal.  All right on the doorstep of Hungerford Arcade.

 

 


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We have to thank Danni from the Town and Manor for putting it all together and we will let you all know when the next one will be.

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Hungerford Arcade Mr. Peanuts

Mr Peanuts - July 2015 Mr. Peanuts with owner, Forge July 2015At Hungerford Arcade, we just love animals and every now and again, a four legged friend comes in and introduces him/herself.  Mr. Peanuts came in with his owner, Forge, and immediately wanted to make friends with everyone.  One customer totally fell in love with Mr. Peanuts (who was, of course, lapping it up).

 

Forge keeps biscuits in his pocket and gave a few of us one each to give to Mr. Peanuts.  You do not have to say anything to him.  Show him the treat and he will hold his leg up to shake your hand.  Then, when he has eaten the biscuit, he sits right up and waves a thank you.  He is an amazing boy and very polite.

Mr. Peanuts can come and visit us any time he likes – he can even bring Forge with him – if he would like. 

 

For all the latest news, go to our Newsletter page.

 

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Friends of Hungerford Arcade: An evening with Ken Haddock

If you’re looking for a good night out on Monday 20th July, look no further!  Ken Haddock is a talented singer songwriter from Belfast.  He is a good friend of Unit 47 stallholder, Philippa Harper.  Philippa has arranged for Ken to play a live acoustic set at the New Greenham Arts Centre in Newbury and by all accounts, it’s a night not to be missed!

Ken has been writing and performing for more than 15 years and is an institution in hKen+Haddock+Empire+04is home town of Belfast, Northern Ireland.  His songs have been described by song-writing legend, Bruce Cockburn, as “Subtle and beautiful, delivered as the are with fine singing and guitar work.”

An acoustic set will truly showcase Ken as a songwriter and singer.  It promises to be a very special performance.

For tickets contact the Corn Exchange Box Office on 0845 5218 218.

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Hungerford Arcade Moonraker Canal Boats

Joe and Sophie Moonraker Canal BoatsHungerford Arcade co-owner, Adrian Gilmour had a fun time when Joe and Sophie came into the shop to buy some china.  Joe and Sophie own Moonraker Canal Boats, “Five star cruising on the Kennet and Avon Canal” .  

The canal boats are fabulous and have wonderful names.  There is ‘Medusa’, ‘Moonbeam’, ‘Moondance’, ‘Moonshadow’, ‘Moonlight’ and new for this year is ‘Moonshine’.

 

We look forward to welcoming Joe and Sophie back to the Arcade in the near future.

 

You can find Joe and Sophie’s website at www.moonboats.co.uk

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