Showing posts with label The Ringling Sarasota Florida. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Ringling Sarasota Florida. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

The Ringling, Sarasota Florida, Circus and a Whole Lot More, The Miniature Circus

Copyright 2014, CABS for Reflections From the Fence






The three photos above are not of real life sized buildings and train.  They are miniatures!  Really!

The first "collection" we visited during our day at The Ringling, was the "Howard Bros. Circus Model".    This is the world's largest miniature circus and they are still building pieces!  To simply state that the detail is amazing just does not tell the story.  Here are a few photos, ok, a LOT of photos.  I could not stop Sony Too!

Look at the detail, the dining tent for feeding meals to the crews, the entertainers.  If you look down in the front left corner you will find the dishes being washed and yes, there is silverware there too!


The entertainers entering the "Big Top".


A little girl practicing high wire walking, not up too high yet.  Check out the laundry over her left shoulder, yep, red long johns, as well as some other laundry hanging back there.


This is detail!  The power lines, strung with copper wire and little glass insulators!


Main street at the circus.  Families.  Balloons.  Ticket booths.


Ice cream anyone?


The side shows.


Inside the menagerie tent.  the camels and llamas.  Somewhere during the day of our visit I heard that many cities and towns did not have zoos and that the traveling menageries served as zoos.  (The researcher in my soul is having trouble with the fact that I cannot remember where I heard that tidbit.)

See the fellow selling lemonade?  I wonder, that pile of boxes to his left, if that's fudge?


The wild cat show, tigers and lions, and above, men on the flying trapeze.


A close up the the trapeze artists.


Again, look at this detail!  Even the straps on her feet to help her hold that large rope are included.


Horse trainer and his steeds:


A sleeping car, notice the pillows through the windows?


The museum building has a second story, this is just one of the views of the circus from that level.


Howard Tibbals is the genius behind the miniature circus.  His circus has 42,143 items, not including the small pieces such as thousands of railroad stakes.  There are eight large tents, 152 circus wagons, 1,500 workers and performers, 7,000 folding chairs and more than 500 hand-carved animals.  Howard was not allowed to use the name Ringling on his circus pieces, so he used his own name.  It took him over 20 years to build his circus.  He showed it at the 1982 Knoxville World Fair.  It took him over a year to set up the circus at The Ringling.  The circus is built on a scale of ¾-inch-to-the-foot.  All items are true to the originals.  Even the inside of some of the wagons have items like money, tickets, chairs, desks, etc.

Truly amazing!  I was really enthralled by this circus.




*  Most photos taken through glass, available light, avoiding reflections when I could, and many cases with considerable assistance from Sony Too's zoom.
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The Ringling, Sarasota Florida, Circus and a Whole Lot More, The Circus Museum

Copyright 2014, CABS for Reflections From the Fence

The entrance to the entire estate, museums, gardens, the visitors center.  The Ringling!


Entrance to the main museum and the miniature circus.


Hanging above the main hall.  May all your days be circus days.  Has a nice ring to it.


The museum is packed full of wonderful displays.  They have a large collection.  I am not sure I have ever been in a museum that had so many displays (lots of goodies on the walls).  Yes, it was overwhelming.  If you read every placard, every display, you would need two 8 hour days just for this museum.  Our approach, right or wrong, was to wander around, gaze about, stop now and then, wander around some more.  We had to go for overall appreciation for what a great collection.  We were on information overload.  It was great!

Buffalo Bills Gauntlets.  Cool stuff, not sure why they are here.  Anyone wanna offer up a reason?


Costumes.  Did not capture any signage, oh, who needs it, isn't this neat??  


Time era 1919-1910 a wood, iron, rubber and brass steam calliope.  And, by the way, look at those legs!  


In one of the display areas they challenged visitors to walk the tightrope.  Despite what this looks like, Man is NOT in the air, that "rope" was right on the ground.  His first attempt ended right about here:


Attempt two:


Hurrying off the other end, he was able to click the buzzer.  (HoboBob we KNOW you could have done this without any issue.)


The Wisconsin Railroad Car, John and Mable's first private car, built in 1905, by the Pullman Company.


The observation lounge.


One of the bedrooms, err, staterooms.  There were three staterooms in this private car.


A bathroom facility, the sink folds up into the wall.  The shelf below, is the toilet lid.  Makes the bath area in Tana look luxurious and large!


Did you ever go to the circus as a child and watch the human cannonball being launched?  Isn't this rather amazing!?!?!


One of several different types of wagons on display.  This one obviously would have been horse drawn.


There were also several movies or videos discussing the circus, history, the Ringling family story.

Next and lastly, we shall visit the miniature circus.  As much as I enjoyed ALL of The Ringling, that was my favorite part!




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The Ringling, Sarasota Florida, Circus and a Whole Lot More, The Mansion

Copyright 2014, CABS for Reflections From the Fence

We did not take the guided tour of the house, obviously we would have learned more.  The self-guided tours allow you access to just the main floor of the house.

John and Maude hired New York architect Dwight James Baum to design the home, and Owen Burns to build it. Maude was involved enough in the design and construction of the home that the original blue prints called it the "The Residence of Mrs. John Ringling.”

The home is called Ca’ d’Zan, House of John.  They began construction in 1924 and completed it just  before Christmas in 1926.  Ca' d'Zan cost $1.5 million to build.  The house is 36,000 square-foot , 5 stories tall and has a full basement.  A nice review of the home and it's history can be found here.  The house was restored between 1996 and 2002 at the cost of $15 million.

The backside of the house, if you consider the water side to be the front.  The windows are panes of pastel, gently colored, each a bit different.


Look at that detail, even the under side of the overhangs are decorative.




On entry to the home, there is a small room looking out on the bay.


The ceilings are gorgeous. Wood floors.  Unique window treatments.


Living room, fireplace, note the second floor railings.


A dining area.  Had a gorgeous green chandelier.


Silver.  Martinis anyone?  I am guessing they are martini glasses.


OK, guessing time for you my dear readers.  Any idea what these are?  I am not sure why the green "glow", except that possibly, it was reflections from the color of the walls.  These are silver I believe.  Asparagus tongs.  Yea, really.  By Christofle of Paris.


Timeless kitchen beauty:


Some serious refrigerator storage and there was another frig.  Thinking that last door to the right would hold an entire side of beef.


Now, in my opinion, any place that has ceilings like this has to be special in every other way.  In my life, the ceilings would be the last place I would decorate or enhance like this.  This is stunning beyond words.  SIGHHH.


The tap room.


This stairwell wins my heart with its simplicity.


Out on the Sarasota Bay side of the house.


Looking at the house from Sarasota Bay patio.


Note:  all photos in the house were taken sans flash, there was a remarkable amount of natural light streaming into the windows.  I did digitally enhance most of the photos, to brighten or enhance.




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