Skip to main content

This Terrifying Rattle Kept Kids Busy In The 1930s

This Terrifying Rattle Kept Kids Busy In The 1930s

Who in their right minds would think that it would be alright to give something like this to a kid? During the 1930s, it was the sort of thing that children were given to entertain them and keep them busy. Yes, it did not matter if it was a choking hazard that freaked them out. The rattles were made using lucite, which meant that they were good for teething regardless of how scary they might look like. In that era, toys were hard to buy. For one thing, the country had been going through the Depression, and these things were expensive! The cheaper alternatives were made with corn cob or cloth.

This Terrifying Rattle Kept Kids Busy In The 1930s

This Terrifying Rattle Kept Kids Busy In The 1930s

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

An Incredible Photo Of A Tree Growing Out Of A Piano

An Incredible Photo Of A Tree Growing Out Of A Piano Take a look at this piano tree – no, we promise you that this was not photoshopped. Could someone have dropped a piano in the woods and then let this tree crack through the instrument? Maybe the piano was sawed in half and then arranged around the tree. This was discovered in the woods close to the California State University, Monterey Bay. The truth was that a college student by the name of Jeff placed the instrument around the tree. We are sure that it took a lot of hard work on his end! Sadly, you cannot go looking around for it since the piano has since been removed from the tree. An Incredible Photo Of A Tree Growing Out Of A Piano

An Ottoman Supply Train Of The Hejaz Railway In The Desert

An Ottoman Supply Train Of The Hejaz Railway In The Desert There were a lot of incredible feats of bravery that happened during the Great War. One of the most famous ones was that of T.E. Lawrence, better known as Lawrence of Arabia. He had been posted in the Middle East in 1917 when he started to topple the trains serving the Ottoman supply chain with a crew of Arabs. When the war came to a close, they had destroyed so much railroad and trains that they could no longer be used. Instead of moving the vacated trains, the Turkish people just abandoned them there. An Ottoman Supply Train Of The Hejaz Railway In The Desert

This 16th Century Boxwood Miniature Was Made In The Netherlands

This 16th Century Boxwood Miniature Was Made In The Netherlands This wooden box carving was made so perfectly that it blows our mind! Each detail is so intricate, and every piece seems like it would take an entire lifetime to accomplish. According to researchers, box carvings such as this one we’re meant to be status symbols used by wealthy Europeans 500 years ago. You will find religious scenes from the bible and depictions of life for various classes. Here was what art historian Eve Kahn said about it: “The works can be so rich that individual feathers are visible on angel wings, and dragon skins are textured with thick scales. Crumbling shacks are shown with shingles missing from their gabled roofs. Saints’ robes and soldiers’ uniforms are trimmed with nearly microscopic representations of buttons and embroidery, as well as jewelry and rosary beads.” This 16th Century Boxwood Miniature Was Made In The Netherlands