One of each pose/item in each of the two
new colours, it's a odd selection, with a couple of question marks (in my mind
at least), such as is the horse supposed to be a Zebra, which is the American
Buffalo and which the Eurasian Wisent, are they both buffalo or are they both
bison, is it a seal or a Sea-lion and how do you tell without a given scale,
why so many deer . . . and etcetera! And while Google would help with some, I'd
lose the paragraph and I've lots of images to provide copy for here!
Useful for backgrounds and narrow-shelf
displays, these new ones are all in soft polyethylene plastic and two
wishy-washy colours which don't photograph that well, but by the end of the
post you'll be pretty familiar with them! The 'Birch' is a bit of a guess but
the only obvious alternative is those trees in the Southern US states with that
mossy stuff hanging in them?
If I didn't lump the sea-life in with this
shot it would be a kangaroo (or wallaby - no scale again?), but all the
sea-life are common in the Southern-oceans or Antarctica so we have a
four-shot!
North American doesn't fare much better!
I've called it a Buffalo Bison to differentiate it from the Wisent and used the
bigger model for the North American version, but are they the bigger, are they
Bison Buffalo? Does anybody care!
Yeah! I should perhaps have not bothered
with the labelling, or got a biology degree first! Reindeer are bigger huh? Red,
Roe, doe , fawn, Hearts or Harts, are they a species 'white hearts' . . . too
many deer!
The horse should probably be a Zebra but
he's too big and the mane's too long and the tails too fluffy so I've made him
a steppe-pony; arbitrarily! The fox and the pig are straightforward, but see
above for the buffalo notes!
Small ears and round back make him Asian!
The Rhino looks Asian too actually? Is a Dromedary a hybrid? Having recently
watched a program of the Bactrian originals - which are very different - and remeberering research we did on the HaT site years ago; I've
chickened-out of going firm on that one, most are hybrids weather one hump or two! Haven't the faintest which Gazelle-Impala-other
one is depicted, but 'gazelles' leap about!
Plastic colours and types so far found; the
original margarine and other premiums were in various shades of off-white,
cream and pale-beige polystyrene and the same material has provided the oxide
red, scarlet, blue and jade, while the same blue can also be found in soft
polyethylene along with the green and yellow (prompting today's post) and
black.
However all but a few of the creamy-white
ones I have here come from the Swagman's
Daughter (there are more originals in storage), as well as the people
thanked last time (Paul Morehead and Brian Carrick), Peter Evans gave me
another handful at May's Plastic Warrior show,
while I've purchased a few of the smaller lots along with the bulk clearance 'bundle';
and they all came - originally - from a wholesaler's stock in Malta.
They are used on religious high-days and
holidays (and other civic events?), wrapped in little paper twists and thrown from the
houses to the children in the street 9nowadays it seems to be mostly confetti streamers and balloons), if you've followed previous links to the Swagman's Daughter you'll have seen all
sorts similar novelties previously associated with gum-balls, Sobres, Christmas cracker-prizes and so
on - a lot of them came from the same vendor in Malta.
Clearly this was another outlet for such
stuff; I guess a 1970's piñata would
have contained the same little novelties alongside the sweets they also carried
[and which are also thrown in Malta, were among the first items ever in
Christmas crackers and often found as part of the mix in Sobres, Wundertutten and Lucky Bags], it's another source for the
mould-owners to sell product too, and another source for us collectors to mine!
Now last time I mentioned that people had
named both Jean and Manurba as the origin of the larger
versions, they are in fact Manurba as
seen by the catalogue image provided by Andreas Dittmann here, but only
some of the poses have been scaled down for this set, while other poses in this
set are either original sculpts or taken from elsewhere?
I've since picked up another hard plastic
one from the Manurba set, a Llama
(missing from the small set) although his Prickly-pear is damaged I notice!
Whether Manurba were the holders of
the original tool, back in the margarine-premium days, is still anyone's guess,
but I wouldn't bet my shirt on another brand at the moment, although I think
the moulds had been passed-on by the time they were building-up in a warehouse
in Malta?
Another question which arose, not in the
last post, but in the sorting of the ethylene batch was; why have a set with a
29-count; 28 or 30 being more obvious targets for the sculptor and tool-makers?
Well, there are more fence pieces in either colour than there are of any
other sculpt, with most animals outnumbered in both colours, the clear
inference being that a full 'set' or mould-shot contains two cavities of the
broken-down fence, giving a likely 30-count after all?
And they are bloody useful when you have
them in such numbers!
I
know what you're thinking Giselle -
have
I used six; or only five?
Well,
in all the excitement I clean forgot to count...
Adjusted set-count; the numbering is
arbitrary I think.
Two of the animals have suffered from
miss-moulding or short-shot, the elephant and the fox, the fences also suffer,
but they are bound too with all the thin channels which make-up the moulding.
As well as suffering short-shots the same
three sculpts (along with the two palm trees and leaping 'gazelle') also have
some very flashy examples, which was probably because the pressure was
turned-up or the heat increased - to prevent short-shotting - with the result
it 'over-flowed' it's designated parameters!
There's also a great variance in colour
across both colour samples with a lot of washed-out semi-transparent examples,
where not enough pigment has been added to the raw material and the neutral
granules haven't picked-up enough colour to go fully-opaque or 'solid'? That last lot was a mouthful wasn't it . . . the vagaries of 'getting
technical'!!
'Image 13' my notes say - unlucky for some?
I think the combination of the three problem areas is what decided
the Swagman's Daughter to offload
them for a reasonable-sum in my general direction, and I in return for a
bargain said I'd only swap them . . .
. . . so while I have a few complete sets
of these for swap, it'll be on a no money, no pack-drill basis! Therefore; if
anyone would like a complete example (with two fences) get in touch and tell me
what you've got to offer in exchange, early applicants can stipulate green or
yellow, or get a default 50/50 mix.
2 comments:
I am flat out against them. Could they spare the plastic?
Heh-heh-heh! Hee-hee-hee . . .
Have you gone on a comedy course . . .
Without telling me?
H
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