And what they are; simple swoppet style (or
technically 'swivel-waist') cheapy-toys, numbered A80-A83, which places them at
the head of the jungle/zoo 'Funimals'
(they have lots of titles; Fun Friends,
Cartoon Animals, Kookie Animals, but that's the one I use) from LP, A84 is still unknown to me, A85 is the lioness, and it means I'm
probably not looking for the anachronistic chinosaurs who were still in the
frame last summer, but see below!
This is No. A80, he appears to have secured himself access to cast-iron
axe-heads with a central shaft-hole, which leaves him the most advanced hominid
on the planet for at least the next 600,000 years!
No.
A81; the archer, you can see from the previous shot
that there are two versions of loin-cloth, a mossy/grassy one and this one
which is sort of stitched-together leaves, bits of bark or giant beetle-shells!
They both come in various shades of green.
The problem with this set is that while
there are four upper-torso sculpts, there appear to be only three leg poses,
the archer (above) and spearman (sharpened pole; below) seem to always share
the advancing/braced stance legs, while this pose; A82, and the axmen seem to alternate between the other two bent-knee
standing/squatting leg poses.
Assuming they were all on one small tool, and
were produced in similar numbers that simply doesn't add-up, so I suspect it's
just happenstance that mine seem to have a 'pattern' which wasn't in the
original issues, and that owners have swapped (or swopped!) the figures around
to give the 'right-looking' legs to the spearman and archer?
Although the poses of archer and bowman
here suggest there is a subtle difference between two versions of the spread
pose, with the waist-join angled a few degrees differently? Which would make
more sense - four and four, randomly issued.
A83. A lot of mine (from different sources, over some years) have
traces of red paint, so quite a bloodthirsty set when issued? Rather at odds
with the cartoonish animals numbered after them! Maybe I am looking for
dinosaurs after all?
As well as different greens for the loin-cloth,
the figures themselves vary greatly from a translucent semi-tanned flesh
colour, to a full-on oxide or orange-brown, and must have been available for
some time, probably (like the Funimals)
in various sets and branded to other importers/jobbers or as generics.
this is them! I knew I was not crazy. I bought a bag of Chinasaurs around 1971 and some of these cavemen were in there. The removable loincloths just seemed too weird for me. This is the first photos I've seen of them.
ReplyDeleteIt's their second outing here, you need to visit more!!!! Joking aside, Anon, would one of the 'Chinasaurs' have been a small, orangey-brown prehistoric mammal about half-the-size of the figures? Looks a bit like Eobasileus, but with a shorter nose?
ReplyDeleteH
About to list two of these on eBay.
ReplyDeleteI have 2 of these for sale in the UK. International shipping enabled.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/195441895598?mkcid=16&mkevt=1&mkrid=711-127632-2357-0&ssspo=ez1aHQTuRVu&sssrc=2051273&ssuid=ez1aHQTuRVu&var=&widget_ver=artemis&media=COPY
I hope you find a buyer, I've got some, see above!
ReplyDeleteH