 
Our links page is just beginning
Just click on an image and pay a visit to some wonderful people
And please email us about a site you love! |
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| Click on an icon to reach a site. (Use your browser's back button to return to this page.) |
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| Pollock's Toy Museum and Toy shop, created by David Johnson, is a must-see site: toy theatres, histories, galleries, portraits and it's all searchable. Lose yourself in the a world created by its eponymous founder who was born in 1856. |
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| Dorret and Rüdiger Koch have created "Invisius," a lovely site available in German and English. At least some of the pages are, with others under construction. But there's enough there to whet the appetite for more: introductory texts; contemporary reports; publishers; an extended biography. Can't wait to see more! |
Harry Oudekerk's "The Theatre at Fishmarket" is a wonderful site where you can download and build an antique pantomime book, "CindersElla" (above right); browse through his "Virtual Theater Museum;" and see his home theater. Harry always has something wonderful in store, so visit often! |
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| Gigi Sandberg's "Toy Theater Company" is a great site for toy theater lovers. You'll find pages on toy theater resources; enthusiasts; events; techniques; and guilds. And, should you be so inclined, discourses in Physics and Philosophy by Glen Sandberg. Who can ask for anything more? |
Fritz Kannik's love for the toy theater began in childhood, in Denmark. His site features Alfred Jacobsen sheets and play synopses like the "Chief of the Cønger," a thriller about the underground of 1658! You'll also find the incredible wave machine, and a nice list of books related to toy theater. |
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| Hanauer Papiertheatermuseuma small, sweet site, the Hanauer Paper Theater Museum features a beautiful Trentsensky theater (left) and a J.F. Schreiber Theodor Guggenberger classic (right). |
Go behind the scenes at Papiertheater Berlin. Regine Mahler features some very appealing old toy theatre engravings along with a nice essay, and displays could it really be?a nativity in one of her theater productions! Crechemania isn't alone, after all! |
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What does an award-winning costume maker and jewelry designer -- who began her career as a prop maker for the Royal Shakespeare Theater in Stratford, England -- do for an encore?
Move to Canada -- and specialize in "the creation of unique automata for the discriminating collector..."
You'll love Arline Smith's one-of-a-kind toy theaters.
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