Copy of `Antique Toys Toy Glossary`
The wordlist doesn't exist anymore, or, the website doesn't exist anymore. On this page you can find a copy of the original information. The information may have been taken offline because it is outdated.
|
|
Antique Toys Toy Glossary
Category: Hobbies and Crafts > Toys
Date & country: 11/09/2007, USA Words: 52
|
Animated toysAny plaything that simulates lifelike movements, whether powered or activated by spring, string, flywheel, rubberband, gravity, controlled movement of sand, gyroscopic mechanism, steam, electricity or batteries.
Artificial antiquingUsing burnt umber or a similar compound to disguise the fact that a toy has been repainted.
AutomataPlural of an automaton and refers to figures that are relatively self-operating and capable of performing multiple complex movements. Early examples feature doll-like bodies with composition or bisque heads.
Balance toysEarliest European example was 16th century French, although most widely known in the Orient. Swinging weight is usually above or below toy. Many popular paper-mache, roly-poly toys, circa 1900, were counterweighted with pebbles or buckshot.
Balance wheelMost often seen on horse-drawn vehicles, it is a small rotating or stationary wheel normally attached to a front hoof, or a shaft suspended between two horses, and which facilitates passage across the floor.
BaroucheOpen four-wheeled rig with driver's seat higher in front and two seats facing each other.
BisqueUnglazed porcelain, minus final firing and glazing.
BrakeTwo- and three-seated sporting rigs, four-wheeled and open; two-seated brake toys are especially prized and are known in only a few advanced collections.
BroughamElegant closed carriage with exterior driver's seat; named after Lord Henry Brougham, Scottish Leader of House of Commons, 1830-1840.
Carpet runnersTransport or other moving toys used out of their proper medium (i.e. tin or cast iron trains with smooth rims rather than grooved wheels, that did not run on tracks but were usually hand-propelled).
Cast-iron toysMade of molten gray high-carbon iron, hand-poured into sand-casting molds; usually cast in halves then mated and bolted or riveted as one. More elaborate versions incorporated interlocking, nickel-plated grills, chassis, bumpers, people, and other accessories.
ChasingProcess of engraving or embossing to decorate a toy or bank.
Clockwork mechanismMade of machined brass and steel and used to animate toys for as long as thirty minutes as interlocking gears move to uncoil spring . Produced as a drive system for toys by clock makers beginning in 1862 and ending about thirty years later in the Northeastern United States, most notably in Connecticut.
Composition toysMaterial may be wood or paper pulp, sawdust and glue, molded into various shapes and painted.
CrazingAging lines that run through the paint on vintage toys and banks distinguishing them from new examples.
D.R.G.M.Often mistaken for a manufacturer's mark, the initials stand for Deutsches Reichs Gebrauchmuster (translation: in-use model).
Die-castingMethod of mass-producing, under great pressure, molten zinc and white-metal alloys into permanent molds. Sharp clean detail can be achieved. Die-cast toys were very inexpensive and generally found in the five-and-dime emporiums.
DribblerNickname for British, solid brass, steam-powered toy locomotives made from the 1840's to the turn of the century; so called because they sometimes left a trail of water deposited from a steel cylinder.
Drive wheelAttached to piston rod that transmits energy from power source, as on toy locomotives.
DRPOSRAn acronym indicated French patent registry.
ElastolinA type of composition material from Germany usually molded around wire supports and which had a delicate survival rate.
FlatsTwo-dimensional lead soldiers with engraved decorations.
Floor runnerSee Carpet runners.
Friction wheelA central inertia wheel, also known as a fly-wheel, activated by spring in rear wheels to set toy in motion. American toys utilized a cast-iron friction wheel ; Europeans used cast lead. Friction toys were popular from 1900 to the early 1930s.
GigA sporting two-wheeled vehicle, deemed too high off the ground for safe pleasure driving, often used to exercise a trotting horse.
Gilded (or gilt)Covered with a thin layer of gold or gold substitute. The paint usually contains powdered metal.
Hansom cabPopular covered, fast-moving two-wheeler for transporting one or two passengers; the driver controlled reins from a platform at rear of cab.
Hauberk ('ho-bark)A tunic of chain mail worn as defensive armor in the 12th to 14th centuries. Term used with militariana.
Hollow castAlso known as slush cast, whereby molten lead alloy is poured into mold, which is then inverted leaving a thin layer of cooling metal adhering to its surface. Pot metal toys, as they are commonly called, tend to have less definition and are more fragile than die-cast toys.
Horse-drawn terminologyThese descriptions apply to toy replications of rigs from the 1880s and 1890s in Europe and the United States.
JapanningA decorative technique that included several layers of paint finished with a coat of lacquer; commonly applied on early American and European tin. In France, a cheaper dying method was used whereby a varnish paint mix was burned on in alcohol, then baked, achieving a thin, hard translucence.
JobberA purveyor of goods manufactured by others; Ives, for example, manufactured toys as well as marketing those of other firms. George Borgfeldt of New York City, obtained manufacturer's rights for certain toys and then sub-contracted their production. Butler Brothers and Selchow & Right were major jobbers.
Landau (Bavaria, Germany)Enclosed carriage with divided top that can be thrown back or let down and raised seat for driver.
Lithographed tinThe process was introduced to toys in the 1880's whereby various colors and detail were printed on flat sheets of metal by a lithographic press; the toys were subsequently formed by tools and dies.
Living picturesLithographed paper on cardboard-jointed figures against colorful backdrop and enclosed in a glass-covered framed wooden box. Clockwork activated. Popular toy in Europe in second half of 19th century. In the United States, A. Schoenhut produced over twenty variations.
Married partsMating of two parts of a toy that did not originally belong together thus down-scaling it in desirability.
Nickel-platingTechnique for coating cast-iron or steel toys with molten nickel to prevent rusting and enhance appearance.
Patent dateIf the patent number appears on the toy or on the box it came in, one can get a good approximation of the year any U.S. toy from 1860 to date was manufactured. German toys produced after 1890 usually bear patent dates.
PatternPrototype of the piece ultimately to be manufactured; usually of bronze or glass, sometimes lead; when pressed in the sand it creates a mold. Pattern mechanical banks are highly prized.
PhaetonAny of the various high, four-wheeled, graceful open carriages; also a type of touring car. The more fragile appearing spider phaeton often featured a rumble seat for coachman.
PlastronMetal breastplate worn under the haubach; also quilted pad worn in fencing. Term used with militariana.
Registering banksMechanical banks that visually indicate the cumulative total of coins received.
Sand toysGraphically appealing and ingenious toys of lithographed paper and wood in which a complex mechanism, powered by shifting sand, provides animation. Popularized by the French, Italians, and Germans as early as the 17th century, they were usually in a glass-encased frame. In the 1850's, one of the earliest United States toy makers, The Tower Guild of South Hingham, Massachusetts, produced wood and tinplate examples featuring chutes and paddle wheels to cause jointed figures to perform.
Semi-mechanical bankA bank that performs a mechanical function, but is independent of coin activation, as with a mechanical.
Sheet metalA toy material that is rolled into a thin plate made of brass, copper and, in the case of most toys, steel. First toy usage in the United States dates back to 1895.
Short strideTerm applied to Barclay toy soldiers because its marching figures' feet were cast close together.
SolidsThree-dimensional figures usually referring to lead soldiers.
Spring-drivenStamped tinplate gears activate by a spring uncoiling on what are popularly known as toy wind-ups. Actually, they wind down after two to three minutes. Usually a key does the rewinding; in the case of Kingsbury, a flanged cover on a patented, sealed round housing must be turned; a lever activates certain spring-driven toy banks. Tin wind-ups date back to the 1890s.
Still bankA bank with no moving parts.
Tab-and-slotApplied to tin toys wherein two parts are mated, and small flaps on one half are inserted into corresponding narrow slots of the other half, then bent to secure the connection.
Tally-hoPosh jolly country outing or to the hunt and races rigs carrying as many as twelve passengers inside and atop the vehicle.
Wind-upsA term often used interchangeably for both clockwork and spring-driven toys; the former offers superior quality and length of activation. Thirty minutes versus the two to three minutes for the coil or barrel spring mechanism.