The Repair Shop viewers heaped praise on ceramics expert Kirsten Ramsay after her incredible work on a cat teapot.
In Wednesday (October 28) night’s repeat episode, partners Matthew and Nigel brought in a cat-shaped tea pot.
What was the story behind the cat teapot on The Repair Shop?
It had belonged to Matthew’s old friend and neighbour Gladys, who had died just a year earlier aged 105.
Matthew said: “As you can see, it’s been in the wars.”
He explained that Gladys had gone over to Germany on secretive missions during the Second World War, and a woman she helped gifted the cat teapot to her.
Read more: The Repair Shop: WWI bagpipes have BBC viewers in tears
Gladys had affectionately named it Dinky, after one of her own cats.
Teapot broken in wartime train raid
Unfortunately, the teapot cracked when soldiers apprehended a train Gladys was travelling on. It was broken in the ensuing search, and while Gladys had tried to repair it herself with glue, large cracks were still visible on the surface.
Matthew told Kirsten and The Repair Shop’s Jay Blades: “I would like to see the beauty of what it was like before it was broken.”
Kirsten said afterwards the project would be “difficult”.
But she nevertheless worked her magic on it, including using paint stripper to carefully remove the glue, allowing her to take the pieces apart and put them back together properly.
When Nigel and Matthew saw the finished results, they were taken aback, saying it looked “brand new”.
“Gladys would be thrilled…” Matthew said, stunned.
Kirsten told him, “Well it sounded like she did so much for other people” and they called the restorer a “true artist”.
How did The Repair Shop viewers react?
Viewers at home felt the same way, as they took to social media to comment on Dinky and Kirsten’s amazing work.
One said on Twitter: “My god! The level of skill and perfectionism on the ceramic cat! Unbelievable even for #therepairshop!”
Another wrote: “Waterworks as per. And the two gents and their very special teapot? Kirsten Ramsay is a wonder – that’s amazing. #TheRepairShop.”
Kirsten Ramsay is true gold on The Repair Shop. What completely stunning work on Dinky the cat.
A third put: “Kirsten off of #therepairshop is such an amazing artist. The story of that teapot reminds me of the untold stories of women who did incredible things during the Second World War – and never said a thing about it. Ever.”
Someone else said: “Look at that cat teapot! That is bloody incredible! What an amazing skill that is, and what a story behind Dinky too. Loved it. #therepairshop.”
“@KirstenRamsay2 is true gold on #TheRepairShop,” said a fifth with clapping emojis. “What completely stunning work on Dinky the cat.”
My god!
The level of skill and perfectionism on The ceramic Cat!!
Unbelievable even for #therepairshop!
— Gus Hoyt (@MrGreenGus) October 28, 2020
https://twitter.com/thelightoutside/status/1321560657372827648
Kirsten off of #therepairshop is such an amazing artist. The story of that teapot reminds of the untold stories of women who did incredible things during Second War – and never said a thing about it. Ever.
— Andy Kelly 💙 (@Andy_eprr) October 28, 2020
https://twitter.com/jason_best/status/1321556943484444672
@KirstenRamsay2 is true gold on #TheRepairShop. What completely stunning work on Dinky the Cat. 👏👏👏👏👏
— Shrewsbury Morris Dancers (@shrewsmorris) October 28, 2020
As yesterday’s episode of The Repair Shop was getting underway, the BBC’s announcer called it a ‘televisual hug’ – and it seems viewers couldn’t agree more.
Read more: The Repair Shop: Woman with ceramic bowl breaks down praising her late sister
“BBC continuity described #therepairshop as the telly equivalent of the hug,” said one, adding: “Too right!”
“@TheRepairShop – ‘A televisual hug’,” quoted another. “Just what we need right now.”
@TheRepairShop – "A televisual hug." Just what we need right now #therepairshop #bbc1 pic.twitter.com/pDsDf9WUrm
— @RadioLisa1 (@RadioLisa1) October 28, 2020
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