Aren't they lovely! Before and after
cleaning and before I got the black off the boy's nose and straightened the
drum-sticks. Isn't it typical - they were beautifully packed and you could see
from the photographs on feeBay they were not damaged, yet USFail, Royal Fail
and/or Parcel Farce managed to crush both drum-sticks, despite a mountain of
bubble-wrap! I gave good feedback as it wasn't the seller's fault in any way!
It was nearly a year ago that Brian sent
the Award International set to the
Blog, and here they are again with their diminutive clones . . . clones neatly-spliced
with a dwarf's DNA though! I also took an Airfix
comparison shot for that Blog as it was clear they weren't 'any-old' cake
decorations . . .
. . . they are in fact the same maker (in
Hong Kong) as the old Airfix piracy Redcoats
- actually cross-painted Bluecoats!
Now, I may be no particular fan of
terrorist insurgencies (did you hear that collective murmur of WTF from the
PSTSM?), especially when it involves spilling tea, but even I can see there's
something not quite right about expecting two old guys and a small-boy, armed
with three musical instruments and a flag to march across a birthday cake
(other puddings/desserts are available for decoration) to certain death while
whistling whatever-came-before-Dixie!
It 'ain't right, I tells ya!
However, as far as I know these 40mm Spirit of '76 figures were never available
in the UK, yet the Redcoats (based on Airfix'sWashinton's Army - still needs text!)
seem to be freely available over here, usually as a set of 7 - with the 7th
sometimes glued to his horse - or as an 8-piece set.
Now, here's the thing . . . assuming that
they are neither that rare, we are probably looking at Culpitts handling the UK invasion, while someone like Wilton was distributing the spirited
fifes & drums of the tea-party wreakers.
Here's a 'What if?';
What if Wilton
(or someone similar) ordered a bunch of figures for the [then] upcoming
celebration of the bicentenary of the success of said terrorist insurgency, say
from a dodgy-looking bloke down the mainly toy-producing industrial estate
alongside Port Tain Sang, at the end of the really long, really wide (with lots
of hotels and restaurants - says Google) Grainville Road [don't look for any of
this on Google Earth, you'll be wasting your time, it's only known to Erwin
Sell and Paul Stadinger!].
And suppose the dodgy-looking bloke said
"Yes, no problem, 20,000 units
American Revolutionary Soldiers like these (opened hand to reveal Airfix Washington's
Army figures given him by Wilton's rep's
shipper's buyer), but twice size yes? And
20,000 units of men in painting (waving magazine-cutting of Archibald
Willard's famous doodle with other hand), two
months, real good, no problem".
Three months later, a tramp-steamer (this
was the '70's!) arrived in the US (having left Kowloon harbour some
weeks earlier) loaded with this sure-fire patriotic money-maker of cake
decorating joy.
The cartons were shipped to Wilton (or whoever), and are opened . .
. "What the Effing-mother-of-C?!!?"
said [yelled] the Sales & Marketing guy (they always cuss in the movies - maybe
I'm a closet Sales & Marketing guy?); "Get me another box!", he barked; it too was opened "No! They're all Effing red too - Godammit! What
the Eff are we gonna' do now; they were CoD not FoB?
Now cake-men - like toy-men - probably have
networks, and just suppose someone in the office said "What about PJ [Culpitt] over in Ingerland (they didn't call it Ookay then), he owes us a favour after he dumped all
those dumb soccer players on us for Mexico" [or something improbable like
that!], a phone call was made, a deal was struck and Britain got the Redcoats,
while the American market kept the Spirit
of '76 figures as a nice stand-alone vignette; sans armed-support?
Only a 'what if?'!
But they were definitely from the same
maker (image stopped right down to be readable; translucent white is a bugger
to macro!), and I recon they were designed to be together, but unless there are
Bluecoats somewhere - and I've never seen them - it's not right to face them
off . . . on a cake!
Are the Redcoats readily available in the
US does anyone know, or do US collectors scan UK evilBay for them? Have you
seen Bluecoats? Did you see the Sprit of'76 figures in UK bakers at the time?
A couple more comparison shots while I was
in the mood! Did the Americans win the war by drumming us to death? No, but
they drummed us out! Boom-boom! I wonder if those colonists ever dreamed what America
would become . . . ?
You can see that the small-boy will make a
decent adult for 30mm figures, here Marksmen/Rado-Ri-Toys,
but SAE or Spencer Smith AWI would also benefit from his attendance at muster.
Still looking for the baseless set though! Maybe
next year . . .
I seem to recall more reverence when I
posted the Award set last year, it
all depends what mood you're in when you sit down to type, anyone offended by
any of the above - for any reason; should go to their doctor tomorrow and ask
for a sense of humour - except the PSTSM; you can stay offended! More, less
irreverent AWI tomorrow . . .
4 comments:
Check your email. I sent pix of the baseless trio.
Found them Bill, brilliant! The mini-season is stretching into a 'season' - Brian sent me some lovely wagons as well today!
H
Of course, in keeping with the tradition of reversed colours for drummers, red was often worn by US drummers.
eg:williamsburg fife and drum corps
So if I ever track the blue ones down . . . I can swap the drummers!
Cheers Ross
H
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