Selcol, large scale village
Graham writes;
"I am
interested in model villages and have seen your "Small Scale World"
website. I have some SELCOL buildings made from white plastic which have to be
painted and they lose the paint very easily, as you can see from the attached
photos. I wondered if you have seen any others (I have a Market Hall which
seems to be a different scale) and also if these buildings were based on those
in or near Braintree near their factory which you mentioned."
Now, having established I know nothing about the buildings as Selcol per
se, it has to be pointed out I am no expert on Braintree or its
environs either - I had a school-friend who lived in Brentwood!
Given that we will sort most of it out to some extent in the next few
minutes; can anyone from the Braintree area or with knowledge of these
buildings (or indeed; Selcol's wider
production) help; particularly with that last question?
I asked around at the Sandown Park show with no luck but to draw an
interesting selection of blank faces and have asked a couple of other experts
to no avail, yet, as with all these things, dozens of people must have been
involved in the design, production and marketing of the buildings, and - at
least - hundreds involved in the purchase and use thereof, back in the day?
A close-up of one of the little (not that little!) thatched-cottages; they
seem to be blow moulded, or rotary-moulded (the larger hole?) polyethylene,
hence the failure of paint to adhere, and to have been filled with expanded polystyrene-foam,
for rigidity.
The subsequent/resulting plug is clearly marked Selcol, so the one fact which is known is that they are Selcol! Now, there's a possibility that
they were originally beach-toys, sold unpainted to place round your
sand-castle, but I think that's clutching at straws, and that they were
designed for garden railways, being scaled somewhere between O-gauge (building
dimensions) and G (figures in the next shot).
A couple of the people I've spoken to on the subject have drawn the
obvious parallel with the Spot-On
village from Tri-Ang/Mettoy, but that
was 1:42/48'ish, against the 1:35/32'ish of these, and I can imagine the PoplarPlastics bus drawing up to this rotunda/market cross/corn exchange to pick-up the [not so] little
people and take them into the nearby city!
You can see - from the damaged sections - the polystyrene foam inside, and
Graham's railway viaduct in the background! He runs O gauge trains including Triang, Big Big, and Timpo
rolling stock and has been doing so for 46 years!
Any information on these, such as when they were advertised, any other
buildings in the range or whether they represent real subjects - from Braintree
or anywhere else; would be much appreciated by Mr. Smith - and other Garden Rail,
or Model Village fans - I'm sure.
As an aside, does anyone know if John Ruddle's buildings have been
featured in any works other than the one shot shown in an old modelling
magazine? Graham; being a fan of such things, is keen to see them, and having
been lucky enough to 'have the tour' myself, I know they are worth a look -
being taken from Victorian Edinburgh to Kabul, via Khartoum and back via
Calcutta, in a walk round a modest suburban lawn is a real treat!
2 comments:
Very nice - and colorful - looking buildings!
Cheers Phil! Apparently Selcol also re-boxed Strombecker kits, so I have to research them and add them to the A-Z page . . . Doh!
H
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