Dummy records used in window displays.
Posted: Sat Dec 19, 2015 12:41 pm
Real records were prone to warping in the heat of a window display, so some record manufacturers issued imitation records to dealers made of cheap materials such as cardboard. They were pressed from blank matrixes and had normal labels affixed to them. The earliest reference I can find to these products is from the German branch of The Gramophone Company in 1908.
This late 1920's example by Columbia came my way quite recently and must have fooled someone in the past, as the scratches suggest that they attempted to play it!
Clapham and Dwyer were music hall comedians, and the picture shows them (Clapham on the left and Dwyer on the right) outside a theatre where they were performing in about 1936. Clapham's car is a Talbot Ten Sports Tourer and Dwyer's is an earlier Talbot, possibly a 75 of about 1934.
This late 1920's example by Columbia came my way quite recently and must have fooled someone in the past, as the scratches suggest that they attempted to play it!
Clapham and Dwyer were music hall comedians, and the picture shows them (Clapham on the left and Dwyer on the right) outside a theatre where they were performing in about 1936. Clapham's car is a Talbot Ten Sports Tourer and Dwyer's is an earlier Talbot, possibly a 75 of about 1934.