These are the uniformed personnel; well strictly speaking the guy in red is a civilian wearing a boiler suit!
The bottom images are all metal Mastermodel originals, and they differ from the other metal figures in this group of posts by being made of die-cast mazac rather than soft lead or poured white-metal alloys. Rather hidden by the second sailor on a kit-bag is the seated WREN, while one of the sailors is inching toward the soldiers to wind them up and start a fight!
The benches in that photograph are metal, while the bench in the pictures above are plastic and marked ‘Peco’, so not all the moulds went to Merit…but that is definitely for another day! The AA motorcycle goes with an RAC phone-box and can be found with metal or plastic wheels. All the figures in the upper photographs are plastic, and while the poorly painted ones will be Slater’s or - at a stretch - Wills, the soldier may have come with a Peco set of benches?
The three sets of ‘working men’, the matchstick plank-carriers come with the figures bottom left, and are supposed to be unloading a lorry, but the guy directing makes a good ‘crane instructor’ or grounds-man. Apart from the colour variants, the late production seems to have got nothing more than a quick ‘wash’. The figures bottom right, are from two sets, the grey figures come in track-gang (maintenance-of-way to US readers) sets or with a night-watchman’s hut and brazier, while the black and brown ones come in sets of cable layers, black ones with silver knee-pads are miners.
Notice also how there is more than one version of several figures, the woman in the pale-blue two-piece has a lower hand and fewer buttons in different places, there is one version of the left-hand (right as you look) walking stick man; holding a newspaper, the other; holding an envelope or book, there’s the cream boy without gaps between his arms and body, the red boy with one gap and two different golfers, while two of the rail-staff seem to be from a specific TT-gauge set as does the blue and white lady/nurse [pleated-skirt girl may be from this set?].
The distinctive base with its side-chamfers makes it easy to identify a lot of the Mastermodel figures, but as can be seen; later sets, discontinued figures (man carrying sack with jerkin - top left) and the odd-sized figures have more common generic bases like the later Airfix HO range, as do most of the ‘public’ figures.
A few bits of info i have picked up from the illustrated kemlows story and examination of my own stash of wardies.
ReplyDeleteThe woman in the pleated dress IS a wardie moulding, she was part of the later issues of set 2, railway passengers, replacing the child. As there was also a child in set 3 this avoided duplication.
Postie was also in this set, and appeared in the later sets without a strap on his bag and a different arrangement of buttons.
The woman with no base was in set 3, she is OO, but not standing on a paving slab like the others.
The smaller than expected rail staff were based on the hortons for trix figures, early mouldings of these appear identical apart from the distinctive wardie base with its chamfered edges, again these are 00 models of smaller people rather than a TT set
the gent with his foot up on a box in the passengers pic is from the street personnel set, he is getting his shoes shined by a crouching boy.
The man carrying a coal sack was only available in a set with coal bins.
When my new camera arrives I'll post some pictures of my collection if you want, along with notes on what went with which sets. There are many scuplts not shown here.
Thanks again Jon, I've answered you first comment and it's the same here, I will return to them in a year or two, I've a few more come in, and these days evilBay can quickly fill the gaps, but yeah - if you publish do send us a link, I'm always happy to share superior knowledge with the Loyal Readers!
ReplyDeleteH