
How dull life looked in monochrome. My old photographs are all black and white, including my christening. I expect my family heirloom gown was white, but I’ve no idea what colours my relatives were dressed in and there’s no one left who would remember. I can understand why my grandchildren might believe there was once a world without color. My dad, a keen photographer, though he often forgot his camera, preferred color slides and I have his collection from the late 1950s until he passed away in the mid 1980s. I love the early ones. Memories of my childhood in a vibrant, colourful Lancaster. Through these, I will always know that my favorite dress, on holiday in Jersey c1961, was pale turquoise.
Television was black and white. Ours was rented, probably from Rediffusion, or similar. I think most people rented their television in those days. The first time I saw color television was at the home of family friends around Christmas in 1969. I thought it was rubbish until told it wasn’t working properly and was being returned. We were watching a chat show, long before Michael Parkinson, but that sort of thing. Wide, horizontal stripes of separate primary colours slowly climbed the screen over and over again. I thought that was it, Colour TV, what a swizz. We got one the following year, rented, I expect. Lots of programmes were still broadcast in monochrome and those that weren’t were advertised ‘In Colour’, it was such a major thing. I remember being impressed seeing my favorite cartoon, The Flintstones, in color for the first time. It was amazing and I was at least fifteen years old.
I don’t think I have an absolute favourite color. It depends on the mood I’m in and if I’m choosing clothes or home décor. Our new bathroom, well, two years old but still new, is beautiful, high-gloss white with tangerine towels and mats. Perfect.
Colours are important. School uniforms, sports teams, businesses and retail outlets are all instantly recognisable by their colours and logos. When I went to high school, I wanted to wear the distinctive Air Force Blue uniform of Collegiate Girls Grammar, but I’d failed my 11+ so that was that. Navy blue for a disappointed me.
I found this amusing, colourful poem with no known author,
Five little crayons
coloured a scene.
Yellow, blue,
orange, red and green.
“Look,” said
Yellow, “My sun is bright!”
Blue said, “Great!
My river’s just right”
Orange said,
“Flowers! I’ll draw something new”
Red said, “Great,
I’ll add some too!”
“Sigh,” said Green,
“I’m tired of trees,
And grass and
bushes and tiny leaves.
I think I’ll draw a
big green cloud!”
“A big green cloud
should be allowed!”
The crayons all
smiled and didn’t think twice.
A big green cloud
sounded rather nice!
Anonymous
Thanks for reading, Pam x
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