The Workshop


Dad didn't keep a tidy workshop. Every once in a while, he'd decide to impose some order on the chaos, and move things around. But it was a lost cause - there was just too much stuff.

But what stuff it was: footballs, rugby balls (of course), cricket balls, softballs, baseballs, basketballs, bowling balls, roller skates, ice skates, rugby boots, running spikes, fishing rods, fishing knives, waders, nets, gaffes, starting pistols, antique guns, box cameras, brass lenses, telescopes, a truncheon, hamsters' cages, books on first aid, physical training, self-defence and even silent killing, stacks of old magazines, Practical Mechanics, Readers' Digest, Men Only*, Trout & Salmon, demijohns, jotters, drawing books, pencils, broken clocks and watches, dowelling, wood, hardboard, beaverboard, perforated zinc, drills, hammers, chisels, saws, a lathe, a treadle fretsaw, tins of paint, solidified paintbrushes, glue, paste, turpentine, methylated spirits, broken things of every kind and unidentifiable aborted projects. The Big Vice and the Wee Vice, naturally.

At tea time, Mum would tell one of us to 'give daddy a shout'. The options were: bellow from the bottom of the attic stair, shout at the ceiling just outside the bathroom, or go upstairs to the workshop and say "A shout".

The skylight was a heavy cast iron affair with rippled glass, and provided the only ventilation to the workshop and the printing room. It could get very hot and stuffy up there in summer. Originally there were two skylights, but as the second one was above a part of the attic that you could only reach by crawling under the work-bench and through a hole, when it rotted and started to leak it was taken away and the roof slated over.

If I had to pick one favourite thing from the workshop, it would have to be the box of framed paper pictures that changed with a light behind them. Some were night & day scenes. Others changed completely, from a pastoral scene to a palace. Only one was damaged beyond use, from before my time.

*Men Only, in the early fifties, was a small quarto publication, largely text, with articles on sport, motoring, travel, etc. Occasional issues would have a topless model photographed in black & white. The magazine was not what it became.

Comments

  1. I must say that despite your qualifier I can still remember the shock and confusion which accompanied Ewan's discovery of the stack of Men Only. Surely this wasn't Grandpa's type of thing! Later furtive investigations compounded the shock with a degree of disappointment as the contents were, as you describe, far from lurid. Still some of the first representations of breasts that I remember seeing though.

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  2. I thought of not mentioning the Men Only mags at all, but somebody would have drawn me up on the omission. I remember once, probably around 1970, Men Only and a couple more titles hit the headlines for being banned by W H Smith. Mum and Dad had a good laugh about it and suggested trying to sell off our old ones on the black market.

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  3. I really like these vignettes and have enjoyed 'The Workshop' several times. When will the next room appear?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hi Alan -
    The best laid schemes - originally I thought I'd manage one room a day, but other things always crop up. Thanks for the gentle goad. I'll get a new one out this evening, OK?

    ReplyDelete

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