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Fancy Dress Ball

Published June 21, 2020 Updated June 18, 2022

Spear’s “Fancy Dress Ball” card game with children dressed in period costumes, 1930s.

1930 United Kingdom Spears Games Education Fashion & Costume Card Games

Spear’s “Fancy Dress Ball” quartette card game with children in accurate and detailed costumes from different historical periods, published by J.W. Spear and Sons in c.1930. Each set has four members, roughly approximate to king, queen, youth and maiden, with a representative symbol at the top left corner of the card. The object of the game is to win the highest number of complete quartettes. See the Rules
See the Box

Spear’s Fancy Dress Ball, 1930s Spear’s Fancy Dress Ball, 1930s Spear’s Fancy Dress Ball, 1930s Spear’s Fancy Dress Ball, 1930s Spear’s Fancy Dress Ball, 1930s Spear’s Fancy Dress Ball, 1930s Spear’s Fancy Dress Ball, 1930s Spear’s Fancy Dress Ball, 1930s

Above: Spear’s Fancy Dress Ball, 1930s. 48 cards, square corners, with the rules glued around the inner part of the telescopic box. Plain pale blue backs.

Spear’s Fancy Dress Ball, 1930s
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By Rex Pitts (1940-2021)

Member since January 30, 2009

Rex's main interest was in card games, because, he said, they were cheap and easy to get hold of in his early days of collecting. He is well known for his extensive knowledge of Pepys games and his book is on the bookshelves of many.

His other interest was non-standard playing cards. He also had collections of sheet music, music CDs, models of London buses, London Transport timetables and maps and other objects that intrigued him.

Rex had a chequered career at school. He was expelled twice, on one occasion for smoking! Despite this he trained as a radio engineer and worked for the BBC in the World Service.

Later he moved into sales and worked for a firm that made all kinds of packaging, a job he enjoyed until his retirement. He became an expert on boxes and would always investigate those that held his cards. He could always recognize a box made for Pepys, which were the same as those of Alf Cooke’s Universal Playing Card Company, who printed the card games. This interest changed into an ability to make and mend boxes, which he did with great dexterity. He loved this kind of handicraft work.

His dexterity of hand and eye soon led to his making card games of his own design. He spent hours and hours carefully cutting them out and colouring them by hand.

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