I don't know much about flats, a
rudimentary history and the technical stuff about pouring lead into slate
moulds, or that sculptors and publishers (or 'Editors') are not necessarily the
same people, is about the limit of my knowledge. I know I like them and I have
a few, they come-in in mixed lots, or if I see some going cheap I grab them, while for everything else Garratt usually proves more reliable on flats than he does
on plastics, if one wants to know more!
I also have a couple of the older German
books along with the beautiful all-colour one which came out in the
1990's/early 2000's (glossy, dark green cover?), but they are all in a rather
appalling stack in the corner of the garage and I haven't started sorting 'the
library' out yet!
I have however - as you will have noticed -
started scanning the cuttings from the box- and lever-arch files and trying to
get the more interesting bits up here, to which end I scanned this in, meaning
to simply post it 'as is', to wit; a curiosity, in the hope someone may have been able
to help with the ID'ing of the figures.
Art
Craft Products - a jobber in the early 1950's;
working out of a warehouse (mail order) or a speciality-store advertising
seasonal novelties in the press, something like that and the pictures look like
you'd want a set - on the mantle for Christmas, arranged under the crimbo-tree
or set-out on a wide window sill, or even on the cake?
Although it's not clear they aren't solids
of some kind! And younger readers should be aware that the mid-eighties and
gay-nineties to which the ad' refers are the 1880's and 1890's, closer (or 'as
close') to the 1950's as/than we are!
I then realised a picture I'd only recently
hoovered-off evilBay matched the sets, with a typical flat, block-in,
factory-paint of the era, but still no ID as they were being sold unknown.
Then about two weeks ago another picture
appeared on the same site, describing a Hafer
as the name, I downloaded the image thinking it might be a typo for Hafner or a similar, more familiar name,
but checked Garratt and the dongles to find two of them, both connected to the
same German or 'Nuremberg Flats' outfit!
I intended to crop the image and do the
same thing as with the previous, but it was a nicer, high-res image, so
thought to ask the seller if I could use it as a stand-alone image - I went
back to see if it was still for sale, only to find he had several useful things
in his shop, so I ended-up buying three of them!
Like the old painted ones (which will
probably be from Art Craft or a
similar seller and contemporary or near-contemporary with the advert) this sculpting is
clearly visible in both sets, but is - here - a modern or recent casting for someone
with greater painting skills than me to work their magic on.
Lots more shots as we may never visit it
again! Going on Garratt, but from his Model Soldier Collecting, not the Encyclopaedia,
we can see that the WH is for Wolfgang Hafer the editor. LM and HL
are probably for the engravers Madlener and
Lecke - maybe one specialised in
horses, the other the sleigh/people, or one blocked-in the other, the finer work?
While the RH may have been added in the last few decades (1979 by the looks
of it?), being Ruediger Hafer;
Wolfgang's son, they both operating near Kassel, a place I have often
cruised-past on the way to somewhere else - a beautiful part of the world
though! The Wv, is for Winter Scenes
(item 19) . . . in German . . . Winterver-something!
How they come in! I also added to the
library (greatly increasing the flats section) with the Berlinner Zinnfiguren catalogue and all but completed the SEGOM archive with their flats
catalogue, having already got the solids/plastic catalogue and the small scale
plastic catalogue to which the late page (with the additional British poses) was added by a contributor back at
the beginning of the Blog; ten-odd years ago!
See, by happenstance; the post as good as
wrote itself, and I get to add Art Craft
and Hafer to the tag list . . .
bargain! And . . . from the base shape/markings, I think I'll be able to ID some of
my unknown flats, so we may well return to Hafer
(or SEGOM) next year.
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