They have always been a favorite. When we are at the county fair, it's the only ride I must go on!
(Sometimes I am the oldest person on it - Hubby just pretends he doesn't know me)
:o)
Some Carousel Definitions
Coney Island Style - a
carving style primarily represented/defined by the works of Illions,
Carmel, Looff and
Stein and Goldstein. The Coney
Island style is associated with very fanciful or
spirited horses/menagerie
animals, many of which had wild,
flowing manes and highly decorated trappings, often with flowers or
jewels.
Philadelphia Style - a
carving style primarily represented/defined by the works of Dentzel,
Muller, and
the Philadelphia Toboggan Company
(PTC). The Philadelphia style is associated with very realistic-looking
horses/animals, who normally were
carved with very lifelike poses and expressions.
Country Fair Style - a
carving style primarily represented/defined by the works of Dare,
Armitage, Herschell,
Spillman, and C.W. Parker. The
Country Fair style is associated with smaller, very stylized horses that
were intended
to be transported from place to
place and not installed on permanently-placed carousels.
Outside Row - The
outermost ring of any carousel contains the largest and most decorated
figures. This
was because the outside row is the
one most easily seen by spectators - so the horses intended for the
outside row were the
ones most heavily decorated.
Middle- and inside-row horses rarely show all the beautiful carving
detail that an outside-row
horse carries.
Romance Side - The
most highly-decorated side of a carousel horse. Most carousel horses,
especially outside-row
horses, carried much more decoration
on the side of the horse that was going to be seen by the public than
on the side that
faced towards the center of the
carousel. On American carousels, the Romance Side is on the right side
of the horse
- on English carousels, it is on the
left. The reason for this is the difference in rotation direction
between American
and English carousels.
Menagerie Figure - Any
carousel animal that was not a horse. Some popular menagerie figures
were
tigers, lions, bears, deer, pigs,
goats, giraffes, rabbits, and cats. Some mythical creatures like the
sea monster and
hippocampus (front half of a horse
and back half of a fish) were also found on carousels and would also be
considered menagerie
figures.
Jumper - describes
a horse/figure that has all four feet off the carousel platform.
Jumpers are normally
the 'moving' horses on a carousel
(either suspended from the overhead or attached to a mechanism from
underneath).
Another term sometimes used for a
horse with all four feet off the platform is galloper.
Prancer - describes
a carousel horse/animal that has the two back feet on the platform, and
two front feet in
the air. Prancers would most often
be found on the outside row of a carousel, though they were not as
common as the
jumpers or standers.
Stander - describes a horse/animal that has either three or all four feet touching the platform. Outside-row
animals are often standers which do not move up and down.
Stargazer - describes a head position where the nose is pointing skyward - towards the stars.
Lead Horse - the
'number one' horse on a carousel. The lead horse is usually the most
decorated one on
the outside row, and sometimes
carried the markings or initials of the manufacturer somewhere in its
trappings.
Rounding Board - the
decorative boards that are placed on the upper portion of the outside
of the carousel,
below the canopy, and often carved
and brightly painted. The rounding boards hide the mechanical workings
of the carousel.
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Source: ww.carouselfigures.com/id250.html
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A Charlie "horse" !!
:o)
Great video. Lots of people pretend they don't know me. :-)
ReplyDeleteAnd ~groan~ at "Charlie horse"
See the pic I just sent in email.
That duplicating machine is something else! Could have used that when I used to make wooden toys. It would have saved a LOT of time!
Delete