The Bristol Magazine September 2021

Page 37

Chris Yeo PROOFED.qxp_Layout 7 25/08/2021 16:07 Page 1

ANTIQUES

Expert opinion ...From Chris Yeo, valuer at Clevedon Salerooms, curator of the Ken Stradling Collection in Bristol and an expert on BBC’s Antiques Roadshow

Star sign

N

uts! Whole hazelnuts. Cadbury’s take them and they cover them in chocolate.” Every now and then an advert comes along that you just can’t get out of your head. For readers of a certain vintage, that opening slogan will be instantly recognisable (and I bet you’ve now got the tune resolutely stuck in your head). The TV adverts of my childhood, be they baker’s boys pushing bicycles up steep hills or Martian robots extolling the virtues of instant mashed potato, are a world away from today’s digital advertising, all kilobytes and pixels clamouring for attention in the ether. Both, however, are light years away from the promotional tools employed by businesses a century ago. From the late 19th century to the 1930s, the most widespread forms of advertising were enamel signs. Displayed on the soot-blackened walls of shops and railway stations the length and breadth of the country, their colourful artwork and snappy slogans proclaimed the superlative qualities of the wellknown brands of yesteryear – from Brooke Bond Tea and Huntley & Palmer biscuits to Lifebuoy soap and Brasso metal polish. Probably the best known is for Five Boys Chocolate. Made by Fry’s in Bristol, the chocolate bar was a mainstay of the nation’s sweet shops for nearly a century. The famous sign shows five images of the same boy going through the full gamut of emotions from tearful state of chocolate-less desperation to joyful realisation “It’s Fry’s”. Based on photographs taken in 1886, the boy featured was five-year-old Lindsay Poulton, the son of the photographer.

Many years later, when Lindsay was an old man, a newspaper tracked him down to see if he had any recollections of modelling for the legendary sign. Oh, indeed he had. Apparently his father had difficulty getting him to show the required degree of desperation and achieved the effect by tying an ammonia-soaked cloth around the boy’s neck! Happily, not all his memories of the day were so painful: Fry’s paid a staggering £200 (over £25,000 today) for the photographs. Nowadays an original Five Boys sign will set you back a great deal more than that–- around £3,000 in good condition. ■ • clevedonsalerooms.com; @chrisyeo_antiques (Instagram)

THEBRISTOLMAG.CO.UK

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SEPTEMBER 2021

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THE BRISTOL MAGAZINE 37


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GARDENING

10min
pages 88-101

ARCHITECTURE

6min
pages 74-75

INTERIORS

3min
pages 84-87

EDUCATION NEWS

28min
pages 60-73

BRISTOL SPORT

7min
pages 56-59

MYCOTECHNOLOGY

6min
pages 54-55

BRISTOL UPDATES

3min
pages 52-53

BREWERIES

8min
pages 48-49

RESTAURANT REVIEW

2min
pages 44-45

DARTS

3min
page 42

RECIPES

3min
pages 46-47

FOOD NEWS

4min
page 43

MOTORING

4min
pages 50-51

CYCLING

8min
pages 38-41

ANTIQUES

2min
page 37

WHAT’S ON

5min
pages 26-27

ARTS & EXHIBITIONS

16min
pages 28-35

FASHION

2min
pages 22-25

BOOKS

3min
page 36

ONE TO ONE

10min
pages 18-21

CITYIST

9min
pages 12-15

BARTLEBY

4min
pages 16-17

ZEITGEIST

3min
pages 10-11
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