. . . as the parent company was Kwong Shing. We looked at Kwong Wah yesterday and there are other
Kwong-somethings out there! Obviously we have both Kositoy and Kwong Shing
together on the one advert graphic here, while . . .
. . . here we tie Kamley and Kositoy into
each other with an identical, but over-stickered, set and the KS is brought into the fold through
early/mid 1960's sets; where it appears as a sort of brand-marking; and later
sets from Kositoy and Kamley (or containing the same product),
where it's used as the prefix to stock-codes.
Recognisable stuff from the previous posts
along with other items, some generic, some marked up, and some stealing artwork
from other1960/70's sets I have in the master-collection (and which probably have
nothing to do with the now-four K's).
In addition some of the artwork has been nicked from Tamiya!
I'm also pleased to see the 'arctic
warfare' helicopter header-card (which was one area where I could have been
tripped-up over the previous posts!) is here with alternate and 'known' Kamley/Kositoy stuff in it (Combat Troops - top right) where mine has
small-scale Airfix 8th Army (2nd
type) piracies.
By this (1986) publicity photo' the Britains khaki infantry clones have
clearly been phased out, although a few of the ostensibly '70's sets were probably
hanging around to be found in the odd corner shop, we still had lots of
independents back then.
The Nazi Spitfire's fun, they did have a
few I believe and some (one?) airworthy Flying Fortresses?
A fine spread of civilian rack-toy tat was
also on display, with - interestingly - some mini-truck body types never issued
with the military trucks, well, two; the crane and the bin-lorry! The
micro-cars have helped me ID a couple of mine and I think the tiny jeeps may
have been seen in the recent Airfix post
on the subject, but the resolution isn't clear enough.
And what looks to be the originator (or an
earlier iteration) of the stretcher team we saw in the large set from Peter
Evans a couple of months ago, this one is - even at poor resolution - a
much cleaner sculpt. With Star's
version, the Maymoon/M-Toy (Marty) take-off of the Britains Swoppet one and the brown one
with clip-in bearers we've seen here in the past, there is a sub-collection
there for someone with little space or a limited budget.
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