Ten ANZAC's from Lone Star, showing a variety
of paint in hats and webbing and all the standard 'toy soldier' poses covered
except 'casualty' where some makers are keener than others to represent the
negatives of making war, although LS's khaki infantry have a lovely
stretcher-team as we saw last year.
The KAR (King's African Rifles), same figures but with darker
skin-tones and a typically; a darker green for hats and socks than the ANZAC's.
Although - as he's snuck into the shot - the prone'ish Bren-gunner (front
left)is an ANZAC with the darker greens of the KAR's. I don't know how he
ended-up in the shot, there is a dark-skinned gunner, but clearly I wasn't
paying attention!
Closer comparisons; showing typical Lone Star base-type variations. I suspect
the larger bases are a later change to the tool, it's easier to make a
component larger than to reduce it? However it's not totally clear as while the
larger bases on the unpainted figure and/or KAR might suggest logically a later
issue . . .
. . . here we find the KAR is the smaller base!
A situation mirrored in . . .
. . . the kneeling firer. Assuming the grey-green
bases were even later, would leave the conclusion some bases got bigger, while
some got smaller? I know this has been pored-over elsewhere in the past, with
an equal lack of a firm-conclusion, so I'm not going to try calling it, suffice
to say there are a lot of variations out there!
Also I suspect the officer on the
right-hand end of the rank has been home-painted/re-painted, but it's not
clear.
Some more comparisons (they're not rare!).
Black grenades seem to be less common and may be earlier, but one gets the
impression Lone Star's out-painters
had a freer hand than say Britains'
did?
I have two unpainted figures in the sample;
this advancing chap and the officer above, who (or which?) may have been
stripped of paint by previous owners, but are more-, or as-likely to have snuck
on to the market from factory-filches or old, forgotten, out-worker's stock?
Recent re-issues, these aren't the softer
PVC of my Toyway stuff, so I guess Dorset or Marlborough? The colour of polymer chosen however (un-pigmented
neutral granules?) is bloody insipid and hard to photograph! Although the
kneeling Tommy-gunner is a better shot with more substance to his 'mass'.
Lower shots reveal that these
Afro-Antipodeans are a bunch of big boys, with a buckshee Hong Kong copy, Airfix's Gurkah and a French
Indo-Chinese (or Algerian campaign?) soldier from JIM (it's all in the hat!) all dwarfed by Lone Star's chap, although the usually larger (in shots of this
type) Atlantic machine-gunner holds his
own . . . a couple of six-footers if they are an inch in 54mm!
Two comments. The KAR had white officers so the figures shouldn't be painted with darker skin tones.
ReplyDeleteThe ANZAC figures were sold in Woolworths half price, unpainted. That could be the source of the ones pictured.
Cheers Terra'!
ReplyDeleteThat does explain the unpainted ones, although it makes it odd that I've only tracked-down two? You'd think there'd be loads of 'em!
The first point though . . . least said soonest mended! They were toys, differentiation was needed I suppose, and there where African officer toward the end . . . maybe these are for the Mau-mau emergency!
H