18.4.12

Shiba Productions fairytale books

(I've had this post queued up for ages. I'm in Vietnam! It's hot and mad and I am covered in infected bedbug bites and I have the flu. So glamorous! Pictures and things to come later.)

My mum and I are pretty mad book fiends, which must be in the blood as her family owned a bookshop/printing company in Wellington until a couple of decades ago. We're both especially obsessed with literature we loved when we were kids, which works for me because my mum kept every single one of her books from her youth. This means I was raised on more or less the same stuff as her- we're both absolute Enid Blyton and Laura Ingalls Wilder fangirls, but there is one amazing book that we both read until it literally fell apart. Mum's grandparents got it for her on a trip to the USA sometime in the 60s, and we both pored over it 30 years apart.




This amazing 3-D copy of Thumbelina was the greatest, scariest thing to me as a 6 year-old, and when we found it while cleaning out the garage, we embarked on a mission to find out more about them. A quick Google lead to tonnes of results, and it turns out we're not the only ones who were in love with this book- and there's a whole series! They were imported from Japan to the US in the 1960s. The 3-D imaging is called lenticular printing, and these books were published by Shiba Productions in the mid- to late- 1960s. This company was founded by Kihachirō Kawamoto, who was a stop-motion artist who also designed and animated puppets for television shows. The prints in these books are technically staged photographs of dolls, but their creator refers to them as puppets, because they 'act'. Magical. Some other studios made different editions of these 3-D puppet books and other lenticular literature, but the ones we love are the traditional fairytale ones, published by Golden Press.






Wall of info, compiled from lots of different sources for anyone who loves these holographic puppet storybooks books like we do. We had to pay through the nose for some of them on eBay and Amazon because it turns out they're pretty collectable, and it's rare to find them in still-readable condition. This is the collection so far- we're still missing a couple, but we're working on it, and The Little Mermaid is currently on its way to me. We bought a second copy of Thumbelina because the original one had been over-read by too many generations and was beyond repair. Something about these books is just ridiculously appealing to me- the hyper-saturated cartoony colours, the puppets that you can see were so lovingly crafted, the weird new way of presenting these familiar stories. I love the detail in the scenes, it's so careful and complex. Anyway. I hope someone else can derive as much weird pleasure as me from these photos.


9 comments:

  1. We had one of these when I was a kid. I'm sure my mom picked it up in some thrift shop. It was the Sleeping Beauty one and it was terrifying and amazing too! I think my sister probably still has it somewhere.

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  2. Hi Georgia, I have just posted your long promised parcel (!) Just wish I'd read this first because I've got a couple of these (and yes, they are scary) I could've included. Drats! Oh well another time...

    Sorry to read about your bedbug bites. Just make sure you don't bring any of the little darlings back to N.Z. with you! Yuk!

    I hope you like your little pressie, let me know when you receive it x

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  3. Oh and Georgia, if they don't fit feel free to give them to a friend (a very nice one) or flog them x

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  4. This is so sweet, I'd love a collecting hobby like this but think its too late to start and wouldn't know where!

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  6. We had HANSEL AND GRETL, well-worn by the time it got to us, but surely one of my first psychedelic experiences was DIVING INTO these pictures.
    Even the typography makes my eyes roll up in my head!
    I've got to google their LITTLE MERMAID now!!!!

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  7. hi, are you selling any of these?

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  8. hi, are you selling any of these?

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  9. Great post. I had the Emperor's New Clothes as a child in the early 70s in Taupo. I loved that book especially the heavy pages and the hologram cover. I couldn't stop looking at the cover. I even went on to get holographic pictures of animals as I got older, because I was so infatuated with that one book. Do you reckon kids of today would love them as much as we did? I'm a children's writer and I'd love to produce something like that but I'm not sure whether the infatuation was time-specific. I completely understand you buying the set. I have a huge collection of old children's books, especially ones with great illustrations.

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