Read: Mollie Clarke’s pictures

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If you like those ever so cute illustrations by Mabel Lucy Attwell then you may well like the children’s book illustrations by Mollie Clarke. She used to write ‘learning to read’ books for school children in the 1950’s and she illustrated them herself.

She did a set of books about Sally and her day at school, and another set about Andrew. The great thing about young children’s books is that they show you so much about what life was really like in those days. For young children everything is new so their books usually show what was familiar to them, and this is what makes the illustrations so charming.  These were the days when girls were brought up as girls, staying at home and being domestic, whereas the boys in the books were a lot more active and interested in cars and planes and making things on their work bench. Here is a selection of some of those pictures.

Fairy Queen MC

This is Sally, dressed up as the Fairy Queen.

cowboy MC

Andrew is dressed up as a cowboy.

Sally help mother MC

Domestic duties! Never too young to learn.

washing stuff MC

Sally needed to learn these words.

Sally has her lunch MC

Sally has her lunch.

Andrew's Bag MC

Andrew’s school-bag. A dentist’s nightmare.

skipping rope sally MC

Look at those navy knickers.

Goodnight Andrew MC

Andrew with his teddy.

pram and sally MC

Sally takes dolly for a walk.

scarecrow MC

 

Scarecrow

 

For Little Children MC

Mollie Clarke does cute animals too.

scooter MC

 

On a scooter

bear and sadcastles MC

Read: Diana annuals, the blonde years

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Back in the day when I was a fifteen year old teenager I didn’t have a boyfriend. My problem? I had short mousy brown hair. At least that was the conclusion I came to.  And the solution? It was obvious, I had to grow my hair and bleach it blonde. Well, it took me about eighteen months to grow it to a decent length, and then I took the plunge and bleached it. And it went green. I didn’t leave the bathroom, except to phone my friend’s dad who was a chemist. I can’t remember what he told me to do now, but it worked, or at least it got rid of the green and replaced it with a rather odd brown, and I didn’t get a boyfriend.

Why did I think that blonde hair would do the trick?  Coming across some old Diana annuals on eBay last year I realised why. In the mid 1960‘s blonde hair was a big deal. Take a look at my collection of Diana annual covers from 1965 top 1975.

Diana 65

Diana 66

Diana 67

Diana 68

Diana 69

Diana 70

Diana 71

Diana 72

Diana 73

Diana 74

Diana 75

As a collection they now look rather fetchingly retro, but back then I firmly believe they did me a lot of damage, or at least to my hair. Even now I’m acutely aware of how many blondes persist in all kinds of advertising, especially in hair salons of course, but disturbingly on birthday cards for little girls. Have you noticed that if they feature a girl on the card, she almost always has blonde hair? At least Disney has made an effort and features girls with hair of all colours, so thank you Disney for that. I often wonder if Princess Diana (born 1961) was given any of these annuals at Christmas. I bet she was.

Gentlemen prefer blondes copy