Walsall Leather Museum (Walsall) – official video review
Let’s take a rest from Stafford and explore the smaller towns.
Walsall.
And it’s most unfortunate that the Walsall Museum has closed down and as library staff tells me – for three years now.
But instead here is a Leather Museum that’s in every sense the museum of Walsall.
START OF THE STORY. Before you're to enter the gallery the smell of wallets and purses is already filling up your senses.
And here’s how the gallery entrance starts its narrative – that Walsall used to be the biggest leather making town in the entire Northern Europe.
PERMANENT EXHIBITIONS. Creative use of leather – saddles, key fobs, even outfits for dogs. And they come from a variety of sources from pigs to snakes to anything less imaginable – like ostriches.
(Meanwhile a display board tells you that many English traditional surnames get their roots from leather makers – Barker, Skinner, Tanner etc.}
Upstairs a staffer will explain how saddles are made and their various types (weight, shapes, luxuriousness and materials etc.). And the balance between comfort, durability and lightness.
(As you can imagine – races typically involve lighter saddles.)
LOCATION. The museum is a ten-minute walk from Walsall Station.
Exit the station and keep walking north. You’ll be going through Station Street, Park Street, a roundabout and finally Wisemore. Cross the Littleton Street and the museum is right beside the Walsall College.
FB chat for free advice on traveling plans.
Time is asset: save it for better with 25-min museum tours. Or find yourself in my novel, check out the photo of the day and finish it off with a secret prize.
Date of visit: 2019
Tags - in_depth_tourism; museum; London_writer; London_travel; indie_writer; independent_blogger
Walsall.
And it’s most unfortunate that the Walsall Museum has closed down and as library staff tells me – for three years now.
But instead here is a Leather Museum that’s in every sense the museum of Walsall.
Walsall Leather Museum (Walsall)
START OF THE STORY. Before you're to enter the gallery the smell of wallets and purses is already filling up your senses.
And here’s how the gallery entrance starts its narrative – that Walsall used to be the biggest leather making town in the entire Northern Europe.
PERMANENT EXHIBITIONS. Creative use of leather – saddles, key fobs, even outfits for dogs. And they come from a variety of sources from pigs to snakes to anything less imaginable – like ostriches.
(Meanwhile a display board tells you that many English traditional surnames get their roots from leather makers – Barker, Skinner, Tanner etc.}
Upstairs a staffer will explain how saddles are made and their various types (weight, shapes, luxuriousness and materials etc.). And the balance between comfort, durability and lightness.
(As you can imagine – races typically involve lighter saddles.)
Walsall Leather Museum (Walsall)
LOCATION. The museum is a ten-minute walk from Walsall Station.
Exit the station and keep walking north. You’ll be going through Station Street, Park Street, a roundabout and finally Wisemore. Cross the Littleton Street and the museum is right beside the Walsall College.
FB chat for free advice on traveling plans.
Time is asset: save it for better with 25-min museum tours. Or find yourself in my novel, check out the photo of the day and finish it off with a secret prize.
Date of visit: 2019
Tags - in_depth_tourism; museum; London_writer; London_travel; indie_writer; independent_blogger
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