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What is it? Quiz #380

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Hey, here you go! This is a car you all will recognise. We thought, give them some slack while we are packing our bags for China4C and many others are preparing for Hershey. So yes it is easy, but... but...  we want to hear exactly - we mean e-x-a-c-t-l-y what it is. Year, Make, Model and every detail added ... or left out which you can find. Don't know if this is of any help but the photos was shot March 1933, presumably in Germany. No more extra hints.

Just read the Rules under Read More and start looking, looking, looking. This may finally be your chance to win the infamous PreWarCar T-shirt. Results will be published next Saturday October 11.


A new generation is picking up the spanner!

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After our article about the new generation of pre-war car rescuers, we received a lot of response for the 2015 calendar (and you can still send in your photos to office@prewarcar.com).
A chap in his early thirties thought he was probably the youngest nutter in the hobby, but hey read about Tom Barrett. He writes: "I am a 14 year old enthusiast coming 15 this weekend. I am doing construction, sports, history and all the main subjects in Wolgarston high school in Penkride. The amazing fun family tradition started with my Great Grandad, Tommy Barrett.

He was a scrap man, scrapping the Rolls Royce Ghosts when they weren't as expensive, he used to drive a 1947 V8 flathead ford Thames. Next it is my Grandad, Anthony Barrett, who is a vintage and classic specialist with a big collection of vehicles, he also is a scrapman and mechanic. After it is my Dad Anthony Barrett jr with a ( edit. Bentley) 4 litre in a 4 and a half chassis, he is a mechanic like my Grandad. Next it is me, an enthusiast looking for a project. I caught the bug when I joined the Bentley club in 2008.

I have had an Austin 7 project before but after I put the chassis all together I found out it was too late for vscc trials.  I help my Dad with the Bentley when I'm able to, so I can build my knowledge of vintage and veteran I have read books like Bentley 50 years of Marque, the Vintage Years, Austin 7 specials bill Williams."

Thumbs up to you Tom! Looking forward to hear more from you in future.
 

Victorian Guernsey Number Plates? (upd. Edwardian / railway or real?)

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Antique Number Plates?

Rob Lawson sends the above photo of a set of antique plates. But is it car or bike? He writes: "My family and I are currently in the process of sorting through items from my late mother's estate. We have come across a pair of cast metal number plates bearing the # 435. We are assuming that they may be genuine early Victorian car registration plates." 

Editor: Well Rob, we must say that we personally never saw plates like these without any lettering, but we understand registrations without lettering and up to 5 digits were common on Guernsey since 1908. Soon enough somebody will jump in and explain what is the case.

Badge collector shares his life-long passion

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Badge collector shares his life-long passion.

Per Faxe lives in Denmark and the purchase of his first motoring lapel badge 40 years ago fuelled a passion which has grown into one of the greatest collections in the world. OK – you may think another man another collection. But I think he deserves more than that. As I read through the history on his website I am drawn into a subject I knew nothing about. We all have a lapel badge that discreetly announces our club or our car or our bike, but Per has 2000. There are also trays full of radiator badges, cap badges, race badges, club badges, mascots and of course advertising badges for oil, petrol, tyres and spark plugs.

If, like me, you started collecting stamps at school age you will remember the simple thrill of finding different stamps and taking such care sticking them on the pages. Per Faxe openly shares the emotion involved in forming his collection and it’s easy to see the painstaking care he has shown during the long hours spent researching, sorting and describing each item. “Since I started collecting in the early 1970's I have been chasing the Ellehammer badge (one of the automobile pioneers in Denmark). It took more than 30 years before I found it! I drove through half the country to pick it up.“  

Not only has he acquired individual badges at flea markets and autojumbles, he has bought other collections as they came up for sale. It seems Denmark is a nation of collectors and Per mentions two life-long collections of  Buster Keldor and Bent Mackeprang who started as boys and never stopped. Imagine the excitement (and the cost!) when Per added these important collections to his own. He particularly likes this Bugatti cap badge from Buster Keldor which was used to show at races. Other favourites on this page. You can read about how the badges are made and who made them – it’s worth learning about the history of Fattorini who still make badges and medals today under the guidance of the sixth generation family member. A sample stamp used in the badge pressing is pictured here.

We all like a quiz, so perhaps you can help solve the mystery about a unique item from Buster Keldor’s collection. An Austin brooch in silver with hallmarks for Birmingham 1916. Per thinks it was made for a lady – but who and for which occasion? Some duplicate badges are for sale, also automobilia, and are priced and photographed individually.

The collection will be sold as an entire unit. If you are interested, please ask for the price for the whole collection. Click here for contact information.
 

(Text Robin Batchelor pictures courtesy Per Faxe)
 

 

The most desirable brass era Toy at $500 only?

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Arguably one of the most successful supercars of the pre WWI era is the Mercer Raceabout. Being the iconic brass time race car it is also the daddy-toy which has been replicated most. In sizes ranging from Matchbox to scale 1:32, to scale 1:16 and yes of course 1:1 replicas as well. But in the end you want to go beyond your fantasyyou only want the real thing... It may be clear that it takes an expert car historian to tell you which ones are fully authentic and which ones aren't. And no wonder the price of the real-real thing - if ever available - is deep into the 7 digit numbers. When you started saving 50 years ago you most probably will never be able to buy one. So you were either born rich or you are a Warren Buffett adept or you bought this 1912 Type 35C Raceabout sixty years ago. At least that weas what David Uihlein  did. He paid US$ 500 in cash (check the receipt) for the car which was in need for a lot of TLC. Back then already he joined the exclusive (and small!) club for owners of Mercer Raceabouts. Today it is nearly impossible to find or buy a Mercer Raceabout. The expected hammerprice is between 2 and 3 million dollars which is a lot of money. But hey, maybe people will look back at that figure as a steal... sixty years from now.

October 18, Dragone Classic Auctions

Fun in a GN

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Fun in a GN.

Tomorrow is October 11th and that can only mean one thing - the annual VSCC Welsh Trial when a large proportion of the active membership converge on Presteigne in Wales for a weekend of vintage motoring up steep muddy hills in glorious autumn countryside. One of the most popular and successful cars to enter is the GN, with its light weight, solid chain driven back axle and ample power. Here is Caroline in her GN at a more gentle event in Wales, but her smile assures us it was just as much fun and I think her husband Peter will agree.

(Text & pictures Robin Batchelor)
 

About Quiz #380: 1928 Ford Model A taxi!

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Finally we had an extremely simple car in Quiz 'What is it' #380 and now people were afraid to answer. At least it seems that this was the case. Four competitors were spot on with 1928 Ford Model A Tudor. When you check in to see the quiz results you can read that John Elema came up with most details; well done John. Still it's our opinion that this week's prize should go to somebody else as we asked also to be very correct on the accessories. And there was only competitor to identify the extras on the car correctly as from a taxi!

His wording: "It's a 1928 Model A Tudor sedan. You can see the Drum tailight which was only used in 1928. Later cars had a light mounted on the rear fender.It is being used as a taxi; has a luggage rack on the back and a for hire light on the lefthand screen post. Accessories include left hand welled fender for spare tyre and a tool box on the running board." Congratulations John Cochran! Please send us your T-shirt size and mail address. See you all next week. 

(Family photo collection Stew Dean)

Classic rally prep in Beijing

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CHina4C: classic prep in Beijing.

Imagine a country, a big country; a huge country, where the horse-drawn carriage and bicycle were the number one transport mode untill not too long ago. Imagine the world's big six motor manufacturers finding a way in there, always eager to enlargen their market share, soon resulting into world's largest motor market. The country exists and is called China. And we are there to drive a rally.
 
So when you want to rally China you need to learn a little history first. Less than 29 years ago, there were hardly any cars in the roads here. Currently Beijing is planning to build its 7th ringroad/ peripherique. Paris has 'only' 2 peripheriques. So China is a very young automative nation with zillions of cars. Road safety is asking for a totally different approach. In order to get a temporary drivers licence any foreign driver must take a safety training. The head of the traffic department of Tianji gave us a short history lesson starting with Karl Benz and the first automobile accident victim in the USA.

Bottomline of his speech was that preserving human life is the most important rule in Chinese traffic today. When all rally participants in the room had agreed on this with a handshake, he signed off our temporary drivers licenses (below). Off we go.

To be continued.

(Text and pictures by Joris Bergsma)

   

When is a trunk not a trunk?

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When is a trunk not a trunk?

When it's a Carrier Deluxe. Then the trunk becomes a pickup box, a bathtub or even a coffin. A neighboring vendor at last week's gigantic AACA Eastern Division Fall Meet at Hershey, Pennsylvania, offered this unassuming auto trunk. A second glance, however, shows that it opens at the middle, not at the top or side. When the clasp is released, each end section swivels outward, allowing the trunk to be top-loaded, then closed again. Alternatively, the end sections can be swiveled completely downward, forming a large open vessel twice the length (or width) of the trunk when closed, ostensibly doubling its capacity. The concept seems clever, but poses a few questions. What supports the extended ends when it's open? The trunk rack would have to be twice as wide, and would have to be mounted clear of the rear fenders. And what do you do when it rains? A canvas cover of some sort would be needed. Did the Carrier Deluxe come with a cover, one wonders?

It bears the label of the Durkee-Atwood Company of Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA. Durkee-Atwood apparently manufactured or distributed a considerable line of auto supplies and accessories, like vee-belts and tire tube repair kits - and trunks. The company appears to be out of business, for its building, at 215 NE 7th Street in Minneapolis currently houses Durkee-Atwood Lofts, offering "very economical converted living space". Does anyone have experience with a Durkee-Atwood Carrier Deluxe? If so, how well did it work? This example certainly had appeal, as it found a new owner by Thursday afternoon.

(Text and pictures by Kit Foster)
 
     

China4C: Stains of honour... (update: 1929 Phantom II !)

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Stains of honour...
Lean back and relax when you read this - we will be somewhere on our dusty jaunt from Beijing and Shanghai for the Classic Car Car Challenge China. Earlier we proposed to you the oldest competitor in the 2014 Beijing - Shanghai rally: a fine 1929 Rolls-Royce Pantom I Sports Saloon by Parkward. Upon closer inspection at the start we found the car to be in perfect fettle and up to anything what a gentleman driver would plan to use it for. Now maybe slightly more dusty than an appearance at Oxford Street would demand for, but apart from that it appears to be in spotless condition. But it also seems that the princely motorcar is a very well choice of transport for this event. The Belgian owner and his spouse cruise effortless over steep and winding mountain roads, along fast mainroads and through the crazy busy Chinese city traffic. 

Now, taking part in a sports event - and certainly in China - will bring you in circumstances unforeseen from time to time. Yesterday a sudden break up of the road resulted in manoeuvring the cars over a very much unpaved area with several nasty potholes. The elegant Sport Saloon picked up an unpleasant blemish in the course of taking a very deep bump, leaving its track to touch a parked tricycle. A small dent and scratch were left at the off side front wing. This was the only incident on a harsh rallying day with 350 km along demanding roads. We were most happy to learn that all competing cars arrived safely at the superb hotel in Jinan. And the Parkward R-R - that's taking a deserved rest for the night as well.

(Text and picture Joris Bergsma)
   

A Hershey Tradition

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A Hershey Tradition

That's what some people call rain. Others call it a curse. More often than not the high holy days of Hershey see some rain; once in a while many days see a lot. It's not the horror it used to be, when the meet was held on green fields and even moderate rain meant deep, deep mud, but it still deters shoppers and spectators. This year, the rain fell mostly at night, but lingering showers sprinkled the Saturday morning car show. The visitors didn't mind, though, nor did the car owners. There were ample quantities of both.

As always, interesting and unusuals cars abounded. A case in point was the rare 1932 DeVaux that heads this article. Others included a late model (1932) Detroit Electric and a French Front 1904 Oldsmobile. The latter is a version of the curved-dash Olds, but with a "conventional" front radiator. Also being judged were a 1934 Aerodynamic Hupmobile and a 1934 Railton from the saem year. Built in Britain on Hudson chassis, Railtons sported classic coachbuilt bodies.

The Antique Automobile Club of America's Historic Preservation of Original Features Class continues to grow. In near-barn find condition, a 1918 International truck delighted visitors with its engine running. Showers resumed as spectators flocked to a brace of Mercers, but they were not deterred. The umbrellas went up and the show went on.

(Text and pictures by Kit Foster)

      

A day of rest in Zaozhuang

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A day of rest in Zaozhuang

Sorry chaps, no cars today. Even a rallying reporter has to obey to the rules. And today - yesterday to be exact - was a day of rest & relaxation in the China Classic Cars Challenge. This to gain new energy in view of tomorrow's 200 mile trip. So this day we used up to explore Zaozhuang - also known as Shandong - the place of birth of philosopher Confucius and to indulge in the fabulous hospitality of course director Mr. Zong, here assisted by his most charming PA with a perfect Boston accent showing us how to prepare a local spicy pancake (as served in the top location depicted above). The outrageous variety of food and dishes is just one of the treats of this exotic rally along the highlights of China. Tomorrow back in the MG's bucket seats for a long day of winding and fast back roads leading to Nanjing.
Maybe we should end the day with the wise Confucius' words:

"Man who run in front of car get tired.
 Man who run behind car get exhausted.
 Man who drive like hell, bound to get there."

(source of these confucian sayings)

(Text and pictures Joris Bergsma)
 
  

Kate and the Busy Bee

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Kate and the Busy Bee.

When certain magazines drop through the letterbox, I down tools, make a cup of tea and read it from cover to cover – the quarterly mag from the VSCC Light Car & Edwardian Section is one such publication. I turned to page 17 to read about the Cyclecar Capers at the the 80th anniversary celebrations and there’s Kate in her 'Busy Bee’. The car is a wonderful home brew cyclecar built from scratch in 1919 by Mr. J.A.Mills and you can read more about it here. I believe this is its first time out since Kate and David did the necessary fettling after acquiring it last year. (David entered one of their other cyclecars, the Graham-White)

Kate looks a picture of concentration as she not only keeps control of her eccentric contraption but also tries to remember the instructions for the test she was driving. The rain didn’t help either, but it didn’t dampen her spirit as she splashed her way through the puddles to the finish line. The article describes the Busy Bee’s popularity… ”several friends enjoyed driving the Busy Bee , but a combination of slow driving and stationary idling ended when the V-twin decided to seize. Fortunately, in less time than it takes to drink two pints of beer, it had cooled down and recovered, apparently none the worse for the experience.”

(Words Robin Batchelor, pictures courtesy David Grounds)

What is it? Quiz #381

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What is it? Quiz #381

It's a pickup, obviously, but what pickup? We've obscured a few identifying features, but we can tell you that it was sold by a company that normally did not build pickups. It was built for a few years only, and was produced in conjunction with another company that had roots in a General Motors brand.

You just have to tell us the make, year and model. Many of you may find it easy, so to win you might tell us some of its history. As a tie breaker, you could offer the name of the model that succeeded it. Just read the Rules under Read More and start looking, looking, looking. This may finally be your chance to win the coveted PreWarCar T-shirt. Results will be published next Saturday, October 25.

Back shed bike to rich and famous Packards

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Back shed bike to rich and famous Packards.

If you are in Melbourne on October 25th then head over to Theodore Bruce for their Motorclassica Collector Car Auction. Sixty lots of automobilia will go under the hammer at 6pm and 34 vehicles start at 7pm.

Lot 7 is a 1914 Victor, the last and only surviving motorcycle from a series of five built over many years by Mr. Edward Victor Bowen in a shed at the back of his bike shop. As each one was completed, the previous one was sold so we can surmise that this must have been Bowen’s ideal machine with 1000cc JAP V Twin engine, TT 3-speed Armstrong gears within the rear hub and locally made sidecar attached to the frame using parts from the Chater Lea catalogue. The auction catalogue shows how it is entirely possible to carry out a thorough refurbishment and still retain the original finish and patina. Full marks!

The 1923 Alvis 12/40 "Ducksback" Tourer is a firm favourite amongst so many sporting vintage drivers being made by a company with a good reputation for reliable, quality hand built cars with impressive performance and stylish bodywork from the best coachbuilders of the time, Cross & Ellis and Carbodies. The pictures show a meticulous restoration and the new owner can look forward to a lifetime’s happy motoring in this vintage gem.

Three RHD Packards from Detroit are offered with their legendary straight eight engines, luxurious coachwork and the car of choice for the rich and famous the world over. I like the story behind the 1925 Packard Holbrook Coupe bought by music magnate Mr. Frank Albert and delivered to Sydney aboard the RMS Niagara which was subsequently sunk in 1940 by a German U-Boat whilst carrying US $8 million worth of gold. However, the 1937 Packard 120 Straight 8 Rumble-Seat Convertible Coupé is my favourite and the same can be said of the acting Governor of Hawaii when he saw the car on the ship taking it to Melbourne on a stopover in Honolulu, although I don’t believe the reason he wanted a RHD car.

The description of the 1936 Cord 810 Sportsman's Convertible Coupé makes the car very tempting….” On account of its rarity and aesthetic appeal, the Cord Sportsman is one of the most highly collectable of American motor cars. Its unconventional bonnet and radiator conceal a V-8 engine coupled to front wheel drive and a pre-selection gear-change with electrically operated box. Remarkably quick acceleration, the Sportsman's Convertible Coupé cruised at 75 mph and had a top speed of over 92 mph..” and is in “ absolutely tip-top condition throughout.” But you’ll need deep pockets.

There are two 1929 Marmons with much lower estimates but the car I would most like to take home from the pre-war cars is the 1937 BMW 327 Convertible. Look at the sheer beauty of the streamlined body (designed in conjunction with the Karosseriebauer Autenrieth of Darmstadt) and beneath the bonnet sits the straight six OHV M78 engine of 2 litres - BMW’s first straight-6 and designed by Fritz Fiedler. Transmission is via a ZF 4-speed gearbox with freewheel facility in first and second gears. “The much sought after 327 convertible is one of the most exclusive of all BMW classic cars.”

(Text Robin Batchelor, pictures courtesy Theodore Bruce Auctions)

     

Another mystery hailing from India (update: Standard Avon)

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Another mystery hailing from India
You may remember we had a rather hard time identifying the (alleged) 1905 l’Elégante some weeks ago, believing the mystery car, shot in India, was a Rover. But you knew better, and right you were! Want more of that? You get more, as we’ve had another message from our friend Karl. And once again, he attached a picture of an old car photographed in India a long time ago. Karl wrote: “Hello once again. Firstly thank you for identifying the 1905 l'Elegante in Bombay that I shared the picture of recently. I have another one to identify."

"A friend saw this photograph hanging on the wall in an old garage in Nasik, India, amongst other pictures. All others were easy to identify except this sporty looking possibly European car. The registration number tallies to Poona (now Pune), at around the 1940s (all cars in the region were assigned new numbers in 1939). I hope you can help me identify the car.” Now, it looks English to us, but we wouldn’t dare giving it a go this time. So let's leave it over to you, our readers. You surely may help us - and Karl - out once more.

Barbara's Rolls-Royce links to all the cars that matter

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Barbaras Rolls-Royce and all those other cars involved
You will know by now that we have a soft spot for cars with a bit of drama attached to them, and so when regular Uffe Mortensen sent in a picture of his 1933 Rolls-Royce Phantom II we nearly melted. Not just because of the car – a truly great design, oh yes, and in a marvellous shape and colour combination, no doubt. But it’s the history-bit that got us really enthusiastic here, as this car has been linked sometime, somehow, somewhere, to a multitude of car-crazy people and their vehicles. Take a deep breathe for a short overview.

When new, the drophead Phantom was commissioned by Georgian prince Alexis M’divani who had just taken delivery of a unique Duesenberg SJ Roadster. He bought the Rolls-Royce for his newly-wed Barbara Hutton, a then 21-year old heir to the Woolworth fortune who’d just inherited $50 million. It wouldn’t be Barbara’s only marriage. M’divani died not long later of a fall from a polo horse (although some sources say he crashed the Phantom) and Barbara started a whole string of weddings and divorces to the rich and famous. Amongst others to Cary Grant, who drove anything from Cord special to Isetta; Igor Troubetzkoy, who became the first driver ever to drive a Grand Prix for Ferrari in 1948 and who later won the Targa Florio for them. Also Porfirio Rubirosa, who owned a multitude of sports cars, also raced for Ferrari and was killed in one when he crashed it into a tree in Paris. A similar thing happened to her next husband, tennis player Baron Gottfried von Cramm, who blew out his mind in a car crash in Cairo, Egypt. Another marriage was to Count Court Haugwitz-Reventlow who gave Barbara her only child: Lawrence ‘Lance’ Reventlow who became racing driver for Cooper, Maserati and Mercedes and later set up his own racing car marque in the US: Scarab. Meanwhile, Barbara hadn’t enjoyed the Phantom for too long, and had also become attached to Ferraris later in her life. She had a silver grey 250 Pininfarina cabriolet and a 365 GTC in an unusual shade of pink!

That’s an incredible amount of exotic cars attached to one life. Barbara died, bankrupt according to some, in 1979 aged 66. After the supposed crash the Rolls-Royce is said to have been restored by Thrupp & Maberly in 1935 and was offered for sale not too long ago for over a million dollars. It didn’t sell, but now that it’s in Uffe’s hands it may be seen in public again. What a car, what a story!

(picture courtesy Uffe Mortensen)
 

Driving home the Model A

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Gregory Wells recently decided to buy and left on Monday with his new purchase trying to drive it home on own wheels:
"Been wanting a driver quality antique car to tour with for a few years now and I finally found one at a price point I could afford. So I pulled the trigger on the purchase of this car about a week ago. The price was too good to pass up, barely into five figures in USD. As you may know, I'm in the Atlanta area and the Model A is in McMinnville, Oregon, a little bit southwest of Portland, so we're 2,700 miles apart. I'm going to attempt to drive the car back to Atlanta from Oregon.
(continued under Read More)

A low bonnet Mystery ( update: Crossley RAF staff car)

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Jaap 'Molsheim' Horst sends this fine photo which came to him from an enthusiast who was thinking (or hoping?) this could be a Bugatti. Well one thing is sure it's not a brainchild from Ettore Bugatti.  Maybe it is french...? Maybe we're looking at a fine set of Bleriot headlights. Maybe Dealunay Belleville, or even Turcat Mery? Yet it is hard to say, there's so little to see. We can only hope that the low bonnet line, the charcteristic louvres and the sheer size of the machine prompt an Aha!  with one or more of you. 

(picture courtesy Jaap Horst)

 

Dina plays for time

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Dina plays for time.

The clocks ‘go back’ this weekend which marks the official end of British Summer Time. It was Germany that first introduced daylight saving in 1915 and Britain followed in 1916. It is New Zealand who can take credit for the idea thanks to George Vernon Hudson who proposed it in 1895, but his native country waited until 1927 before introducing it.

So with time being on my mind, I dug out my slowest car – a 1925 Trojan Utility with top speed of 35 mph – and went to visit Dina. Timing is very important in her job as a concert pianist – just listen to her playing Prokovief’s Sonata No. 2.(click), and you can watch her here. Or do you prefer a Scarlatti sonata? She started playing the piano age 5 in her home country of Kazakhstan and has won numerous awards whilst performing all over the world. Her next concert is at The Royal College of Music in London on November 13th in their Amaryllis Fleming Concert Hall, named after the accomplished cellist who was author Ian Fleming’s half-sister and Augustus John’s illegitimate daughter.

As the setting sun heralded the end of another Autumn day, Dina decided to try out the hood in case it rained – she has spent enough time in England to understand our strange weather. And now she understands a bit more about our strange cars.

(Text & pictures Robin Batchelor)

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