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Mitchell's Mobile Shop 4 x 500 piece puzzle box set
Puzzle Number: G5040

CA$24.95   |   In Stock
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Puzzle Description

Long before families shopped online, Derek Mitchell's wonderfully evocative paintings were just the answer. Families in the decades from the 1920's to the 1960's were not as mobile as they are today and if you lived in a village, it wasn’t that easy to get into the nearest town to do your shopping. Mitchell’s Mobile Shop (G5040) provided groceries, fresh fruit and vegetables almost to your door! The puzzle box measures 41 x 29 x 5 cms and each of the four puzzles when complete measures 49 x 34 cms. This 4 puzzle box set is a fantastic value and worth the investment.

There were all sorts of vendors plying their wares from small, and not so small, vans. There would be fishmongers and tool sharpening services on four wheels. In the puzzle entitled Down the Aisle, you can see all the old brands some of which are still available today: Bovril, Lyons tea, PG Tips, Cadbury and Saxa salt; not to mention the huge glass jars full of teeth rotting sweets. Yum!

There were even mobile libraries that would visit on a weekly basis. We even had periodic visits from a foreign sounding man on a bicycle with reams of Spanish onions draped over the bike's handlebars. I was told he cycled up from Spain. That seems quite far to come to sell some onions. I heard he was actually an escaped convict from Barlinnie trying to make a few pounds.

We sometimes had snow in our Glasgow neighbourhood and one year the street was particularly treacherous. I called the local authority and sure enough about an hour later a large truck with pink salt appeared. It barrelled down our street and drove off without one single shovelful of salt being spread. Ah, the good old days.

Mobile shops, like the red telephone box which you would see everywhere, have all but disappeared. Of course we shouldn't forget the one mobile food shop that's still going strong. It's a shop you hear long before you see it. Guess what it is? It's the ice cream van. Those guys never quit. Why do we love ice cream? Perhaps it's those ingredients: sugar, cream (fat) and fruit. A no brainer, as they say. Ice cream (without the cream) has been around for over two thousand years and ice plus fruit flavouring was available as a treat back in Ancient Greece when ice was transported down from the mountains into Athens. Of course cheap electrical refrigeration solved the ice transport problem and we have been dying for an ice cream since.

This set of four 500 piece jigsaw puzzles allows you to recreate a range of unique scenes. As with all Gibsons jigsaws, the beautifully illustrated pieces are made from the highest quality 100% recycled board and are therefore a pleasure to work with again and again.

***All orders shipped from Canada Puzzles are packed in custom fitted, heavy duty cardboard boxes and are fully insured against loss or damage.***

About Trevor Mitchell

Trevor Mitchell began his career as a designer of brochure and advertising material at a London advertising agency after leaving Bradford Art College in 1979 with a diploma in Art & design. A few years later he returned to his native West Yorkshire and in 1986 was made redundant, when the design studio he was working for went into liquidation.

This was the moment that Trevor's life changed and he took the first steps towards becoming a self-sufficient artist. However, through the combination of raw talent and dogged Yorkshire persistence his paintings started to get notices.

The first breakout came when Trevor was asked to do some paintings of local West Yorkshire scenes for two calendars. Various other commissions followed, including a collection of pictured for greeting cards.

The next and most important development in Trevor's career came with the publication of his paintings as prints. One of the many publishers that Trevor has made contact with asked him if he could produce some illustrations depicting farming with steam. Trevor was delighted to accept the challenge, he had always had a fascination with steam traction and the paintings were very successful.

Following this, commission came in at a pace. His paintings for the Danbury Mint have been hugely successful including a series of pictures based on the women's Land Army of the second war.

Today, the subject matter of Trevor’s paintings is wide and varied, including farming scenes, tractors, vintage vehicles, railways and World War II aircraft.

Trevor is married with two children and lives in Shipley, West Yorkshire.

Other Puzzles by Trevor Mitchell



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