Every collector ends up with a few 'doubles' , I'd like my doubles/extras to go to a good home. If you can see a push up you would like then I'd be happy to swap, just let me know!
If you've found yourself on this page...welcome!I'm an English girl living in Melbourne , Australia hence the name Pomsie (Pommy Australian) I suspect I might be one of the first to call myself a Pomsie?!Why Push Puppets? About 2 years ago I found a small black cat push puppet on my shelf and thought to myself 'I loved these when I was a kid', so I hunted out a few more! My partner felt I had discovered a hidden repressed passion which needed feeding so bought me a small yellow spotted dog from the local market, and so it began. Now I can't stop, it is a complete obsession. I've now discovered I am not alone, there is a small passionate little community out there of "Wakouwa, Push-Up Button Puppet, Collapsing Toy, Thumb Puppet, Wackelfigur, Wackelfiguren, Wackeltiere, Wackeltier, Drückmännchen, Drücktier, Drückerfigur, Drukfigur, Drukpoppetje, Mackaci Figurky, Pupazzi, Figurine en Boiscollector" collectors (this list is thanks to one of the best collectors out there...thanks Jane Coakeley)
Brief History of Push Puppets...
....where did they come from ? When were they first made? All Puppets in photos are from my own collection. Push puppets were first made in Switzerland by a wooden toy maker, Walter Kourt Walss in 1932. These articulated,wobbling toys were known as WAKOUWAS; taken from the first few letters of each of Walter's names! The dancing, wiggling toys are now known by many different names around the world .Photo : Wakouwa Champs early wooden base puppet.
Wakouwa Champs
The chap is a Kohner Howdy Doody character puppet, wooden body and plastic base (1950s)The term 'Push Button Puppets' was first adopted by an American toy making company in America, Kohner Brothers in 1947, buying the patent from the Swiss inventor Marty Meinard.
Kohner moved into producing plastic puppets in the 1960s.Picture:1960s Kohner's The Lone Ranger
In the 1970s Kohner starting produced Disney characters with Gabrielle: 1970s Pluto Push-up Puppet
Many companies followed the Wakouwa invention and the Kohner push puppets, making similar puppets around the world, including England where the company Tri-ang started producing tin bases and wooden tops! Photo Above: The Tri-ang Dog on Tin base (1940s)
Many smaller push ups were also made in Germany (mainly in the Erzgebirge region) , the Czech Republic, France and Italy.
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