Although I’ve been interested in vintage for absolutely years I’ve never really been drawn to the 1940s and WWII side of it until more recently, and a lot of that new found interest is due to Eden Camp. I’ve been to this museum before, I’m pretty sure I even posted about it, but honestly it’s probably my favourite museum in the whole world and I love going whenever I can.
Eden Camp was originally a Prisoner of War camp in North Yorkshire, and has since been turned into a WWII museum. Which I know sounds super boring, it certainly did to me the first time I went, but it just frames it in a way that I’ve never seen before. I worry how amazing it is and how it makes me feel can never come across in photographs, especially as I don’t know how to get across in words the profound effect it has on me either, so you’ll just have to trust me that ITS AMAZING!! Even more so than I can describe!
Because it’s based in a former Prisoner of War camp it gives the museum an authenticity that a lot of these kinds of places usually lack, but it’s surprisingly not somber, if anything it really brings the human element to what happened instead of it seeming so detached. It’s set across the original buildings, with each hut dedicated to a different aspect of wartime life with reconstructed scenes that even smell like 1940s Britain. One minute you’re wandering through a blacked out street, the next it’s the Blitz, then in another moment you're with evacuated children being loaded on to steam trains, or sheltering from the bombs on the London Underground. It’s so immersive that it’s hard not to feel swept up in it all and admire the lengths these people went through. I feel like most things about the war focus exclusively on the army or the horrors of the Holocaust, which is what’s always put me off as it feels a bit like an excuse for glorification of violence instead of empathy for what these people were actually put through, you know? And that’s exactly what Eden Camp doesn’t do. It covers all aspects of the war from the home front and how the people left behind were affected, as well as the wider picture of what was happening around the globe.
When you look at this stuff and the things that made up peoples lives and the way society was, it feels like such a huge difference to today. Like I know it was 80 years ago, but the world changed so very much just between 1940 and 1970, and 1970 doesn’t seem as long ago, you know? And yet it’s only 30 years apart. Which is the same equivalent as 1991 is to us today, and yet the difference between 1991 and 2021 doesn’t seem as vast as the differences between 1940 and 1970. It just really fascinates me how quickly and how much things changed, both in terms of social attitudes as well as more superficial things like how stuff was made and what was available to people. Like even when there was extreme rationing, things were still well made and expected to last and made of proper materials and the government took steps to ensure that no one was overcharged for these things. Like, can you even imagine???
I'm really into bears lately, and I love old carved stuff like this that looks handmade.
I've been admiring this painting for years! It used to be at another antiques place locally, now it's moved to here, and I swear I've been looking at it for about 6 years so it always makes me really happy to try and spot where they've hung it up this time. I'm going to be so disappointed when it sells.
I love old packaging design, and this iron was tiny. I did think about getting it as it would literally be perfect for travel, but it was super heavy which isn't airline friendly.
I've never seen canisters specifically for different types of sugar before.