Meet Judith Anne
#1
Meet Judith Anne
[ATTACH=CONFIG]571537[/ATTACH] Here is my sweet Featherweight, Judith Anne, named after the lady that sold her. She is a 1937. This lady had 7 of them and thought it was time to let someone else enjoy them. Oh happy day!!
#2
Super Member
Join Date: Sep 2015
Posts: 1,963
Does she have the art nouveau decored face plate? I am on the look for a 201 with the early type decor :- )
It's in nice condition, looks clean too. From pictures on the web I have noticed some 221s have less shiny finish, more of a silky smooth surface, and others have the very polished up shellac. I think they can dull down the shellac shine just a bit by rubbing the last layer with fine pumice powder. I'm not sure how they originally did it. Either way, what a lucky find, it's the cutest machine ever :- )
It's in nice condition, looks clean too. From pictures on the web I have noticed some 221s have less shiny finish, more of a silky smooth surface, and others have the very polished up shellac. I think they can dull down the shellac shine just a bit by rubbing the last layer with fine pumice powder. I'm not sure how they originally did it. Either way, what a lucky find, it's the cutest machine ever :- )
#10
Super Member
Join Date: Sep 2015
Posts: 1,963
I like those. I'm not sure there is a strict line between art nouveau and art deco; it's sort of the same thing, continous line of "style" from around 1890 up until the second world war, maybe a bit into the 50s in some areas; gradually getting simpler and more minimalistic. By then everybody who mattered hated everyting too swirly, classical, any hint of historical revival was out of the question. It was all an attempt to make a new world, distance themselves from the past. That's of course impossible and was largely a mistake in itself.
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