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Six iconic clocks that rock and stand the test of time
Six iconic clocks that rock and stand the test of time

Irish Examiner

time09-08-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Examiner

Six iconic clocks that rock and stand the test of time

Cuckoo clocks With their tipping, over-excited little bird whooping out the hours, cuckoo clocks have been around since the 1630s, when the craze for automatons to entertain the gentry began. Created in many genres, the clock cases we most associate with this chirping mechanism were crafted in the Black Forest of Germany from the mid-1800s, and beloved of the Victorians. Carved in woodsy themes like twisted branches, leafy chalet roofs and wild animal figures (Jadgstuck or hunting style), their pendulum and pine-cone weights pulled the clocks along between windings. Today, flocks of these animated clocks survive in several interesting, less fussy examples, and children and adults continue to love them. Some cuckoo devices come with a handy light sensor that silences the birdie after dark. Karlsson Cuckoo Clock, with a garden bird trill, €99, suppliers include Meadows & Byrne. My choice would be a simple birdhouse in colourful aluminium and ABS plastic housing by Karlsson in a moulded chalet form. With more of a bird chirp rather than a cuckoo call, the quartz mechanism is run by AA batteries and can be set to quiet at night. Choose your little bird from a large range of single colours; €99, Meadows & Byrne. Karlsson has a fascinating collection of clocks and also offers its cuckoo clock as a table/alarm clock; €43, Varieties of these new birds are also out there from Guzzini and Fisura. Mora clocks Having been drawn into Henning Mankell's Wallander on RTÉ Player, a detective drama set in the southern Swedish province of Skåne, I was reminded of the beauty of a commonplace inclusion in many Scandinavian houses — the longcase Mora clock. From the 17th century, struggling carpenters made these clock cases to supplement their income, and they have a distinctly feminine, soft and hippy rococo curve that's weighted towards the base. The rustic Mora longcase clock is a staple of Scandinavian country-house decorating. File picture Varieties of these period Gustavian beauties are available in old originals with a clock mechanism, or new handmade pieces with quartz mechanisms. Prices from Mora Clocks (based in the UK) range from €650 for a reproduction and €2500 for a vintage piece with pendulum, weights and chimes (180cm to 240cm high), Keep an eye on the antique auction circuit, and Etsy too. Nelson's ball clock Jumping forward in time, George Nelson's ball clock, designed for the Howard Miller Clock Company, was launched into our spaces in 1949. It still rocks the 1950s Atomic look and continues to delight decorators with its explosive space-age energy. Nelson (1908-1986) designed dozens of clocks for sideboards and walls, and his ball clock with its sculptural metal rods marking out the hours, finished in a wooden ball, came in a choice of colourways. The Nelson Ball Clock. With serious design bounce, this clock has remained an affordable mid-century icon for over 75 years, €345, Vitra. Other models to explore by Nelson's studio in collaboration with Herman Miller, touched by the genius of Irving Harper and Isamu Noguchi, include the Flock of Butterflies, Star, Sunburst, Spindle, Asterisk, Turbine, and the all-seeing Eye clock. Make time for 1stDibs to search for original pieces. Configure a brand-new ball clock with original bounce in your choice of colours from €345, Flip clocks Flip clocks or flipo-clocks were a strange mechanical moment for graphic clocks before LCD screen features lit up our nightstands. With a modern steam-punk wonder to their workings, they delivered the time like a desk calendar, flipping over a stack of numerals in two piles of plates to count out 24 hours. Leff of Amsterdam Brick Flip clock. Secondhand examples from €250. Suppliers including Robert Jagers, FlipOClock, Ballydehob, Cork. The name most closely associated with mid-century flip-clocks is Copal (models 101 and 201). Some collectors spend considerable money and endless hours repairing these increasingly rare models; see There's also a specialist repair service from restorer Robert Jagers at FlipoClock, in Ballydehob, Co Cork, from €150 per timepiece (parts and shipping not included) Robert also stocks working vintage flip clocks, and he's one half of the much-loved vintage shop Hunter Gatherers Vintage curated with his wife Steffie in Skibbereen, Wall clocks Now you can pick up a budget wall clock that's accurate and eye-catching for less than €50 at Jysk. For something with fascinating design credentials, my pick is the AJ Bankers call clock, designed by Arne Jacobsen in 1971 for the National Bank of Denmark. It's one of those pieces in a modest size, which ticked over into domestic use from a commercial setting. Executive elegance, the AJ Bank clock c.1971 conjured by Danish architect Arne Jacobsen, now faithfully reproduced by Rosendahl Design Group, €254, Finnish Design Shop. It's timeless industrial styling at its very best from the mid-century era of 'total design', where an architect would place every detail in a building. Produced today by the Rosendahl Design Group, it gives you something that's seconds away from the original. In glass and aluminium with a red detail to the hands over a black or white face, it features a fascinating grid of 12 squares, each of which is filled out to indicate the numerals; €254, If you're looking for a Danish clock with a more pared-back aesthetic, go for the Henning Koppel wall clock from Georg Jensen (c.1978) with its receding dot and dash face in a choice of colours; from €211. Rotbluta from Ikea is superbly priced in a simple, white, classic wall clock belted in ash veneer, €40, Newgate clocks Britain has a long history of clock-making, and many of us grew up with a Smiths clock from Enfield running down the last moments of dawn before falling onto the shag rug in preparation for school. For something quirky and retro, Newgate Clocks is another great design brand to make time for; its inexpensive LCD clocks are my favourite for an affordable, fun buy. Newgate Clocks of England offers some quirky and delightful timepieces to stoke any Boomer's nostalgia; LCD alarm clocks from €35. The Newgate Spectronoma LCD clock in black is like a small factory of time and motion — it's busy, digital, and colourful with three screens in white, red and green incorporating a 12- or 24-hour time display, a digital alarm, snooze function and temperature display, €55. If you prefer something lower slung, try out the Futurama LCD clock in black and white with its moon-phase and alarm screen adding up to five-screen madness adored by a generation sprinting away from analogue life in the 1970s. Check out

In first, Hegseth to skip multinational meeting on Ukraine support
In first, Hegseth to skip multinational meeting on Ukraine support

Yahoo

time02-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

In first, Hegseth to skip multinational meeting on Ukraine support

Pete Hegseth will not attend a gathering of 50 countries to coordinate military support for Ukraine, multiple European officials and a U.S. official said — the first time the coalition will gather without America's secretary of defense participating. The group will meet April 11 in Brussels and will be chaired by Germany and Britain. Hegseth attended the last meeting in February, though he became the first U.S. defense secretary in the coalition's 26 meetings not to lead it. Hegseth won't join in person and isn't expected to join virtually either, according to a U.S. official, who like others was granted anonymity to discuss the planning. In fact, the Pentagon is unlikely to send any senior representatives, which typically join the secretary on such trips. The United States is still assessing how its officials will participate in the various forums that support Ukraine, including those that help manage security assistance and training, the U.S. official said. For Europeans, the secretary's absence is the latest sign of the Trump administration's lower-priority approach to arming Ukraine — a point Hegseth made clear at the last meeting in February. In a speech from Brussels, Hegseth scolded European officials, urging them to take more control of their own defense rather than relying on America's 75-year role helping defend the continent. He also ruled out the possibility of NATO membership for Ukraine before the administration had itself made a decision on the topic — something the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Roger Wicker, R-Miss., called a 'rookie mistake.' 'President [Donald] Trump will not allow anyone to turn Uncle Sam into Uncle Sucker,' Hegseth said, referring to a quote from former president Dwight D. Eisenhower. Hegseth's predecessor, Lloyd Austin, founded the Ukraine Defense Contact Group shortly after Russia's full-scale invasion in 2022. Since then, the group has helped raise and coordinate more than $126 billion in security aid to Ukraine, around half of which has come from America. In the three years since, the group became synonymous both with Ramstein Air Base, where it was founded, and U.S. leadership. The only time Austin did not attend one of the group's in-person meetings was early 2024, when he was recovering from complications following cancer treatment. Instead, he called into the summit and had Celeste Wallander, a top Pentagon policy official, convene the group. Sensing the U.S. may step back from its role, European officials were already planning for alternate formats when the group last gathered during the Biden administration, Wallander said in an interview. One of the arrangements discussed was for Germany and the United Kingdom to take the lead, representing Europe's economic powerhouse and one of its most capable militaries. While the Ukraine group could continue meeting without U.S. leadership, Wallander said, there would be real costs. American defense officials, along with military counterparts from U.S. European Command, have typically led briefings on the state of the war and how it relates to Ukraine's battlefield needs. Without them, the group would lack key U.S. intelligence, something European officials are already preparing for. In late February, after a disastrous visit to the Oval office by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the U.S. stopped sharing intelligence with Ukraine and paused weapons deliveries for a week. The Pentagon has $3.85 billion left in authority to send Ukraine military equipment, but no money left to replace it. Leaders in Congress have said they have no plans to pass more.

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