Bath Toy thumbnail 1
Bath Toy thumbnail 2
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This object consists of 2 parts, some of which may be located elsewhere.

Bath Toy

1970 (manufactured)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This is a bath toy in the shape of a fish designed by Patrick Rylands, designer of toys for Trendon Toys Ltd, Ambi Toys, Brio and others. Patrick Rylands had trained as a ceramicist at the Royal College of Art, and his love of sculptural forms combined with his interest in plastics technology led him to design smooth rounded plastic toys which were very easy for small children to handle. The fish is one of a group of toys by this designer which won the Duke of Edinburgh's Design Award in 1970.

Object details

Categories
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 2 parts.
(Some alternative part names are also shown below)
  • Bath Toy
  • Toy
  • Fish
  • Bath Toy
  • Toy
  • Fish
  • Box
Materials and techniques
Injection-moulded ABS, printed
Brief description
Fish shape bath toy, plastic, England, Trendon Toys Ltd., 1970
Physical description
A bath toy in the shape of a fish made from injection moulded A.B.S. (plastic). It has an internal ballast weight to ensure that the toy keeps upright in the water. The plastic is dark yellow; the eyes of the fish are indicated by a black spot within a black ring.
Production typeMass produced
Credit line
Given by Trendon Ltd.
Object history
Given to the Museum in 1970 by Trendon Ltd. [70/3079]
Subject depicted
Summary
This is a bath toy in the shape of a fish designed by Patrick Rylands, designer of toys for Trendon Toys Ltd, Ambi Toys, Brio and others. Patrick Rylands had trained as a ceramicist at the Royal College of Art, and his love of sculptural forms combined with his interest in plastics technology led him to design smooth rounded plastic toys which were very easy for small children to handle. The fish is one of a group of toys by this designer which won the Duke of Edinburgh's Design Award in 1970.
Collection
Accession number
MISC.42:1, 2-1970

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Record createdJanuary 13, 2004
Record URL
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