TIN TOY MUSEUM
IN YOKOHAMA, JAPAN
G'day folks,
I've included a few collections and museums on this blog but here is something different. Yep, more tin toys than you can shake a clapping monkey at.
A random walk through the narrow residential streets of Yokohama can
often lead to unexpected discoveries. Like stumbling on an unassuming
little house that’s a toy museum, home of one of the world’s largest
vintage tin toy collections.
The toys range from the 1890s through the 1960s, a kind of “golden age” for tin toys. Most of them were made in Japan, and all were amassed by Teruhisa Kitahara, the author of several books on vintage toys and one of the world’s preeminent collectors. Kitahara has been hunting down tin toys and wind-ups since the 1970s, and the examples on display in his little museum are all part of his personal collection.
The museum, which includes a small shop where you can buy some tin toys for yourself, was opened to the public in 1986. It became a way for Kitahara to share his spinning acrobats, chiming monkeys, toy planes, and mini railroads for all toy fans. There are some quirks in the collection too, like the Creature from the Black Lagoon staring out at all the toys from a glass case on the floor. Maybe he’s the security guard.
Clancy's comment: Yep, shake, rattle and roll.
I'm ...
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