This US firm was founded as K&M (after the owners children) by G.B. Pillai in
1979 and for many years was best known for soft toys of a more realistic (if
very fluffy) nature than your average pink rabbit or blue squirrel!
Vinyl animals followed, aimed at museum and
safari-park gift-shops and then, after an opportunity to go into retailing
itself (presented at/with the Vienna Zoo)
was taken-up, the company increased its range of lines to equip that kind of emporium.
The result was that sets of 'heritage' figures (and astronauts) joined the
catalogue, and there's nothing more heritage than knights!
The parent is now K&M International with offices in at least 8 countries,
including - interestingly given current geopolitics - China AND India. In the US it's a 'd-b-a' (doing business as) what in the UK would be T/A (trading as); Wild Republic.
There are two sets, a better set with
figures around the 70mm (16656 Medieval
Nature Tube) made for them in or by a Hui
Zhou of/from China and a smaller set (22862
Mini Knight Polybag) from the Victory
& Valour (UK spelling) line, credited to Shantou,
which consists of duplicates of four of the larger poses, reduced to a 60mm
range.
Peter Evans kindly sent these to the Blog a
while ago, and explained that the smaller header-bag had had two-each of the
four poses, one-each of whom were detached to another detail before the parcel
left for SSW's command centre!
The larger set, I think a slightly
darker-blue chain-mace chap has been in one of the Charity shop purchases,
while Chris sent the kneeling archer in his last parcel for the Blog, again
there are shade-variations with a lighter bow and darker mail.
The falconer is rather nice and a bit
different, I can only think of the Starlux pageboy chap, off the top of my head (and Exin's
30mm mounted, poncy-looking Prince type), but I seem to recall someone did a whole line-up of them in Plastic Warrior magazine a while
back?
I've said before I'm no expert on armour,
but I think it's fair to say you get three early types and one 'high Tudor' tournament
type, who looks (in the 70-mil set) as if he should glow in the dark, but it's
just a pearlescent polymer.
As you can also see the scale is not
constant within the two sets, the yellow guy matches the smaller ones better
than his own mob, while 'her majesty' is heading toward 80mm, without the crown! I think the black chap has also turned-up before, but whether
from Peter, Chris or charity I don't know; by the time I get them all together
they'll need a whole tub to themselves!
Backs of the other five bigger ones, and a
group showing how the kneeling archer can also be used with the smaller set,
it's not a brilliant photograph, but I was concentrating on getting them all
still standing-up!
Cheers Peter, a brief overview, but we'll
return to them in future comparisons I'm sure.
I love the "Mediaeval Nature" tube label- not sure what the Mediaeval nature is, looks pretty nasty judging by all the swords...
ReplyDeleteThere's definitely a hidden joke in there Andy; if the books are to be believed, the 'nature' of medievals was a great deal of butchery and mayhem!
ReplyDeleteH