Best - and first - known as Bonux premiums, we did look at them back
at the start of the blog and there wasn't anything particularly wrong with the
post's blurb, but the pictures were a tad kak-shite, so this is more of an
excuse for a return, than a specific follow-up! With added big-guns!
Bonux Premiums, three sets of four figures, all depicting French troops
of the brush-fire wars/end of colonialism period; Indochina and Algeria; with
sets in Foreign Legion kepis, para berets and infantry helmets. Bonux is marked on the flatter side of
the bases which slope with fluted-hollows underneath, like Mokerex coffee-premiums, and might - therefore - share a
tool-maker.
The FFL haven't improved since we last saw
them with a lot of chucking and waving going-on and not much weaponry-fighting!
Although all the grenadiers are otherwise un-armed as well, so the whole unit
of 12 aren't going to hold Firebase Gabrielle for long!
They were also available unmarked in the
same colours as the Bonux premiums and silver (left hand picture) manufactured
in the same softish 'Airfix' polyethylene, while the right-hand picture shows
figures issued in a harder 'Hong Kong' polymer which may be an ethylene or a
polypropylene, having a denser, tinier propety, and may be far more recent?
Colours are brighter too.
In both cases they have been posed, crewing
Bonux giveaway artillery, for whom I
have to thank Chris Smith, as he hid them in his first donation to the Blog a
year or so ago. I meant to Blog them much sooner, to which end I sort of hid
them in the 'plunder posts' but things intervened (as they do) and they got
put-away!
Beautifully scaled to fit the 45mm figures,
I don't think it was necessarily intended, Bonux
ran lots of lines together and at different times (a bit like Kinder?) and it
just so happens they go together so well, maybe the guns are Injecta Plastic as well?
At some point painted versions, also with
unmarked bases were issued somewhere, not so common they may have been included
is some larger die-cast vehicle or wooden-building type gift set or something
at Christmas? I used to think they might be home-painted, but one or two have
come separately from the bulk of them?
The other issue I've found is those marked
Johnson, in bright yellow, Ludo had bright red and green examples on his old
site (I'll check the Forum and post a link at the end if they are there) and
I've seen a powder blue one.
Last time (2010) I proffered Johnson & Johnson (pharmaceuticals)
or Johnson Wax (household cleaning
and hygiene products) as possible's, but I'm told they were/are (?) a chemical
and insecticide brand across the Channel; that might still leave JW in the frame here, their US parent and French Subsidiary is SC Johnson?
The upper left image shows distinct colour
differences in the Bonux-marked set, from black through dark olive-drab to a
mid-olive green, while the lower images is - from the left; Bonux black, Bonux
mid-olive, Johnson, unmarked painted, unmarked olive-drab, unmarked silber and
the more ridgid unmarked plastic in a jade or mid-green.
I can't thank Chris enough for the guns,
when people send stuff to the blog it's usually - and expected to be - esoteric
chuck-outs, cheapies and miscellany (as the expression goes) and as it all
fills gaps in the whole; is always much appreciated, however, Chris sent these,
clearly marked and having a market-value (especially on evilBay.fr), so it was
a real act of kindness, in a parcel already full of goodness and good things,
and while I rather hid them at the time, it was only for a post like this, and
I'm sure we'll see them again - there's lots of guns to compare and contrast
one day!
Here a brown version of the single barrel
'25lbr', I've seen a bi-coloured one in the same brown and pale fawn or sand,
and I've also seen bright blue-single and double-guns and yellow ones.
I couldn't choose between the final two
images of the seven-figure line-up, so the other one is above . . . a slightly
different angle!
Ludoprimophile - Bonux (with lots of guns)
23rd Feb 2021 - How sweet; TJF's found one . . . figure!
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