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DIY The DIY Revolution
The beginnings of a DIY movement can be traced back to the spate
of How To… and Know How… books and pamphlets published
in the 1890s.Ordinary people wanted to know more about DIY
These guided ordinary people through the complexities of modern living.
A later influence was the activities of groups of people with specialised
interests,
sometimes at work, but more likely for leisure. These included amateur radio
constructors, car mechanics, model makers, home fretwork craftsmen, hobbyist
woodworkers and, probably the most important, home handicraft workers. The ‘handicrafts’ phenomenon,
both before and after the Second World War, was absolutely massive. It was a
silent, unsung industry – the ‘profit with pleasure’ culture
where families could supplement their income by making handicrafts in their free
time in their own homes.
Advert for Marley Floors, 1957.
Credit: © Marley Floors Limited
Working as their own boss and at their own pace, handicrafts gave many people
valuable practical experience of doing things. It would not prove that big a
step from doing handicrafts in the home to working on the home itself.
Rapid social and economic change after the
Second World War propelled the DIY movement forward. Peacetime
left hundreds of small firms
with ‘metal-bashing’ facilities casting around for
new markets. Many turned to making DIY products. Other companies
capitalised on war-time advances in plastics and adhesives, transforming
them into commercial products for DIYers in the 1950s and 1960s.
As well as new plastics, glues and adhesives, other items such
as new paints, fillers, floor, wall and other surface finishes
also appeared.
The public were increasingly being exposed to all these wonderful
things through exhibitions, DIY magazines and the full force of
television.
Ordinary people wanted to know more about DIY because they would
have to do the work themselves. Servants were gone, tradesmen were
expensive, home ownership was rising and the housing stock decaying.
Fortunately, the Government assisted by offering generous home
improvement grants.
Tool manufacturers, such as Black & Decker, Wolf, Bridges,
and Stanley, sensing this major shift in users, started to provide
ranges of power tools for DIY enthusiasts, a potentially enormous
market in comparison to the professional trade. The electric drill
became the premier work tool for most DIYers in the late 1950s
and 1960s, rivalled only by the famous ‘Workmate’ work
bench from the 1970s.
Demand for DIY products forced a revolution
in national distribution and retailing of products and services.
The traditional ironmongers
and builders merchants yielded to the rise of the DIY superstore.
The concept of a DIY supermarket was born in Southampton in 1969
when B&Q, Britain’s current market leader, opened a 3,000
square-foot store.
During the late 1970s and throughout the
1980s, the sale of council houses and the rise in house prices
added further fuel to the DIY
fever. Money was easy to borrow, especially for home improvements.
In 1987, £9 billion, twice the annual earnings of UK tourism,
was spent on DIY, and 15 per cent of all building materials were
customised and sold through the DIY superstores. In 2001, Britons
spent a record £23 billion on DIY, the equivalent of £900
per household.
Globalisation of the DIY revolution is encapsulated in the philosophy
of IKEA: the Holy Grail of DIY, and founder of mass-produced flat-pack
furniture. IKEA is the largest furniture retailer in the world,
and its catalogue, of which 110 million copies are produced each
year, is more widely distributed than any other book!
Source www.ingenious.org.uk/
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