![funneh ratty catty christmas funneh ratty catty christmas](https://i.pinimg.com/564x/d4/f3/b2/d4f3b27df43960c1a21a57f506db2c29.jpg)
Inspired by Hargreaves’ son Adam asking what a tickle looked like, these characters have been around for over 25 years and been a part of my life for practically as long as I can remember. These are so cute, colourful and charming, exactly in the spirit of the Mr Men series, which I loved as a child – and still do today!
#FUNNEH RATTY CATTY CHRISTMAS SERIES#
In case you missed it (or don’t have 15 minutes to spare pressing the Refresh button), Google have run a series of their infamous ‘Google Doodles’ in honour of what would been the 76 th birthday of Mr Men creator, Roger Hargreaves. It seems a shame that these are tucked away in a place most people wouldn’t even notice so hopefully this post does its bit to show them off to the rest of the world! You can’t really tell from the pictures (which have distorted the light reflections weirdly) but these are made from copper, which is even more stunning and vivid in real life – and I loved the way the light reflected and bounced off these pieces, making them even more vibrant. My favourite is probably The Arts with its striking centre-piece of the two Chinese theatre masks and loads of other dynamic pictures surrounding it – it’s almost like it’s alive with movement! Click on each photograph to enlarge and zoom in and you can check out some of the detail for yourselves!Įach ‘Rondo-Progression’ has a different theme (unfortunately, I forgot to note them down, bad blogger, slaps wrist!) but I believe they were The Arts, Food, Leisure and Work. The style reminds me a little of Jan Pieńkowski’s silhouette illustrations for the Joan Aiken books I used to read when I was little. I was taken aback by the level of detail in these – you could spend ages poring over these still find even more interesting and clever little vignettes revealing themselves in the copper artwork. Such was the case with this stunning series of plaques entitled The Cityplaza Copper Suite by Australian sculptors Joan Walsh Smith and Charles Smith in Tai Koo’s Cityplaza complex of buildings.
![funneh ratty catty christmas funneh ratty catty christmas](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/b4L6WcYSNjs/maxresdefault.jpg)
![funneh ratty catty christmas funneh ratty catty christmas](https://cdn.cloudflare.steamstatic.com/steamcommunity/public/images/clans/29890282/f231924aa8ab2d7d7573b4753cb74bafa36dbecc.png)
In Hong Kong, you can often find pretty things in the strangest places… which often means discovering fine art in the most mundane of anonymous corporate offices.