About Me
- Hugh Walter
- No Fixed Abode, Home Counties, United Kingdom
- I’m a 60-year-old Aspergic gardening CAD-Monkey. Sardonic, cynical and with the political leanings of a social reformer, I’m also a toy and model figure collector, particularly interested in the history of plastics and plastic toys. Other interests are history, current affairs, modern art, and architecture, gardening and natural history. I love plain chocolate, fireworks and trees, but I don’t hug them, I do hug kittens. I hate ignorance, when it can be avoided, so I hate the 'educational' establishment and pity the millions they’ve failed with teaching-to-test and rote 'learning' and I hate the short-sighted stupidity of the entire ruling/industrial elite, with their planet destroying fascism and added “buy-one-get-one-free”. Likewise, I also have no time for fools and little time for the false crap we're all supposed to pretend we haven't noticed, or the games we're supposed to play. I will 'bite the hand that feeds', to remind it why it feeds.
Sunday, December 31, 2017
12 is for Days of Christmas - Day Six
Kinder meets Disney, these are
among the easier to locate, but the toys that use the [non-standard] container
as a part of the toy are less common.
Labels:
12 days of Christmas,
Civilian,
Contribution,
Disney,
K,
Kinder,
Make; Italy,
Novelty,
Plymr - Mixed,
Res Plastics - RP,
Vehicles
LP is for Little Plum!
Sometimes a title is so obvious it's like
Newton's apple; it just falls into your lap! These two are by Lucky Products and resemble the UK Beano comic cartoon character Little Plum and his err . . . sister . . . girlfriend?
Not a terribly good likeness of Little
Plum, but the principles of cartoon-caricature are there with the
oversized head, the childlike features, the clowning-around and the succeeding
in looking harmless even when waving a war-axe around!
The female is very similar, but dancing off
the other foot. Both carry on the tradition of the earlier Jecsan set (which was also copied in Hong Kong I think; as gum-ball
prizes?) made in Spain, although the Iberian set had more grotesque features, particularly
in the faces (borderline-racist Indians), but also little spindly arms and legs,
the horses drawing heavily on the Lucky
Luke comic strip. As far as I know LP
only did these two poses.
As Pink
Floyd nearly put it: "Careful
with that tomahawk Eugene"!
And a quick thanks to dadsattictoys on
evilBay who got the boy to me in about four days, several of which included a
Sunday, Christmas day and Boxing day! Grudging respect to Royal Fail - as well -
I suppose!
PS - because I put "I think" in the title, I'd covered my arse - they're not scoring points, they're just being arseholes and for the second Christmas in a row; once an arsehole, always an arsehole. Nice of me to give them something to write about over the holiday season, onanistic tosspots!
Labels:
70mm,
American,
Comics,
DC Thompson,
Hong Kong,
Humour,
LB (LP) - Lik Be,
Plymr - Ethylene,
TV/Movie,
Wild West
Saturday, December 30, 2017
12 is for Days of Christmas - Day Five
More Jeeps! A whole field of four-by-fours,
kubels, dune-buggies and utes! You can see the gaps Mr. Ferretti is trying to fill, if you think you can help eMail me and I'll get
you both in touch.
F is for Follow-up; Belenes, Nativities, Santons etc...
Along with the angel we saw yesterday came
these two as a response to the santon and nativity posts.
I'm on safer ground with the right hand
figure; 70mm. 'ivorene' polystyrene nativity figure, probably the Hearald angel
or Archangel, although I don't recognise it from a specific figure
manufacturer's set, so could be a more generic or unrecorded decoration from a
home-wares company or cake decoration supplier somewhere?
Equally though; it could be a tourist piece
of Jesus himself, St Paul, or Peter? Also, while the colour of the plastic is
more 1970's Hong Kong or US, the styling of the sculpt is quite 1950's French
production?
I don't know anything about the John Bull
look-alike which seems to be a fired-earth or terracotta, the chipping to the
front of the base even suggests a composition, but with that paint definitely a
minor-make!
It's clear Crescent's sentry doesn't trust him either "Your papers . . . Now!"
Can you help Brian with indentifying either
figure?
Labels:
60mm,
70mm,
Christmas,
Civilian,
Composition; Terracotta,
Contribution,
F,
Nativity,
Novelty,
Personalities,
Plymr - Styrene,
Seasonal,
Unknown
Friday, December 29, 2017
12 is for Days of Christmas - Day Four
More steckfiguren, more Indians, more
aliens and some monsters, the little cartoony horse-riders, cartoony knights
and the best versions of astronauts.
Labels:
12 days of Christmas,
Aliens,
Civilian,
Contribution,
K,
Kinder,
Make; Italy,
Mixed Eras,
Monsters,
Novelty,
Plymr - Mixed,
Res Plastics - RP,
Robots,
Sci-Fi,
Space - NASA,
Spacemen
A is for An Angelic Angel
This came in from Brian B the other day, it's sweet, Christmassy and I know nothing about it other than A) it looks like it's from a set of LRG's (Little Rubber Girls - hummmm . . . I think they may have a NSFW website!) or some kind of 'Blind Bag' thing and B) it appears to have been made by an S Sun [& Sons/Bros./Co./Inc./Limited/ Manufactory/Plastics/Products?] of China.
She's made from a lovely rich gold material
which looks - from the swirls on the underside - to be PVC or a similar soft
rubbery polymer. With her T-shirt and sneakers and recognisably Manga
features she's modern, I guess she may be as well known to some, as my little
running girl and mushroom community turned-out to be, the other month? She has
a halo too, so some religious connection in her history; or from a set with
little devils as well?
She has a protector, and while he may be
aiming over her head, he is a bit to warlike for the 25th which - along with
last week's connectivity issues - kept them off the page then! But still;
Angels at Chrimbo - check!
Can anyone add anything for Brian?
Labels:
50mm,
A,
Christmas,
Make; China,
Nativity,
Novelty,
Plymr - Vinyl/PVC,
Seasonal,
Unknown
Thursday, December 28, 2017
12 is for Days of Christmas - Day Three
Steckfiguren -
Cowboys, Indians, Mexicans, backwoodsmen workmen, alien-robots and both sides
in the American Civil War, a stunning vista!
Labels:
12 days of Christmas,
ACW,
Civilian,
Contribution,
K,
Kinder,
Make; Italy,
Mixed Eras,
Novelty,
Plymr - Mixed,
Res Plastics - RP,
Robots,
Sci-Fi,
Space 'Aliens',
Wild West
A is for Army Force Playset
A very quick one today, I know this has
been a bit 'thin gruel' the last few days; but the issues with Internet
activity, coming as they did when I had other things to do, have left it all a
bit pear-shaped here at Small Scale World Towers, and you gets what you gets
what I had to grab!
The latest incarnation of the Pioneer 'Street Machine' sets we've been following, as much as by accident
as by design, since Rack Toy Month, this time in Smyths (who had the big set with one row of military among the
civil stuff the other month), but imported by them - in time for Christmas -
not Kandy, who usually handle them.
Labels:
1:76 - 1:72,
1:87 - HO,
20mm,
25mm,
A,
AFV; APC/MCV,
AFV; Tk. Transport,
AFV; Truck,
AFV's,
Boxed,
China,
HO - OO,
Metal - Die Cast,
Pioneer Toys,
Smyths,
Streetmachine,
Vehicles
Wednesday, December 27, 2017
12 is for Days of Christmas - Day Two
More vehicles, I've always liked the grand
tourers (front, center-right) as they make useful staff-cars for 1:76th scale
figures, but who knew there were so many Jeeps!
N is for Nuts! Nutcrackers - Part Three; They're Everywhere!
I'm sure Brain Berke and I aren't the only
ones to have noticed this slow, sentient takeover of global culture by the
madly grinning but apparently 'nice' nutcrackers (Martians are nice . . . in
the eyes of other Martians; as they render us down to a protein Vimto!), so; in
order to protect humanity from further incursion, here's a quick guide to their
clever disguises!
Certain tropes are adhered-to which can't
be easily hidden, they follow a theme of pseudo-military dress, a pattern of
sartorial elegance best described as privately-funded Yeoman Cavalry meet
Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Heart's Club Band in Biba's pirate-chandlery!
Boots are usually laced, the laces either
straight or crossed, but buttons can be found and plain boots are seen.
Smock-jackets are laced - again parallel or cross-stitched, while others have
button-up dress jackets and either crossed-belts or parallel belts are
sometimes seen being sported.
Headwear varies but is commonly military or
regal, if regal; usually multi-pointed crowns, if military; busbies, bearskins,
shakos and Polish-Lancers caps are all found, with or without peaks.
They hide themselves in numerous ways, Brian
shot these in New York, I saw two similar sets in Basingrad (an easy target),
but couldn't shelfie them, security was tight. Note however that while they
wear different uniforms these evil-beevils are clones - the mustaches fool
no-one observant!
Large tin-plate ones (5-foot) have been
seen - also in Basingrad - drumming up support (it's an easy target), drums,
other instruments, swords, muskets, fancy-staffs and ceremonial maces are
favourite props of these invaders.
Larger figures (3/4 feet) have also
infiltrated this New Jersey fruit market (have they no humanity), draped in
rich, Prussian-blue velvet cloaks, playing with smaller infiltrators on
puppet-strings, you see . . . you see how they inveigle their way into our
culture with a mixture of charm and pushiness!
Don't mess with Skandi-Santa, he looks like
he's about 'had' the human holidays, but you can laugh at his socks when he's not
looking . . . but be careful, his eyes will follow you round the market!
I haven't escaped this invasion, forcing
2-quid (Poundworld Plus) from my still warm hands, this one has come home with me and there was
nothing I could do to stop him. He has announced himself White Rod; Keeper of the Keys to the Lollipop Cupboard!
His mouth works, but is only big-enough for
a pine-nut or sunflower-seed; clearly they have another agenda entirely, which
has nothing to do with nuts and everything to do with world domination and the
subjugation of the masses.
They've crept on to my wrapping paper!
They. Are. Everywhere! Run . . .run for the hills!
These jumped-out of a cubby-hole in Debenhams, Basingrad (the bloody place
is infested with them) and nearly got me, but I managed to shoot them and make
for the escalator!
If this warning has come too late for you,
and you have youngsters around over the holiday, this is an A4 dimensioned
picture you can print-off for them to colour-in, it might buy you 20-minutes
peace and quiet, but then again . . . it might not!
Tuesday, December 26, 2017
12 is for Days of Christmas - Day One
♪♫ Trains . . . and boats and planes ♫♪♪. . .
. . . . .aaand...er...diggers! Burt, you forgot the diggers!
Anyone wishing to correspond with Francesco with a view to swapping can get in
touch with him through me, just email me for his contact details.
Labels:
12 days of Christmas,
Aircraft,
Civilian,
Contribution,
Giodi,
K,
Kinder,
Make; Italy,
Metal - Die Cast,
Mixed Eras,
Novelty,
Res Plastics - RP,
Trains,
Vehicles,
Vessels
N is for Nuts! Nutcrackers - Part Two; Nutty Kings
The reason Brian B's shelfies were so
timely is that earlier that morning I had encountered a huge nutcracker outside
the gun shop, and when I say "huge"
I mean these guys must be six-foot if they are an inch!
I also found that my mate hadn't thrown his flyer in the recycling, so was able to get to the bottom of the whole caboodle, it was a Christmas hunt designed to drive custom into the town, organised by one of the local commercial bodies (Fleet BID), which sadly hasn't saved the sweet shop which will close this weekend I think.
This is he; Brazil Nut! The left hand
photo' was taken a few days later after I had worked out what the hell was
going on, in the meantime I continued into town and found . . .
. .
. another one - Walnut - in the window of the little boutique opposite Boots.
Well, the game was afoot Watson! Arriving at my destination to find a bunch of
shelfies from Brian was the news that the Gods wanted nutcrackers on the Small
Scale World this holiday season.
Now while I may be a dyed-in-the-wool twenty-ninth-day
non-evental atheist, with leanings toward the one true lord; The Flying
Spaghetti Monster, equally; I'm no fool, and if the Gods want, the Gods get.
By now I was digging a vague memory of a
flyer coming through the door a few days earlier, from the depths of my
pea-brain, and suspected I would find more, and that one was likely to be found
in the main precinct, this one!
Cashew Nut also has
all the equipment (to his left) necessary to enable younger nutcracker-hunters to
temporarily turn themselves into nutcrackers - bargain! To its right is an
identical one (apart from his name; Peanut) which was found in the
Public Library the next day!
I then managed to walk past a forth yards
from my destination, Macadamia being found at Gina G's ice-cream parlour, in a
fetching orange, again second images were taken later. It was a few minutes
after this I found the mail from Brian and replied 'Funnily enough I've just....'
I also found that my mate hadn't thrown his flyer in the recycling, so was able to get to the bottom of the whole caboodle, it was a Christmas hunt designed to drive custom into the town, organised by one of the local commercial bodies (Fleet BID), which sadly hasn't saved the sweet shop which will close this weekend I think.
It was also at this point I realised they
had different names, and nuts at that, hence going back to some I'd already
shot to make sure I had all the names.
I spent the next few days looking
fruitlessly for the other five with no luck, but after a new flyer had been
acquired (all previous flyers having mysteriously disappeared from both houses
(the Gods may want this shit to happen but they don't make it easy for the
acolyte!) and partially memorised, I found these two (Chestnut and Pecan)
in the dark walking home at the end of last week (15th).
Chestnut and the
earlier found Walnut have the joint distinctions of A) being reverse
colour-ways of each other and B) not having a same colour twin, the other eight
are four pairs of identical twins!
The following Monday got me close to the
goal of all ten with Cobnut in the dance studio (I
explained to the lady that I wasn't in the market for a pink tutu, but if ever
I was; hers would be the emporium I would patronise for the apparel!), while Pine
Nut was outside the surf-ski shop.
However . . . I had by this point tried
every store in or near the place on the map (see below) where Number two was
supposed to be and had asked several of them if they were hiding it, all to no
avail, so being me, and on the God's work, fired-off a quick maile-electronique (the French add 'e'
to everything!) missive to Fleet BID,
muttering darkly about competitions that were impossible to complete and local
government corruption, which resulting in a swift, happy reply from (Tracy Shrimpton)
explaining that it was in the toy shop.
This Monday (18th) found me right down the
back of the toy shop, ticking the last box - Hazelnut - but there's
something cynical about placing it at the back of the shop; some of the others
took a bit of finding but they were all nameable from the street, except the
toy shop one.
And if you think I'm giving the toy shop a
hard time for no reason, remember it's the same one that places a giant Playmobile figure outside, in the
street, every day!
So the Gods hopefully appeased, the trail
followed, the nutty kings found, if they follow this up with the same again
next year, and with the Historical Society likely to do another toy exhibition,
we seem to be laying down traditional Christmas posts here at Small Scale World,
but then Christmas is all about tradition!
Monday, December 25, 2017
K is for Kinderfest
I would imagine that despite eggs really
being an Easter thing (why did they chose an egg shape and not a sphere?) there
will be a fair number of Kinder eggs
dragged from the depths of stockings today, a few triple-packs under the tree
as 'little presents' as in; "You've
had your big present . . . now what's in this?", so here's a few for
those of you not blessed by Ferrero's finest milk and white.
This is a shot of Francesco Ferretti's mostly
RP (Res Plastics) kinder toys, and it's a joy to behold, he has sent us lots of
closer shots and they will run from tomorrow as a 'Twelve Days of Christmas',
one per day, little or no blurb as I can't say more than the pictures show and
each picture shows enough to keep you looking for minutes so . . . enjoy!
Another long shot, all these shelves will
be seen in the coming days, including most of the all-important 'Steckfiguren'
some German collectors get quite excited about!
At the same time ' Jargaba12' has got in touch,
he is selling his entire collection of what I call Mocherette (for reasons I
will one day get round to telling), and anyone interested can get in touch with
him by via me.
As well as the Kinder versions he has (or seems to have) all (certainly; most!) of
the earlier versions from Val Peltro
and Westair, and later Winter Reproductions and Ancestors of Dover, as well as the
Russian-made ones issued a few years ago.
An ideal opportunity to fill gaps or build
a decent collection of these figures which are as sought-after as the Steckfiguren,
which I would take myself if my budget wasn't so squeesed!
'12 days' from tomorrow.
Happy
Christmas all!
N is for Nuts! Nutcrackers - Part One; New York Shelfies
I was literally just starting to collate
nutcracker stuff for a foreseen post on their return, re-invention, restoration
to prominence - whatever you call the phenomena - on my way to the Internet station
(currently down) I use, only to find a bunch of these from Brain, who would
send several lots in over the next week or two up to last weekend.
So, things spiraled as they do and we now
have three posts which while not covering everything; will give a reasonable
account of a set of figural 'things' that/who have been pretty-much absent from
the blog - today looking at the wide variation in nutcrackers through Brain's
shelfies.
So we start with the nutcracker equivalent
of deforms or 'super-deforms'! These have deliberately short legs, short bodies
and squidged heads to create short, fat nutcrackers, presumably for
specialising in short, fat nuts - hazels?
These are more traditional in proportion,
but flarxed-up with sequinned headdress'es, lace trim and fancy codpieces, I am
reminded of Fanny the Wonder Dog!
Much more Christmassy; the God of the
lollipop-stick on the left (see 'White Rod' - my new purchase - in part three),
and clearly MacNutcracker on the right, or is it McNuttcraker, I think a
massacre in Inverness is required to sort that out; yes - I listened to Mark
Steel the other day!
I seem to recall we've had the camouflaged
one before? News, Views, or Brain B last year? I'll have to find the post to
add the new 'nutcracker' tag! He's compared to a very traditional drummer-boy
one in 'Santa-scarlet', not available from Farrow
& Ball . . . yet!
To the right is a fantastic post-modern,
minimalist take on the nutcracker, this is almost a bare one, all the basic
parts are there, sans hat or bearskin; it's just been given a coat of what
looks to be gloss-white. Love it!
Here we see on the right some of the
'super-deforms' apparently attached to the hat of a more conventional
nutcracker . . . "Shall I throw the
green cannon-bauble of Antioch at the guests now, Mr. Scarramanga?"
While to the left; a priceless version with
chefs coming out of their own cakes! The heavier base will allow for some
serious leverage . . . Brazils' shouldn't be a problem for them, but it looks
like they are powered novelties with little actual strenght? I suspect their
lollipops may be real, sugary 'snacks' though!
Hummm . . . designer babe, least said -
soonest mended; she doesn't even have the proper mouth!
Larger ones in more traditional layouts,
Tyrolean musicians to the left, Bavarian guards types to the right, this is the
size for a practical, actually use it for nuts, type!
This guy is looking particularly stern,
he's also been clothed in starter-flags, while his hat has a weird
Hibernian/Polish cavalry Officer vibe! Also he's unusual for having shoes and
socks rather than high boots.
The reason I had started collection info.
On these the same morning as Brian sent the first of the shelfies, was because
these had all but disappeared by the late 1980's; you found the odd
non-working, smaller one with hanger in peoples family collections of
tree-decorations, and they were still a staple of tourist shops selling Erzgebirge
in Southern Germany or Berlin (there was a lovely store full of this stuff in
the Europa Centre down by 'The Zoo',
and I remember a whole street of shops selling them in Bad Tölz
in the 1970's. But - as far as British (and I suspect; other -) Christmases' are
concerned - they had all but vanished.
Yet in the last few years they have
multiplied like fungi on a forgotten silage clamp, and there is a tsunami of
nutcrackers washing over the retail landscape like . . . err . . . a very big
wave...
Now my theory for this is a simple one and
I'm open to other hypotheses; namely, after the end of the Cold War (actually still
healthily chundering-on in the background!) and reunification of the two
Germanys, there was very real poverty in the Eastern portion of Germany and in
the Former Czechoslovakia, and as a way of producing both jobs and cash, there
was a re-vamping of craft-industries, including the wood-based ones,
particularly those of the Erz (or 'ore') Mountains.
As a result of success in those ventures,
and a triggering of the nostalgia button of Western consumers, they have caused
this current plethora of nutcrackers, there may have been a smaller part played
- particularly in the UK - by the likes of Lidl
and Aldi shipping in sets of wooden
decorations, a possibility backed-up by the apparent popularity of less
'Erzgebirge' wooden decorations using the new lazer-cutting techniques. Fashion
says; wood's where it's at man!
Next - The Nutcracker Trail!
Labels:
1:Mixed Scales,
1:No scale,
Christmas,
Contribution,
Erzgebirge,
Ethnic Dress,
N,
Novelty,
Nutcrackers,
Pier 1,
Seasonal - Celebration,
Wood
Sunday, December 24, 2017
C is for Carpentry - Field-carpentry
Bit of a box-ticker today, these have been
in the queue since 2012, but they are common knowledge and already to be seen
on the web, but with all the connectivity issues the last few days, and a big
gap in the queue on the 24th (this is being written PM of the 21st), this si
the best I can do at short notice!
When your soldiery aren't building heavy timber crosses . . . oh, no, that's Easter isn't it! The catapult from Atlantic, basically a copy of the old Elastolin siege engine, but more likely a copy of a copy . . . if
you know what I mean, in addition to Ougan
carrying the Elastolin model, various
Italian and French companies seem to have knocked-out copies, and Atlantic just scaled one of them down
for their ancient series; even the change from a counter-weight to a
rubber-band looped over an eye came from one of the larger clones I think?
I am pretty sure this is an original - in
every part - model, with both the heavy yellow rubber-band and the
rope-coloured button-tread being 'as supplied' by Atlantic in the original box. The mechanism works well and will
fling one of the little plastic rocks about four meters across a flat floor
from the level position.
A shot of a couple of complete runners, as
with everything Atlantic, they come
in various colours, but tent to be kept to a range of realistic 'wood' browns,
the same colours also seen throughout the Wild West range.
Another reason these images have been
incarcerated in Picasa for so long is that I kept meaning to re-shoot these
shots, it's not terribly clear (due to the angles I shot it at to hide
extraneous background) but this siege tower (also following it's DNA back
through larger piracies to the Hausser
model) is moving against a shoe box with its lid on upside-down to play at
being a fort!!
With all three of these machines the
nightmare for collectors are the little wheel-plugs or wedges which don't
stop-in, however hard you push them in, but - due to the nature of
polyethylene's properties - tend to pop-out and go AWOL when you aren't
looking, and I notice from the above I seem to have lost one after managing to husband
24 of them for the preceding 20 years . . . Doh!
The best kind of siege-engine is the one
your enemy happily tows into his city for you, despite the oracle telling him
NOT TOO! You deserve the government you get, and the Trojans got one that ended
their existence, couldn't happen today . . . could it?
I have a bit of a soft-spot for Trojan Horses
(which ought to be called 'Greek Horses'!) and have a half-a-plan to one day
get an Action Man horse (not much
different from this one in size - a tad bigger maybe?) and paint it in a
timber-plank scheme, giving it a twig mane and tail, gold ears and those manic
Greek-warship eyes!
The trapdoor is a bit of a 'fail' on this
model, it sort-of clips on, but can only be on or off; it doesn't hinge. Being
a more unique sculpt, it has less parts than the other two 'wooden-wonders'.
Labels:
1:76 - 1:72,
20mm,
Ancient Greece,
Ancient Troy,
Atlantic,
C,
HO - OO,
Make; Italy,
Plymr - Ethylene,
Siege Engines,
Troy
Saturday, December 23, 2017
C is for Chevaliers - Les Chevaliers Mini!
I picked these up in a charity shop the
other day and recognised them as those announced in Plastic Warrior a while back (issue 163) by Peter Evans in his
London Toy Show roundup - 'What's new for
2016'.
Feeling very pleased with myself (99p) I
snaffled them home for further investigation - after photographing the suitcase
they came in, popping the rivets on the plastic handle-holder and leaving it
all in my mates recycling bin - collect responsibly; the planets dying and it's
down to us!
As I say; they came in a little tin
'suitcase' (well, you could get quite a few of Action Man's suits in it!) which had obviously lost some packing
(probably a blister tray) at some point, and while there are definitely some
shields and weapons missing, imagining them laid-out in a tray suggests the
figure/horse-count is possibly correct, however trying to sort them into 'two
sides' is not so easy or clear, so it may be that the tin contained more, or
that they are the part-product/s of more than one set?
The horses are lovely although the lance is
a fancy jousting one rather than a plainer, more warlike and likely pointed
one, and it's been chewed! The rearing horse is particularly fine but the charging
one is good too; I believe they are scale-downs of the 70mm chunkers.
You can see that the level of detail while
smoothed-off in the way of PVC has been enhanced with paint to the same quality
as say the Starlux knights (which
then would go OK with), or higher as you can see from the images.
The figures are designed to both sit in the
saddle and walk upon the earth, and look good doing either, while a set of
weapons and shield were included, even if - as I suspect - most of them have
been lost in the mud of a battlefield.
But checking the PW story, I noticed that mine were lacking the finer details of
those figures and re-reading the article it became clear that it was announcing
a 56mm range, while the chaps I've picked-up are only 40mm! Indeed at least one
of mine is a different paint scheme (red with eagle helm-crest) from one of the
blue ones in the PW announce.
I don't know when they came out and whether
or not they pre-date or followed the 56mm launch, the tin looked new enough to
be less than two years old, but clearly the Papo
knights (and other lines?) are available in three sizes.
I've not seen them new, but look out for
them if you have the older Elastolin,
Marx, Merten or Starlux knights
in similar sizes as they will go well together, but don't store them together,
PVC (such as these) figures have a tendency to melt polystyrene figures such as
the aforementioned four brands, if barracked in the same block!
Stop Press! - It wasn't the PW article I was remembering, it was
Shaun's posting of them (much more here) and the subsequent comments from yours-truly
over there, which I've just found through Google (nice to know it works!), and
they do pre-date the mid-sized issue, they were sell-off in the US as early as
January 2015!
Labels:
40mm,
Boxed,
C,
Make; French,
Medieval,
Metal - Tin-plate,
Papo,
Plymr - Vinyl/PVC
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