This sat on Adrian's stall until the hall
was nearly empty, unloved and unwanted, now . . . it is damaged and has a
replacement spear . . . but it's already one of the top-ten figures in my
entire collection - and bear in mind; I have all eight tiny Trojans - twice!
It’s a French-made Clairet Greek Hoplite and to be honest the replacement spear - for which
the hand has been drilled - only enhances a superb sculpt, the undamaged original
is furnished with some double-barbed stick which looks like it was borrowed
from an Esquimaux who previously used it to catch seals! This one though, is
about to ruin a Persian's afternoon - forever!
This is a beautiful figure . . . isn't it?
Stunning! Best of show.
Who knows? A blow-moulded, semi-flat,
celluloid Indian, clearly removed from a larger piece; possibly a decorative
picture or mirror-frame? I think it may be pre- or between-the-wars rather than
a post-war piece?
As well as the cut-mark/hole at the back of
the stump where a backing was, he has also been removed from something below
his feet, the hole being neatly covered-over with a couple of wafer-thin slices
of ivory or bone, previously board-game counters or tiddlywinks, which only
raises the question, why wasn't the damage behind similarly patched?
Nothing too exciting, an Elastolin figure for the neighbouring Austrian
market, where the bought-out Tipple-Topple's
brand-mark was retained for continuity, or to appease the locals - stop them
starting another war! The seller had several poses, but I chose this as an
iconic example.
Could be nothing, could be something? Wintershilfswerke
(WHW) maybe, or 'from hollow-cast'?
The white trousers rather rule out British? He's a glassy or brittle
polystyrene, semi-flat, or - at least - somewhat sculpted in one plane and a
ceremonial from somewhere? 50/52-mil? I like him!
Really pleased - but a bit gutted. I posted
this along with a kneeling firer last year having shot them at the show. This
year I managed to get this one, but the kneeling figure - seemingly - had
already been bought by someone else! Although the kneeling one had a silly
smile and a bent barrel, so I'm happy with this one really. An Argentine (or 'believed to be Argentinian')
copy in polyethylene of a Lineol
composition-made, WWI late-type German Infantryman.
Smine . . . sorll'myne!
I thought the hoplite was by Tibidabo? The blow mould Indian is superb.
ReplyDeleteOk did somebody complain about the lack of posts the postings are flooding out. I think we will let you sleep for a few hours. Cheers Johnny. PS have you seen Marx Fort Alamo for sale Posting on Strelets forum and you have been quoted. Your fame continues to grow.
ReplyDeleteCheers Jah! Big of you! I haven't been on Strelets since that Turk ruined it and I had to get their host-provider to remove two threads!
ReplyDeleteH
Brought here by a recent Carrick post over at the Facebook "Friends of PW" group ...
ReplyDeleteYou are welcome Pylgrym and happy to visit at any time!
ReplyDeleteH