14 February 2020

Blandford’s Painting Book of National Costumes


At some point in the 1950s the London publisher Blandford issued a series of colouring books devoted to European national costume (North-West, Southern, Central, and South-East Europe).  Each country has a coloured picture of a couple in traditional dress on one page, accompanied by some text describing the costumes, and opposite it a black-and-white version of the same picture the reader can colour in.  The books are unpriced but my two examples have 2/- (10p) in pencil on the cover.

Book no. 4, South-East Europe, was illustrated by S Horne Shepherd.  It comprises Yugoslavia, Rumania, Bulgaria, Albania, Greece, Sardinia and Turkey.  The Romanian picture is unusual in having a child with the man and woman, most only featuring adults.  The descriptions are rich in stereotype – the Romanian girl likes to run about barefoot in summer, the Bulgarian man is armed to the teeth with a long dagger, a pair of old pistols and ‘an ancient flintlock muzzle loader.’  There is nothing political of course, and the map on the back of the fourth book is based on the 1938 configuration of countries, showing Germany as a single entity.


The emphasis is very much on the peasant picturesque and it seems unlikely that by the 1950s costumes like those depicted in the books would have been much seen outside festivals.  The drawings play to an agrarian image of life in Continental Europe which may have shaped the attitudes of British children but was removed from the reality.  They evoke a place of bucolic contentment where little girls run about barefoot; exotic and colourful in contrast to grey post-war Britain.